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A study of Information Management in the Patient Surgical Pathway in NHSScotland

A study of Information Management in the Patient Surgical Pathway in NHSScotland. Dr. Matt-Mouley Bouamrane Research Fellow, Health Informatics, College of Medicine, Veterinary & Life Sciences University of Glasgow. Research Aim. AIM:

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A study of Information Management in the Patient Surgical Pathway in NHSScotland

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  1. A study of Information Management in the Patient Surgical Pathway in NHSScotland Dr. Matt-Mouley Bouamrane Research Fellow, Health Informatics, College of Medicine, Veterinary & Life Sciences University of Glasgow

  2. Research Aim • AIM: • to examine information management processes in the patient surgical pathway in NHSScotland to identify & report: • examples of good practice • areas for quality improvement / services re-design • factors which promote (or not) successful implementations Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  3. About NHSScotland • Responsibility for the National Health Service of Scotland (NHSScotland) is devolved to the Scottish Government • NHSScotland is organised in • 14 regional NHS Boards. • Health-boards… • - oversee the provision of primary and secondary health-care services in the region • - have the responsibility to implement national policies at the local level. Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  4. The eHealth Programme • The eHealth Directorate: • - is part of the Scottish Government Health Department • - its mission is to define a national eHealth strategy • oversees the delivery of the eHealth programme. • The eHealth programmeaims to support: • - improvements of the ICT infrastructure and systems used throughout NHSScotland for information and records management, • - skills development and change processes, required for integrated healthcare delivery. Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  5. Materials & Methods • Mixed-Methods approach: • Systematic review of preoperative processes in elective surgery • Semi-structured interviews with stakeholders (Feb 2011-January 2013): • 25 General Practitioners (GPs) across 9 health-boards • 45 members of the preoperative multi-disciplinary team (MDT) in all 14 health-boards • 4 interviews with members of the eHealth patient programme, SCI Gateway (electronic referral) architect and NHS IT staff • 2 focus groups with GPs and EPR / preoperative MDT Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  6. Materials & Methods • Data Analysis: • Process-mapping to model care pathways • Qualitative analysis using DeLone & McLean’s model of Information Systems Quality as thematic framework • Normalisation Process Theory (NPT, May et al., 2009) to interpret study findings • NPT is concerned with: • implementation (social organisation of work) • embedding (making practices routine elements of work) • integration (sustaining embedded practices in their social contexts) Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  7. Results: Primary Care EMR - I • A majority of primary care practices used until recently, an Electronic Medical Records (EMR) system called GPASS (General Practice Administration System for Scotland) • initially developed in the mid-80’s • provided free of charge by the NHS National Services Scotland Quality Outcomes Framework (QOF): • General Medical Services contract introduced in April 2004 • - QOF measures achievement against a range of indicators. Additional payments to each practice are calculated based on performance in relation to these targets. • - QOF provides GPs with defined financial incentives to record all healthcare episodes as accurately as possible Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  8. Results: Primary Care EMR - II • Policy Context / eHealth strategy (2008-2011): • All GP practices had to migrate from GPASS to 2 alternative accredited commercial systems (EMISTM & Vision/INPSTM) by March 2012. • The procurement of primary care EMRs is now delegated to the 14 territorial NHS boards In our sample: • - a majority of users (n=20/25, 80%) had switched to a new system within the last 6 years, • - including n=11 (44%) who had only switched to new systems within the last 2 years. Background & Motivation Research Method & Data Collected Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  9. Results: Primary Care EMR - III • Perceived benefits of systems: • adequate support for information access and searching • technology is up to date, and superior to previous systems • EMR is flexible and provides adequate work-flow support • information added value (key-work searches, information filtering, clinical summaries, classification) • - good support for record-keeping and performance monitoring Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  10. Results: Primary Care EMR - III • Perceived dis-benefits of systems: • - EMR is administratively cumbersome • - electronic prescribing functionalities are not optimum • - information navigation issues and unnecessary steps (e.g. multiple clicks) • insufficient training and understanding of the system functionalities (e.g. alerts and decision support) To summarise… Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  11. Primary Care - eReferral • Policy Context: Electronic Referral management was identified as a critical enabler of the 18 weeks ‘Referral-To-Treatment’ target. • defined as a key strategic eHealth policy priority under the NHS HEAT (Health, Efficiency, Access and Treatment) target programme. - health-boards have the responsibility to ensure that primary care systems are able to send referrals via the national eReferral system (SCI Gateway) and that secondary care services are capable of receiving and triaging electronic referrals (eTriage). • Level of adoption: in January 2011, the rate of electronic referrals across Scotland was estimated to be 98.8% and the electronic management of referrals was 81.4% Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  12. Primary Care - eReferral • SCI Gateway, the national eReferral system • is designed to handle referrals directly from patient records held in GP systems and transferring these to secondary care systems • protocol-driven system • XML electronic document, based on standard issued by the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  13. Primary Care - eReferral Information Management in Pre-Operative Clinics Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  14. Primary Care - eReferral Key Benefits: - increased use of standard and guidelines during the referral, - automated data entry - immediate transfer of the referral request - good usability - clinical advice and decision support functionalities • Disbenefits: • administratively cumbersome or slow • - information presentation and visualisation not always adequate • - more complex or time consuming than previous paper-based referrals • - lack of coherence across referral processes • - lack of feed-back on referrals Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  15. Primary Care - Discharge • Almost all GPs reported a substantial variability in the quality of discharge information: • - some letters still handwritten with GPs receiving an illegible carbon copy • …not unusual for GPs to have to phone hospitals to receive confirmation of the information contained in the discharge letter • Delays could also be significant: • - an immediate discharge letter is handed directly to the patient - and it is not unusual for patients to return home after surgery without informing their GPs • - GPs may not know that the patients have had surgery at all until several months later Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  16. Secondary Care – Preoperative Assessment Three health-boards have implemented electronic preoperative information systems: 1- NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde (GGC) have implemented a preoperative electronic document (eForm) with the support of the electronic patient record (EPR) programme 2- NHS Dumfries & Galloway have developed an in-house preoperative electronic form 3- NHS Tayside are using a hybrid system: paper-based integrated care pathway documents are scanned and stored electronically. Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  17. NHS GCC Preoperative eForm Rationalisation of preoperative clinics and standardisation of preoperative processes were undertaken as part of the Planned Care Improvement Programme (PCIP, 2006-2008) eForm was developed in 2008/2009 Level of use: In January 2013, more than 90,000 preoperative assessments were reported completed via the electronic portal since its launch in 2009. Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  18. NHS GCC Preoperative eForm • The system has embedded clinical guidelines and decision support functionalities agreed across the health-board during the PCIP consultation • Main perceived benefits: • Standardisation of preoperative processes (and documentation across the health-board • - enable nurses to complete a preoperative assessment and clinical consultants to access the document remotely from multiple sites. • - This is a substantial improvement as patients around the health-board may have their assessment and surgery at different hospitals, depending on surgical specialties and consultants’ operating lists. Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  19. Electronic Preoperative Document • Overall, staff at these 3 health-boards have reported improvements in clinical processes, particularly in terms of information-sharing among the MDT • no inconvenience to patients during the consultation were reported • …however, potential clinical benefits for patients have not been evaluated to date. • There is an overall lack of evaluation of service effectiveness of preoperative clinics across Scotland. Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  20. Summary of findings - I • There have been significant improvement in streamlining information management processes in NHSScotland in recent years • The use of electronic medical records in primary care is now universal • The use of electronic referrals is also almost universal • The NHS GCC electronic portal is an iterative step towards a virtual electronic patient record, aggregating information from heterogeneous data repositories and systems • a combination of policy, setting targets, adequate resources and sustained engagement with stakeholders have been key factors in facilitating successful implementations Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  21. Summary of findings - II • Key areas for quality improvement include: • Electronic discharge: could provide improvement in discharge processes across all issues identified (variability, legibility, delays) but this would require major service redesign in hospitals. • Greater communication and coordination of processes across primary care and secondary care are still required to develop a fully integrated surgical care pathway in NHSScotland • The routine use of ICT with preoperative clinics has the potential to improve the reporting of surgical outcomes in NHSScotland, but this has not been realised yet. Information Management in Primary Care Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  22. Acknowledgment This research was funded through a Postdoctoral Training Fellowship (PDF/09/09) from the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health and Social Care Directorates. Information Management in Primary Care Thank You Key Lessons Learned & Areas for Improvement

