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Leaping Toward Higher Standards

Urban Hospital Reports 2008
Rural Hospital Reports
2008

Congratulations to these Colorado hospitals who reported to the LEAPFROG GROUP for Patient Safety, as of June 30, 2008.
If your hospital DID report to the LEAPFROG survey, Bravo! Call and commend them for reporting. Preventable medical mistakes are a problem you can do something about. If it has not yet reported, call the hospital Director for Quality and ask when they will.

The information is compiled from the answers hospitals provided. The LEAPFROG GROUP does not independently verify the accuracy of the information.

Learn about patient safety Read about LEAPFROG?
Urban hospital reports printer friendly version

Fully implemented LEAPFROG's recommended quality & safety leap.
Good progress in implementing LEAPFROG's recommended quality and safety leap.
Good early stage effort in implementing LEAPFROG's recommended quality and safety leap.
Willing to report publicly; did not yet meet LEAPFROG's criteria for a good early stage effort.
Did not submit this information.
NA Not Applicable - e.g. Pancreatic resection does not apply because hospital does not perform pancreatic resections.

 

 

LEAP 1
An Rx for Rx.
LEAP 2
Sick people need special care.
LEAP 3
Practice makes perfect.

LEAP 4
A culture based on safety.

Do your doctors always use computer systems to order prescription medication? Does the hospital have full-time doctors certified in critical care? How many operations did the hospital perform last year? Is concern for patient safety evident in all hospital services, procedures, and policies?
Computerized Physician Order Entry Intensive Care Unit Physician Staffing
Procedures and Volume Targets
LEAPFROG Safe Practices
Choose a hospital that requires its staff to use computers to order medications, tests and procedures. This is called
Computerized Physician Order
Entry (CPOE). With CPOE systems, hospital staff enters medication orders via a computer linked to prescribing error prevention
software.
Choose a hospital with an
intensive care unit that is staffed by doctors and other caregivers who have special training in critical care. These doctors are called ‘intensivists.’
Select the hospital with more
experience and the best results
for specific procedures, surgeries or conditions. This is known as Evidence Based Hospital Referral (EBHR). By referring patients needing certain complex medical procedures to hospitals
offering the best survival odds based on scientifically valid criteria — such as the number of times a hospital performs these procedures each year or other process or outcomes data — research indicates that a patient’s risk of dying could be reduced by 40%.

Select a hospital that has a high Leapfrog safe practices score.
This means it has implemented the 30 procedures to reduce
preventable medical mistakes. This fourth leap assesses a hospital’s progress on the remaining
27 NQF safe practices.

   

Procedures that meet Volume Targets

 
Boulder Community Foothills

High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU

Boulder Community

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Aortic value replacement

Centura Health Avista Adventist—Louisville

High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU

Centura Health Adventist—Littleton

High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU

Centura Health Adventist—Parker

High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU

Centura Health Penrose-St. Francis—CO Springs

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Aortic value replacement
Bariatric surgery
Esophagectomy

Centura Health Porter Adventist—Denver
Aortic valve replacement
Centura Health St. Anthony Central—Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Centura Health St Anthony North—Westminster
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Centura Health St. Mary Corwin Medical—Pueblo
Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Bariatric surgery


Children's Hospital— Aurora NA
Denver Health Medical Center—Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Bariatric surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Exempla Good Samaritan Medical—Lafayette
Esophagectomy
Pancreatic resection
Exempla-Lutheran Medical Center—Wheat Ridge
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Exempla St. Joseph— Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Longmont United Hospital

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Aortic value replacement

McKee Medical—Loveland

Esophagectomy
Medical Center of Aurora

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Aortic value replacement


Medical Center of the Rockies—Loveland
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Esophagectomy
Pancreatic resection
Memorial Health System —
Colorado Springs
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
North Colorado Medical Center—Greeley
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
Pancreatic resection
North Suburban Medical Center—Thornton
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
Pancreatic resection
Parkview Medical—Pueblo

