Nicklaus Children's Hospital
Miami, Florida 33155-3009
Patient Rights and Ethics
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
Billing Ethics |
Hospitals should provide patients with complete billing information and access to a representative that can quickly resolve billing issues. In addition, hospitals should not sue patients over late or unpaid bills. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
This hospital provides a detailed bill within 30 days of receiving insurance payments: Yes This hospital provides access to a representative who can quickly investigate billing errors and establish payment plans: Yes This hospital sues patients: No |
||
Health Care Equity |
Hospitals should examine their own data to identify any differences in processes or outcomes for patients of different races and ethnicities, and patients who speak different languages. Hospitals should also put action plans in place if differences are identified. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
Informed Consent |
Hospitals should ensure that all patients are fully aware of risks and alternatives prior to procedures. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
All staff involved in the informed consent process achieve the appropriate training: Yes Doctors explain expected difficulties and recovery time and allow patients to ask questions: Yes Doctors involved in the procedure are listed on the consent form, and patients are notified if the doctor will be absent and if trainees will be involved: Yes Consent forms are written at a 6th grade reading level: Yes Staff ask patients about their preferred language for decision-making and make a trained medical interpreter available if appropriate: Yes Doctors use the "teach back method" to ensure patients understand what will be performed and what are the risks: Yes |
||
Responding to Never Events |
Hospitals should have a never events policy that includes all nine (9) actions that should occur following a “never event,” which includes apologizing to the patient and not charging for costs associated with the never event. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
More Information
Patient and Family Caregiver Initiated Rapid Response Team |
This hospital does have a patient and family caregiver initiated rapid response team.
|
Protocol to collect and respond to patient-reported concerns about care |
This hospital does have a protocol to collect and respond to patient-reported concerns about care.
|
Preventing Patient Harm
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nursing and Bedside Care for Patients |
Hospitals should have nurse staffing plans in place that ensure there are enough nurses of all types (i.e., registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, or unlicensed assistive personnel) to provide direct care to patients in medical, surgical, or med-surg units each day. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
This hospital's total number of nursing hours per patient day is: 13.44 This hospital did achieve Magnet status, nationally recognized for nursing excellence. |
||||||||||||||
Nursing Care for Patients |
Hospitals should have nurse staffing plans in place that ensure there are enough registered nurses (RNs) to provide direct care to patients in medical, surgical, or med-surg units each day. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
This hospital's total number of RN nursing hours per patient day is: 9.72
|
||||||||||||||
Percentage of Nursing Staff who are Registered Nurses (RNs) |
Hospitals should have nurse staffing plans in place that ensure the proportion of nursing hours performed by registered nurses (RNs) is adequate. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
||||||||||||
This hospital's proporation of RN nursing hours per patient day to total nursing hours per patient day is: 72.29% (where a higher percentage is better). |
||||||||||||||
Percentage of Registered Nurses (RNs) who have a Bachelor’s Degree in Nursing |
Hospitals should have a high proportion of highly trained and skilled registered nurses (RNs) who have an advanced nursing degree. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
Effective Leadership to Prevent Errors |
Hospitals should take meaningful steps to raise awareness about patient safety, hold leadership accountable for reducing unsafe practices, provide resources to implement a patient safety program, and develop systems and structures to support action to improve patient safety. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
This hospital scored 120.00 out of 120.00 possible points. |
||||||||||||||
Staff Work Together to Prevent Errors |
Hospitals should assess their culture of safety and hold leadership accountable for implementing policies, procedures, and staff education to improve the culture of safety. |
CONSIDERABLE ACHIEVEMENT |
||||||||||||
This hospital scored 110.00 out of 120.00 possible points. |
||||||||||||||
Handwashing |
Hospitals should regularly monitor hand hygiene practices for everyone interacting with patients, and give feedback to ensure compliance. Hospitals should foster a culture of good hand hygiene, offer training and education, and provide equipment, such as paper towels, soap dispensers, and hand sanitizer. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
|
Medication Safety
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Safe Medication Ordering |
Hospitals should enter at least 85% of inpatient medication orders through the CPOE system, and should fully demonstrate their CPOE system meets the national safety standard for decision support. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||
This hospital's percentage of inpatient medication orders entered electronically: 85% or greater |
||||||||||||
Medication Reconciliation |
Hospitals should have a rate of unintentional medication discrepancies per medication that is lower than or equal to the 50th percentile (where lower performance is better) nationally. |
DOES NOT APPLY | ||||||||||
Safe Medication Administration |
Hospitals should have nurses and other clinicians use BCMA in all medical/surgical units, intensive care units, labor and delivery units, pre-operative and post-anesthesia care units to scan the patient and medication prior to administration at least 95% of the time. The BCMA system includes decision support to prevent errors and the hospital has processes to prevent workarounds. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
