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Medication
Safety Component — Annual Hospital Survey
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Instructions for this form are available
at:
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Page
0
of 2
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*required
for saving
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Tracking
#:
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Facility
ID:
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*Survey
Year:
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Section
1. Facility Characteristics
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*Ownership
(check one):
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□ For
profit
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□
Not
for profit, including church
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□ Government
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□ Military
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□
Veterans
Affairs
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□ Physician
owned
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If
facility is a Hospital:
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*Number
of patient days: _________
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*Number
of admissions: __________
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For
any Hospital:
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*Is
your hospital a teaching hospital for physicians and/or
physicians-in-training or nursing students?
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□
Yes
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□ No
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If
Yes, what type:
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Major
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Graduate
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□ Undergraduate
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*Number
of beds set up and staffed in the following location types (as
defined by NHSN):
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a.
ICU (including adult, pediatric, and neonatal levels II/III and
III):
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__________________________
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b.
All other inpatient locations:
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__________________________
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*Select
the module(s) for which your facility currently reports or
intends to report data:
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□ Glycemic
Control Module
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Assurance
of Confidentiality: The voluntarily provided information
obtained in this surveillance system that would permit identification
of any individual or institution is collected with a guarantee that
it will be held in strict confidence, will be used only for the
purposes stated, and will not otherwise be disclosed or released
without the consent of the individual, or the institution in
accordance with Sections 304, 306 and 308(d) of the Public Health
Service Act (42 USC 242b, 242k, and 242m(d)). CDC
(57.701)
Rev (13.0,
December 2024)
Public
reporting burden of this collection of information is estimated to
average 180
minutes per response, including the time for reviewing instructions,
searching existing data sources, gathering, and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently
valid OMB control number. Send comments regarding this burden
estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information,
including suggestions for reducing this burden to CDC, Reports
Clearance Officer, 1600 Clifton Rd., MS H21-8, Atlanta, GA 30333,
ATTN: PRA (0920-0666).
Section
2. Glycemic Control
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Responses
to questions in Section 2 are required if “Glycemic Control
Module” is checked in Section 1. If unchecked, skip Section
2.
Section
2a. Glycemic Control Program
*Does
your facility provide leadership support and clinical resources
specifically for inpatient glycemic control quality improvement
or safety program activities as demonstrated by: (Check all that
apply.)
Special
team(s) dedicated to assisting in the management of inpatients
with diabetes
Senior
executive who serves as a point of contact or “champion”
to help ensure the glycemic control program has resources and
support to accomplish its mission
Clinician
(physician, nurse, or pharmacist) leader with dedicated time to
oversee development and implementation of glycemic control
improvement interventions
Allocation
of dedicated resources to support glycemic control activities
Our
facility has other leadership support or clinical resources to
address inpatient glycemic control practices, describe:
_________________
Currently,
our facility does not have leadership support or clinical
resources specifically to address inpatient glycemic control as
part of our patient safety and quality improvement activities
Section
2b. Glycemic Control Practices†
*Does
your facility promote inpatient glycemic control practices as
part of your patient safety and quality improvement activities
as demonstrated by: (Check all that apply.)
Offering
provider education on glycemic control and best-practices for
managing diabetic patients at least annually
Offering
prescriber (e.g., physician, nurse practitioner) education
and/or training on glycemic control and best-practices for
managing patients with diabetes at least annually
Offering
nurse education and/or training on glycemic control and
best-practices for managing patients with diabetes at least
annually
Offering
pharmacy education and/or training on glycemic control and
best-practices for managing patients with diabetes at least
annually
Using
facility communication to raise awareness about inpatient
glycemic control activities via email, newsletters, events, or
other avenues (e.g., grand rounds)
Offering
patient education
Active
surveillance for glucose control metrics, such as
hypoglycemia/hyperglycemia events or other facilitated relay of
clinical data to providers
Insulin
orders/protocols that are standardized across units or the
facility
Our
facility uses other approaches to promote inpatient glycemic
control practices, please describe :
______________________________
Currently,
our facility does not have specific activities to promote
inpatient glycemic control practices
Section
2c. Insulin and Hypoglycemia/Hyperglycemia Management Practices‡
*Does
your facility use the following strategies to implement
inpatient glycemic control and insulin management practices?
(Check all that apply.)
9a.
If this response is selected, please indicate how this protocol
is implemented. (Check one.)
The
insulin use protocol is available for use, but not embedded
into any standardized (e.g., admission) order sets
The
insulin use protocol is integrated into standardized (e.g.,
admission) order sets; however, providers must “opt in”
The
insulin use protocol is integrated into standardized (e.g.,
admission) order sets that requires providers to “opt
out”
9b.
If this response is selected, please indicate where these
protocols are used. (Check one.)
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used only in
critical care units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used in select
medical or surgical units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used in all
inpatient units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used elsewhere;
please indicate:___________
9c.
If this response is selected, please indicate where these
protocols are used. (Check one.)
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used only in
critical care units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used in select
medical or surgical units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used in all
inpatient units
Nurse-driven
glycemic control monitoring protocols are used elsewhere;
please indicate:___________
9d.
If this response is selected. Please indicate where these
protocols are used. (Check one.)
Coordinating
glycemic control with nutrition is done only in critical care
units
Coordinating
glycemic control with nutrition is done in select medical or
surgical units
Coordinating
glycemic control with nutrition is done in all inpatient units
Coordinating
glycemic control with nutrition is done elsewhere; please
indicate:___________________
Our
facility uses a different strategy to implement inpatient
glycemic control practices, please describe: ________________
Currently,
our facility does not have any standardized protocols to support
implementation of inpatient glycemic control practices
*Does
your facility use the following approaches to monitor and report
inpatient glycemic control and insulin management practices?
(Check all that apply.)
Our
facility monitors the use of standardized protocols for insulin
use and hyperglycemia management for inpatients with diabetes
Our
facility performs active surveillance for hypoglycemia events on
a daily basis to allow real-time correction of insulin use /
diabetes management
Our
facility performs active surveillance for hyperglycemia events
on a daily basis to allow real-time correction of insulin use /
diabetes management
Our
facility performs retrospective review of hypoglycemia /
hyperglycemia events on a regular (monthly or quarterly) basis
to identify opportunities to improve insulin use / diabetes
management
Our
facility reports unit-level results of glycemic control event
monitoring
Our
facility shares feedback to providers on the glycemic control of
their inpatients with diabetes
Our
facility uses a different approach to monitor inpatient glycemic
control and insulin management practices, please describe:
________________
Currently,
our facility does not monitor inpatient glycemic control and
insulin management practices
Section
2d. Glycemic Control Software Tools & Additional Information
*Does
your facility have an EHR-based glycemic control
(“glucometrics”) software or tool to support a
glycemic control quality program or activities? (Check one.)
*Approximately
what percentage of your inpatient population with diabetes have
a continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device that is being used
in the course of inpatient care: (Check one.)
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†
Adapted
from Society for Hospital Medicine. The Glycemic Control
Implementation Guide. 2nd
ed. Ed. Maynard G, Berg K, Kulasa K, O’Malley C, Rogers KM.
Available at:
https://www.hospitalmedicine.org/globalassets/clinical-topics/clinical-pdf/gcmi-guide-m4.pdf.
‡Adapted
from the University of California, San Diego Center for
Innovation and Improvement Science, with permission from Greg
Maynard, MD, MSc
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File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Jones, Karen (CDC/DDID/NCEZID/DHQP) (CTR) |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2025-05-21 |