Advance planning and swift action kept Duke ahead of national peanut recall
When peanut products were first linked to a nationwide
salmonella outbreak in January 2009, the logistical implications for
protecting patient safety immediately registered on the radar
of Brooke Berson, director of clinical resource management at
Duke University Health System.
"At first the recall involved a few brands, but then it
became apparent that this was going to be ongoing and massive
in scope," she says.
The numbers mentioned on the evening news were striking:
Nationally, five people had died and more than 400 people had
become sick with salmonella poisoning after eating food
containing contaminated peanuts from one Georgia plant. Some
430 products had been recalled, and the list was growing every
day.
Berson learned of the contamination and subsequent recall
through the Risk and Safety Management Alert System (RASMAS),
an online subscription-based clearinghouse for product alerts
and recalls. Duke uses RASMAS to oversee updates in 15
different categories relevant to a health care institution,
from lab supplies and prosthetic limbs to the toys found in
pediatrics units and the food served in hospitals.
While other health care systems have used RASMAS with mixed
results, Duke took the extra step of adding an inventory
control process to apply the recalls with accuracy and
expediency. The action proved prescient during other headlining
recalls -- for
human tissue in 2006 and
Heparin in 2008.
"In the previous recalls -- and now the recall for the
peanut products -- RASMAS and the process Duke has developed
around our inventory have proven to be an invaluable resource
in protecting our patients' safety," says Michael Cuffe, MD,
vice president for medical affairs.
With the newest alert from RASMAS, Food Services immediately
pulled all recalled peanut items from cafeteria lines and
pantry shelves throughout the health system. And as more brands
and more food products joined the FDA's recall list on a daily
basis, Berson and her team cast an even wider net to protect
patient safety by alerting the Senior Recall & Response
Team (SRRT), which Cuffe leads.
"The SRRT is made up of leaders at Duke who respond to
emergent issues as they impact patient care, safety, or staff
safety or process," says Berson. "With the growing
peanut-product recalls, the SRRT requested that vending
machines and even our gift shops be checked for affected
food."
Erring on the side of caution and in anticipation that some
patients and family members may have questions about the extent
of the recall, most peanut-containing items were removed -- and
remain out of the health system today.
"We had to hit the balance between being restrictive enough
to weed out the recalled items, but not so overcautious that
definitively safe items were eliminated," she says.
Three months since the first recall alert, the FDA database
has ballooned to nearly 4,000 products in 18 categories
representing pre-cut produce, trail mix, ice cream, cereal, and
almost every grocery aisle in between.
Through RASMAS and other ongoing patient safety initiatives
at Duke, Berson and the SRRT remain watchful, making sure that
the threat of the peanut is one less thing for patients and
their families to worry about.
The graph below illustrates the dramatic decrease in the time it takes to close an alert at Duke. As of October 2008, it took fewer than five days to close an alert.