Medication Documentation for Elective Outpatient Surgery Patients |
Hospitals should document 90% or more of home medications, visit medications, and allergies/adverse reaction(s) in the patients’ clinical record. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
||||||||||
|
Healthcare-Associated Infections
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
C. difficile Infection |
Hospitals should have fewer than expected colon infections from C. diff bacteria. Leapfrog uses a standardized infection ratio (SIR) calculated by the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) to compare the number of infections that actually happened at this hospital to the number of infections expected for this hospital, given various factors. A number lower than one means fewer infections than expected; a number more than one means more infections than expected. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
This hospital’s standardized infection ratio (SIR) is: 1.059 |
||
Infection in the Blood |
Hospitals should have fewer than expected central-line associated blood stream infections. Leapfrog uses a standardized infection ratio (SIR) calculated by the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) to compare the number of infections that actually happened at this hospital to the number of infections expected for this hospital, given various factors. A number lower than one means fewer infections than expected; a number more than one means more infections than expected. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
This hospital’s standardized infection ratio (SIR) is: 0.048 |
||
Infection in the Urinary Tract |
Hospitals should have fewer than expected catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Leapfrog uses a standardized infection ratio (SIR) calculated by the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) to compare the number of infections that actually happened at this hospital to the number of infections expected for this hospital, given various factors. A number lower than one means fewer infections than expected; a number more than one means more infections than expected. |
CONSIDERABLE ACHIEVEMENT |
This hospital’s standardized infection ratio (SIR) is: 0.572 |
||
MRSA Infection |
Hospitals should have fewer than expected antibiotic resistant bacterial infections. Leapfrog uses a standardized infection ratio (SIR) calculated by the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) to compare the number of infections that actually happened at this hospital to the number of infections expected for this hospital, given various factors. A number lower than one means fewer infections than expected; a number more than one means more infections than expected. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
This hospital’s standardized infection ratio (SIR) is: 1.126 |
||
Surgical Site Infection After Colon Surgery |
Hospitals should have fewer than expected surgical site infections after major colon surgery. Leapfrog uses a standardized infection ratio (SIR) calculated by the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) to compare the number of infections that actually happened at this hospital to the number of infections expected for this hospital, given various factors. A number lower than one means fewer infections than expected; a number more than one means more infections than expected. |
UNABLE TO CALCULATE
|
Critical Care
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
Specially Trained Doctors Care for Critical Care Patients |
Hospitals should have intensivists present on-site at least eight hours a day, seven days per week or have intensivists present via 24/7 telemedicine with some on-site intensivist presence. When not in the ICU, the intensivist immediately responds to calls and has another physician or trained clinician who can immediately reach the patient. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
This hospital achieved the standard using on-site intensivist coverage. |
Pediatric Care
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Experience of Children and Their Parents |
Hospitals should perform better than most hospitals in five (5) areas:
|
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
There are 18 domains in the CAHPS Child Hospital Survey. Performance on the following five domains make up a hospital’s score on Leapfrog’s “Experience of Children and their Parents” measure. “Top Box Score” represents the percentage of respondents who gave the most favorable response.
|
||||||||||||||
Radiation Dose for Pediatric Abdomen/Pelvis Scans |
Hospitals should have an average radiation dose for routine pediatric CT scans of the abdomen and pelvis that falls within national benchmarks. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
||||||||||||
Radiation Dose for Pediatric Head Scans |
Hospitals should have an average radiation dose for routine pediatric CT scans of the head that falls within national benchmarks. |
CONSIDERABLE ACHIEVEMENT |
||||||||||||
Congenital Heart Surgery for Infants (Norwood Procedure) |
Hospitals should perform at least 8 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 5 procedures annually. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
||||||||||||
This hospital performed Norwood procedures, a congenital heart surgery for infants, compared to Leapfrog’s standard of 8 procedures annually. As part of their process for privileging surgeons, this hospital does not ensure that each surgeon meets or exceeds Leapfrog’s minimum surgeon volume standard of at least 5 procedures annually for Norwood procedures. This hospital does participate in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Congenital Heart Surgery Database (CHSD). |
Maternity Care
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
High-Risk Deliveries |
Hospitals should deliver at least 50 very-low birth weight babies per year OR the hospital must maintain a lower-than-average morbidity/mortality rate for very-low birth weight babies. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Cesarean Sections |
This is defined as first-time mothers giving birth to a single baby, at full-term, in the head-down position who deliver their babies through a C-section. Hospitals should have a rate of C-sections of 23.6% or less. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Episiotomies |