  23. References • Bouamrane, M.M., Mair, F.. A study of general practitioners’ perspectives on electronic medical records systems in NHSScotland. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 2013;13(58). • Bouamrane, M.-M.; Gallacher, K.; Marlborough, H.; Jani, B. & Mair, F. S. Developing and supporting Evidence-based Processes of Preoperative Assessment Poster Proceedings of Evidence 2010, BMA House, Nov. 2010, London, U.K., 2010 • Bouamrane, M.M., McGee-Lennon, M., Brewster, S., Mair, F. Using process-mapping to design integrated health information management systems. In Proceedings of the 24th International Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems (CBMS), 2011. 1–6. • Bouamrane, M.-M.; Macdonald, C.; Ounis, I. & Mair, F. S. Protocol-driven Searches for Medical & Health-Sciences Systematic Reviews Proceedings of the 3rd Conference on Theory of Information Retrieval, ICTIR'11, Bertinoro, Italy. Advances in Information Retrieval Theory, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, LNCS Volume 6931, Springer 2011, pp 188-200, 2011 • Bouamrane, M.M., Tao, C., Mair, F.S. Managing complexity in pre-operative information management systems Proceedings of Managing Interoperability and Complexity in Health Systems, MIXHS'11, 20th ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, CIKM 2011, Glasgow, United Kingdom, October 24-28, 2011, ACM, 2011 • Bouamrane, M.M., Osbourne, J., Mair, F.. Understanding the implementation and integration of remote tele-health services; an overview of normalization process theory. In: Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare (PervasiveHealth), 2011 5th International Conference on. 2011:300 –307.

  24. References • Bouamrane, M.M., Tao, C., Mair, F.S. An Overview of Electronic Health Information Management Systems Quality Assessment. In: Proceedings of Managing Interoperability and compleXity in Health Systems, MIXHS’2012, 21st ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, CIKM 2012, Oct. 29 2012, Maui, USA. 2012. • Bouamrane, M.-M. & Mair, F. An overview of electronic health systems development and integration in Scotland Proceedings of Managing Interoperability and Complexity in Health Systems, MIXHS'11, 20th ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, CIKM 2011, Glasgow, United Kingdom, October 24-28, 2011, ACM, 2011, 59-62

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