Vice President Joe Biden Calls For Renewed Focus On Patient Safety
Hospitals need to focus more on reducing preventable errors and infections and the government must create more economic incentives to improve patient safety, Vice President Joe Biden said at a conference in Irvine, Calif. over the weekend.
鈥淯p until now, our health care system, in my humble opinion, hasn鈥檛 sufficiently linked quality 鈥 with safety,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ot enough time has been focused on keeping bad things from happening.鈥
But Biden said the paradigm is starting to change. Hospitals are now penalized for unnecessary readmissions and new technology alerts nurses of possible problems and reduces the reliance on handwritten doctors’ orders.

Gains have been made in improving hand hygiene and reducing central line infections, he said. And a recent government report by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality found that 1.3 million fewer hospital-acquired conditions occurred 鈥 and 50,000 fewer deaths 鈥 in 2013, compared to 2010.
鈥淭his is the time to double down on your commitment to patient safety,鈥 he told the crowd of doctors, nurses, hospital executives and patient advocates. 鈥淲e鈥檝e gone from accepting the inevitable to showing what鈥檚 absolutely within our wheelhouse to be able to change.鈥
The conference was sponsored by the , an organization aimed at reaching 鈥渮ero preventable patient deaths by 2020.鈥 There were panels on patient involvement, on lessons learned from Ebola and on measuring hospital efforts to improve safety.
Alicia Cole, who attended and spoke at the conference, has spent years recovering from multiple hospital-acquired infections. She went into a Burbank hospital in 2006 for a simple surgery to remove small fibroids and ended up with a staph infection, sepsis and flesh-eating disease.
鈥淚nstead of getting better, I deteriorated,鈥 Cole said. She has had numerous additional surgeries, had to stop working and still sees a doctor weekly. 鈥淢y life completely changed.鈥
Jim Bialick, president of the Patient Safety Movement Foundation, said it鈥檚 critical to bring together patients, doctors and technology companies to create solutions. 鈥淭raditional methods aren鈥檛 working,鈥 he said.
Bialick said he appreciates the government鈥檚 renewed focus on the issue. For instance, its Partnership for Patients program is working with 3,700 hospitals across the nation to reduce preventable infections and readmissions.
Much of the discussion at the conference focused on sepsis, a blood infection that聽costs the health care system more than $20 billion annually and has a mortality rate of up to 50 percent. Several hospitals, including UC San Francisco, have programs aimed at identifying victims early.
Chris Fee, associate professor of emergency medicine at UCSF, said reducing sepsis deaths is about recognizing symptoms in patients and getting treatment started as soon as possible. Technology can be key in alerting hospital staff of abnormal vital signs and lab tests he said.
鈥淲e have to remember that patients can be very ill and look quite well,鈥 Fee said.
The UCSF project started as a pilot and has since expanded to the entire hospital. Fee said it is credited with reducing mortality from 18 percent in 2012 to 12 percent in 2014 and saving more than 100 lives.