Ebola Response Team is Honored With Patient Safety Award

Article

MedStar Washington Hospital Center’s Ebola Response Team has been honored with the 2015 Patient Safety Award from the District of Columbia Hospital Association (DCHA). The award recognizes the team’s outstanding efforts in its Ebola-related plans and training to care for potential or confirmed patients with the Ebola virus.

Some members of the Biocontainment Unit at MedStar Washington Hospital Association

MedStar Washington Hospital Center’s Ebola Response Team has been honored with the 2015 Patient Safety Award from the District of Columbia Hospital Association (DCHA). The award recognizes the team’s outstanding efforts in its Ebola-related plans and training to care for potential or confirmed patients with the Ebola virus.

The team, also known as the Biocontainment Unit among hospital personnel, handled all aspects of planning, education and training. These Hospital Center experts in infectious diseases, infection control, emergency medicine and emergency preparedness organized drills, handled on-site surveys from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the D.C. Department of Health and the National Institutes of Health, and integrated the feedback from the drills and the surveys to modify the plans for even greater effectiveness. They also led the response to two real-life situations involving patients whose symptoms indicated possible Ebola-and did so efficiently, safely and with compassion for both patients.

"The Biocontainment unit team is a unique blend of people all working to accomplish one goal– to provide safe, high quality and compassionate care to people who become seriously ill from an infectious disease,” says Craig DeAtley, PA-C, director of emergency management for MedStar Washington Hospital Center. “The award recognizes the importance of teamwork as the planning, practice and commitment must all come together in order to achieve the desired results.”

The DCHA Patient Safety Award recognizes individuals or teams who demonstrate exceptional commitment to improving the culture of safety in an institution, patient safety, quality of care, as well as the reduction of errors in medicine. More than 80 professionals were part of the team.

The Hospital Center was designated nationally to serve as one of the original 35 Ebola Treatment Centers in the U.S., and was designated by the state of Maryland and the District of Columbia as well.

In June, the Maryland Hospital Association (MHA) recognized the Hospital Center’s Ebola caregivers with the Distinguished Service Award, which is the MHA’s highest honor.

Source: MedStar Washington Hospital Center 

Newsletter

Stay prepared and protected with Infection Control Today's newsletter, delivering essential updates, best practices, and expert insights for infection preventionists.

Recent Videos
 Brenna Doran PhD, MA, hospital epidemiology and infection prevention for the University of California, San Francisco, and a coach and consultant of infection prevention; Jessica Swain, MBA, MLT, director of infection prevention and control for Dartmouth Health in Lebanon, New Hampshire; and Shanina Knighton, associate professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Nursing and senior nurse scientist at MetroHealth System in Cleveland, Ohio
 Brenna Doran PhD, MA, hospital epidemiology and infection prevention for the University of California, San Francisco, and a coach and consultant of infection prevention; Jessica Swain, MBA, MLT, director of infection prevention and control for Dartmouth Health in Lebanon, New Hampshire; and Shanina Knighton, associate professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Nursing and senior nurse scientist at MetroHealth System in Cleveland, Ohio
In a recent discussion with Infection Control Today® (ICT®), study authors Brenna Doran PhD, MA, hospital epidemiology and infection prevention for the University of California, San Francisco, and a coach and consultant of infection prevention; Jessica Swain, MBA, MLT, director of infection prevention and control for Dartmouth Health in Lebanon, New Hampshire; and Shanina Knighton, associate professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Nursing and senior nurse scientist at MetroHealth System in Cleveland, Ohio, shared their insights on how the project evolved and what the findings mean for the future.