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Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2020 Sep 30:mzaa116. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzaa116

A Novel Method of Assessing Clinical Preparedness for COVID-19 and Other Disasters

Harriet Fisher 1,, Cherilyn Re 2, Jeffery Wilhite 3, Kathleen Hanley 4, Lisa Altshuler 5, James Schmidtburger 6, Morris Gagliardi 7, Sondra Zabar 8
PMCID: PMC7543447  PMID: 32991675

Abstract

Quality Issue

The emergence of COVID-19 highlights the necessity of rapidly identifying and isolating potentially infected individuals. Evaluating this preparedness requires an assessment of the full clinical system, from intake to isolation.

Initial Assessment

Unannounced Standardized Patients (USPs) present a nimble, sensitive methodology for assessing this readiness.

Choice of solution

Pilot the Unannounced Standardized Patient methodology, which employs an actor trained to present as a standardized, incognito potentially infected patient, to assess clinical readiness for potential COVID-19 patients at an urban, community safety-net clinic.

Implementation

The Unannounced Standardized Patient was trained to present at each team’s front desk with the complaint of feeling unwell (reporting a fever of 101 degrees Fahrenheit in the past 24 hours) and exposure to a roommate recently returned from Beijing. The Unannounced Standardized Patient was trained to complete a behaviorally-anchored assessment of the care she received from the clinical system.

Evaluation

There was clear variation in care Unannounced Standardized Patients received; some frontline clerical staff followed best practices; others did not. Signage and information on disease spread prevention publicly available was inconsistent. Qualitative comments shared by the Unannounced Standardized Patients and those gathered during group debrief reinforced the experiences of the Unannounced Standardized Patients and hospital leadership.

Lessons Learned

Unannounced Standardized Patients revealed significant variation in care practices within a clinical system. Utilization of this assessment methodology can provide just-in-time clinical information about readiness and safety practices, particularly during emerging outbreaks. Unannounced Standardized Patients will prove especially powerful as clinicians and systems return to outpatient visits while remaining vigilant about potentially infected individuals.


Articles from International Journal for Quality in Health Care are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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