This is defined as mothers having an incision made in the perineum (the birth canal) during childbirth. Hospitals should have a rate of episiotomies of 5% or less. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Screening Newborns for Jaundice Before Discharge |
Hospitals should screen at least 90% of babies for jaundice. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Preventing Blood Clots in Women Undergoing Cesarean Section |
At least 90% of women undergoing a cesarean section receive treatment to prevent blood clots. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Complex Adult Surgery
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
Carotid Endarterectomy |
Hospitals should perform at least 20 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 10 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Mitral Valve Repair and Replacement |
Hospitals should perform at least 40 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 20 procedures annually. In addition, hospitals should participate in a national clinical registry and achieve the same or better outcomes when compared to others who also perform this procedure. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Open Aortic Procedures |
Hospitals should perform at least 10 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 7 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Bariatric Surgery for Weight Loss |
Hospitals should perform at least 50 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 20 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Esophageal Resection for Cancer |
Hospitals should perform at least 20 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 7 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Lung Resection for Cancer |
Hospitals should perform at least 40 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 15 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Pancreatic Resection for Cancer |
The hospital performs at least 20 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensures that each surgeon performs at least 10 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Rectal Cancer Surgery |
Hospitals should perform at least 16 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 6 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Total Knee Replacement Surgery |
Hospitals should perform at least 50 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 25 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Total Hip Replacement Surgery |
Hospitals should perform at least 50 procedures annually, and as part of their process for privileging surgeons, ensure that each surgeon performs at least 25 procedures annually. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Safe Surgery Checklist - Complex Surgery |
Hospitals should go through all the elements of a complete safe surgery checklist on all patients every time a surgery is performed. |
CONSIDERABLE ACHIEVEMENT |
Elective Outpatient Surgery - Adult
Ophthalmology (Eyes)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Anterior Segment Eye Procedures | 0 |
Posterior Segment Eye Procedures | 0 |
Other Eye Procedures | 4 |
Orthopedic (Bones and Joints)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Finger, Hand, Wrist, Forearm, and Elbow Procedures | 15 |
General Orthopedic Procedures | 0 |
Hip Procedures
(Does not include total hip replacements – see Total Joint Replacement)
|
0 |
Knee Procedures
(Does not include total hip replacements – see Total Joint Replacement)
|
50 |
Shoulder Procedures | 19 |
Spine Procedures | 0 |
Toe, Foot, Ankle, and Leg Procedures | 13 |
Otolaryngology (Ear, Nose, Mouth, and Throat)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Ear Procedures | 5 |
Mouth Procedures | 2 |
Nasal and Sinus Procedures | 13 |
Elective Outpatient Surgery - Pediatric
Ophthalmology (Eyes)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Other Eye Procedures | 88 |
Orthopedic (Bones and Joints)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Finger, Hand, Wrist, Forearm, and Elbow Procedures | 347 |
General Orthopedic Procedures | 25 |
Knee Procedures | 361 |
Shoulder Procedures | 220 |
Toe, Foot, Ankle, and Leg Procedures | 232 |
Otolaryngology (Ear, Nose, Mouth, and Throat)
Procedure | Number of Procedures Performed Annually |
---|---|
Ear Procedures | 237 |
Mouth Procedures | 64 |
Nasal and Sinus Procedures | 51 |
Pharynx, Adenoid, and Tonsil Procedures | 281 |
Care for Elective Outpatient Surgery Patients
Measure name | Leapfrog’s Standard | Hospital’s Progress |
---|---|---|
Elective Outpatient Surgery Recovery Staffing - Adult |
Hospitals should ensure that a specially certified clinician is present and immediately available while an adult patient is present until discharge. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
Elective Outpatient Surgery Recovery Staffing - Pediatric |
Hospitals should ensure that a specially certified clinician is present and immediately available while pediatric patient is present until discharge. |
ACHIEVED THE STANDARD |
Safe Surgery Checklist - Elective Outpatient Surgery |
Hospitals should go through all the elements of a complete safe surgery checklist on all patients every time a procedure is performed. |
SOME ACHIEVEMENT |
Experience of Patients Undergoing Elective Outpatient Surgery |
Hospitals should perform better than most on four (4) areas including regarding the experience of adult patients: (a) facilities and staff (b) communication about the procedure, (c) patients’ overall rating of the facility, and (d) patients' willingness to recommend the facility. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Unplanned Hospital Visits after Colonoscopy |
Unplanned hospital visits can occur when patients experience complications after a colonoscopy procedure. Facilities should have a rate of unplanned hospital visits that is lower than most hospitals and surgery centers. |
DOES NOT APPLY |
Nicklaus Children's Hospital
3100 SW 62nd Avenue
Miami, Florida 33155-3009
Map and Directions | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Visit facility’s website | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
More Information Hide More Information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
|