Tag: Patient Safety

Breast Implants – national recall

CONSUMER ALERT – The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) continues to review and assess breast implants available in the Australian market. For more information and the latest updates, see the TGA’s online breast implant hub.

  • On 2 August 2019, the Allergan company voluntarily recalled their un-implanted Biocell macro-textured breast implants and tissue expanders due to a risk of breast implant associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL), a rare cancer of the immune system. Another company also cancelled their product (Emergo Airxpanders Aeroform tissue expanders)
  • On 26 September 2019, the TGA published its decision to recall and suspend a number of other breast implants and tissue expanders. The full list of recalled and suspended products can be found on the TGA’s Breast Implant Hub.

The TGA has developed a fact sheet for consumers regarding the Allergan recall. The TGA fact sheet states that:

If you have symptoms such as pain, swelling, a rash or a lump in your breast, armpit or elsewhere or you are not sure about changes in your breast, please discuss these with your general practitioner (GP), surgeon or other appropriate medical professional as soon as possible.

Patients can also call HealthDirect on 1800 022 222 for further information.

Staying Safe at Home – Patient’s Own Medicines

This is a guest blog from researcher Brock Delfonte.

Managing your medicines at home can be complicated. It is important for your health that you always take the right medicines at the right time and know why you take each one. It is also just as complicated managing your medicines when you are admitted to hospital. Keeping track of all your medicines is vital but can be difficult as there are a number of different names, types and forms that medicines can come in, including:

· tablets, capsules and liquids
· patches, creams and ointments
· drops and sprays for eyes, nose, ears and mouth
· inhalers and puffers
· injections and implants
· pessaries and suppositories.

Most medicines are usually prescribed or provided by a doctor, nurse or pharmacist. Herbal, complementary or “over-the-counter” products like vitamins, nutritional supplements, and natural remedies are also considered medicines, as is anything you may obtain at supermarkets, health food stores or over the Internet.

Bringing in your medicines to hospital is one way you can help hospital staff get your medicines right. Bringing all of your medicines, including anything you keep in places like the fridge or by the bedside, lets hospital staff know what you’re taking and makes sure that you will be able to continue taking them if needed. There are a number of other benefits from bringing in your own medicines to hospital:

· Hospital staff can use some of the information found on the medicine labels to help them, including the details of any doctors or nurses who prescribed medicines for you and the pharmacies they came from
· Having the medicines with you can help you remember exactly how you take them, and help you remember any other medicines you may take
· Having your medicines with you can allow hospital staff to better help you should any of your usual medicines change in any way or are stopped during your hospital stay.

Remember to store your medicines correctly at home, and have them easy to access should you or your family or carers need to collect them to bring in to hospital. Bringing in all your medicines to hospital each time and wherever possible helps hospital staff provide you with the best quality care they can.

Brock Delfante MSHP
BCom BSc MPharm PhD (c)

PMH Staff Morale at Crisis Point – Consumer Perspective

As promised by our state’s new Heath Minister, The Honourable Roger Cook, the report into staff morale at WA’s Child and Adolescent  Health Service can be found publicly on this link on WA Health’s website. Confusingly, it is noted as confidential- a sign of how recent this edict of transparency by the Health Minister is.

As Executive Director of the Health Consumers’ Council, Saturday 10th June was my first opportunity to see the report, despite contacting WA Health back in March 2017 to offer assistance to ensure the consumer voice was part of the review they were to undertake.

Having now read through the report, these are some considerations:

Staff Morale is clearly a patient safety issue

The report begins with highlighting the link between staff morale and patient safety, including the sentence on page three in bold typeface:

‘organisations with a highly-engaged workforce perform better on safety, quality and patient experience measures’

And then, patients are barely mentioned again, until page 12 in the section of the report entitled “Impact on Quality of Care.” Here the Consumer Advisory Councils finally get a mention and make positive comments about increased engagement under the executive management that is the target of the report. They also note concerns regarding adverse media about staff morale diminishing patient confidence in attending to seek help.

While the report states there has been no evidence found of patient safety issues, there is a perception among staff of under-reporting of clinical incidents:

‘Also of concern were comments by some staff that the current culture was not conducive to the reporting of clinical incidents and that they believed under reporting was prevalent, inferring that any risk to patient safety was not being adequately captured.’

It then highlights that there has been an increase in the number of incidents reported, which could also infer that if there is under-reporting, then indeed there may have been impacts on patient safety.

Patient Opinion

While acknowledging the very dedicated and effective members of the Councils, I would note that as a former Community Advisory Council member, I was often plagued with doubts that I understood the current issues facing patients and families on the wards that very day. Members of Consumer or Community Advisory Councils work hard to understand the complexities of the health system to provide useful input.  Being able to code-switch between the worlds of lived experience and the health system is essential to being effective.

But also vital is the experience of patients and families on the wards who are not fluent in health-speak. Health Consumers’ Council urges any patients or families who would like to tell their recent stories about any Child and Adolescent Health Service, positive or negative, to access the Patient Opinion website to do so. This moderated platform provides the opportunity for patients and families to provide anonymous feedback to promote an ongoing, transparent, quality conversation about our health services. It may ensure patient feedback is received that would have otherwise be lost from the conversation as health service complaints processes that can be hard to access. Also, their outcomes are hidden from public view.

Have we got the right target?

The Governance paragraph on page 10 has one sentence that gives pause:

‘Many staff related the changes in leadership style and tone to the current CE (Chief Executive) and his new executive structure; however others report that there has been a history of poor communication and transparency in style that has been in place for many years and is not attributable to this.’

While Professor Frank Daly has already fallen on his sword so to speak, there is a doubt in my mind that this is the actual basis or crux of the matter. We all need to keep a watching brief on this.

What happens to the patient outcomes?

The report has noted that:

‘The reviewers believe that this risk [to patient safety] will become realised, if the recommendations are not actioned.’

Implementing recommendations can sometimes be as elusive as sticking to a new diet. The goodwill may certainly be there, but without some kind of transparent tracking of progress, there is always the risk the report will remain rhetoric rather than reality. While Recommendation 1 has already been actioned, there are another 15 that need attention.

It is notable too that there is not specific recommendation addressing how the Child and Adolescent Health Service will partner with consumers to address this staff engagement/ patient safety issue. Despite our national hospital and health service accreditation benchmark of consumer engagement, Standard Two -Partnering with Consumers, consumers are often asked to the table last, and somewhat reluctantly. It is notable that the Child and Adolescent Health Service Board does not have a member who might reasonably be acknowledged by those in WA who know each other (i.e. all of us) to have strong, independent consumer advocacy credentials.

It can be said that expertise lies at both ends of the stethoscope, and in the case of the Child and Adolescent Health Service, it could be argued that neither end has had the power or voice of the health administrator. The Health Consumers’ Council sees the opportunity for effective partnerships between consumers and front line clinicians to drive ongoing in health reform and safety and quality initiatives. Consumers continue to be a massive, untapped resource in health system reform.

Pip Brennan |  Executive Director | Health Consumers’ Council | 0406 290 923