And with over 1,000 hospitals enrolled in the Healthier Hospitals Initiative, the momentum is there – but the quality community can take it to the next level. The timing couldn't be better to take this to the mainstream. It’s a low-cost, high-impact activity and everybody wins. to 2:45 p.m. If anyone in your organization is planning to attend, please bring this to their attention and urge them to register before seats are gone.Įnvironmental sustainability and the triple aim means that you can save money and do what you are really there do do-take care of patients. Join me and my colleagues, Don Berwick, MD, MPP, President Emeritus and Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), Jeffrey Thompson, MD, CEO, Gundersen Health System, Gary Cohen, President, HCWH, and Robin Guenther, Principal, Perkins+Will at the National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care for an important panel discussion - Workshop C25 | Tuesday, December 9 from 1:30 p.m. They are improving environmental performance, reducing costs and engaging staff and communities through conserving energy, reducing waste, and purchasing environmentally preferable supplies and healthier foods. Pioneering health systems are implementing exciting new innovations to help achieve their triple aim. Now is the time to make environmental sustainability part of your quality improvement work – does your facility have a green team or a sustainability lead? Get together and see how quality and sustainability teams can link up for greater value. Environmental Sustainability is a quality improvement process – one program at a time. Why? Because, like any other successful initiative, it requires team work, data, engaged leadership and momentum – and that’s what what the quality movement is all about. They need the quality community to take on sustainability as a quality imperative. They are measuring the impact of Engaged Leadership, Healthy Food, Lean Energy, Less Waste, Safer Chemicals and Smarter Purchasing. They are using data to capture environmental improvements in health care. They modeled their initiative after the success of the 100,000 lives campaign. The Healthier Hospitals Initiative is driving change in the sector and they took lessons from the Institute for Health Care Improvement. Moving from the single aim of better patient care to the triple aim of better care, better population health, and lower costs, sustainability is key. I now see it as demonstrating health care’s leadership in wellness, prevention and fiscal responsibility. Now I understand that an investment in the planet is an investment in staff, in the building infrastructure and in the communities we serve. I see that we can’t have healthy people on a sick planet. I didn't consider the amount of waste, energy and water that hospitals used – that chemicals of concern are found in medical products and furniture – that the food system is one of the biggest contributors to global greenhouse gas emissions. I wasn't aware of the significant impact that the health care sector has on the environment – and on quality care. Years ago when I was a hospital CEO, I didn't have sustainability on my radar screen. Now is the time to make environmental sustainability part of your quality improvement work. Blog by Blair Sadler, Esq., Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement
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