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair
Aortic value replacement

Platte Valley—Brighton NA
Poudre Valley Hospital— Fort Collins
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Bariatric surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Presbyterian/St. Luke's Medical Cntr.—Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Rose Medical Center— Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
St. Mary's Hospital —
Grand Junction
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Esophagectomy
Pancreatic resection
Sky Ridge Medical —
Lone Tree
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
Spalding Rehabilitation—
Aurora
NA
NA
Swedish Medical Cntr.—
Englewood
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
University of Colorado Hospital— Denver
Abdominal aoritic aneurysm repair
Aortic valve replacement
Bariatric Surgery
Esophagectomy
High risk deliveries & neonatal NICU
Pancreatic resection
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Rural hospital reports printer friendly version

For rural hospitals, not all leaps apply. The Colorado Business Group on Health asked rural hospitals to complete at least LEAP 4 of the survey which was adopted in 2004. This is the fourth year rural hospitals have been asked to complete the survey.

The Colorado Business Group on Health congratulates these Rural Hospitals reporting to the LEAPFROG GROUP as of June 30, 2008.

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Fully implemented LEAPFROG's recommended safety practice.
Good progress in implementing LEAPFROG's recommended quality and safety leap.
Good early stage effort in implementing LEAPFROG's recommended quality and safety leap.
Willing to report publicly; did not yet meet LEAPFROG's criteria for a good early stage effort.

Blank cells indicate the hospital did not report that year.

LEAP 4
A culture based on safety.
Is concern for patient safety evident in all hospital services, procedures, and policies?
Adequate staffing, clear and uniform documentation, prevention practices, management of medications, and infection control are basic foundations of care that highly impact the outcomes of any hospital stay. This score is a summary of 27 safety practices. Each individually can improve health care outcomes.
LEAPFROG Quality Index
The score for Leap 4 is calculated by adding the scores awarded for each of 27 safe practices.
View a list of the highest ranking ten safe practices.
 
2005
2006
2007
2008
Centura Health St. Thomas More Hospital— Canon City
Colorado Plains Medical Center–Fort Morgan    
Delta County Memorial Hospital—Delta
East Morgan County Hospital—Brush
Estes Park Medical Center–Estes Park    
Keefe Memorial Hospital—Cheyenne Wells
Memorial Hospital—Craig
Montrose Memorial Hospital—Montrose
San Luis Valley Regtional Medical Center—Alamosa
Southeast Colorado Hospital–Springfield
Southwest Health System–Cortez    
Sterling Regional Medical Center–Sterling    
Valley View Hospital Association—Glenwood Springs
Yuma District Hospital—Yuma
 
As of June 30, 2008

List of the highest ranking ten safe practices used to calculate LEAP 4 Quality Index.

1. The hospital has an environment where healthcare delivery is based on open communication and safe practices.

2. The hospital has enough nurses, and the nurses are highly trained.

3. Your doctors and nurses should be constantly informed about new information relating to your condition and care.

4. "Anticoagulation therapy" helps to thin the blood and keep it thin to prevent clot formation. A special team, including doctors, nurses, and pharmacists, should help the patient manage this problem.

5. Before an operation patients should be checked for the risk of infection. If a risk is identified, doctors or nurses should try to prevent infection by using antibiotics or using anti-infection methods.

6. When a doctor gives verbal orders, the order should be written down and read back immediately in order to verify the accuracy of what was heard.

7. Every person should wash their hands before and after contact with a patient or objects around a patient, every time!

8. A central intravenous line is a narrow tube that is placed into a large blood vessel and passed into the opening of the heart. It is used to administer medicine, fluid, and draw blood. Methods known to prevent infection should be used when a patient receives a central line.

9. Pharmacists should be consulted in prescribing and dosing of medications by being available for consultation with the doctors and the nurses.

10. Operations that are performed on the wrong site or on the wrong patient can be avoided by adopting standardized protocols for all doctors and nurses to follow.

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