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The 15-minute Geriatric Visit. David B. Reuben, MD David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. Overview of Next 55 Minutes. General background Individual approaches Approach to redesigning practice to manage geriatric conditions (eg, falls, incontinence) An example of how this might work
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The 15-minute Geriatric Visit David B. Reuben, MD David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
Overview of Next 55 Minutes • General background • Individual approaches • Approach to redesigning practice to manage geriatric conditions (eg, falls, incontinence) • An example of how this might work • Costs of implementing change
Slides and Supporting Materials http://www.geronet.ucla.edu/centers/acove/index.htm What’s inside • Slides and reprints • Office forms • Physician education • Patient education
Ground rules (assumptions) • Follow-up visit cannot take more than 15 minutes • General medical care cannot be compromised • No electronic medical record • Office staff can provide some help
Goal: comprehensive care of older personsThe problem: too much to do, too little time • Aggravating factors: two separate, sometimes competing agendas -the patient’s and the physician’s • Inadequate resources - office staff and other professionals • Business as usual
Background • Assessing Care of the Vulnerable Elderly (ACOVE) project • identified vulnerable elders, • created a a set of quality indicators based on literature review and expert panel for 22 conditions that affect older persons • examined the process of care (by chart review and structured interview) for each condition
Background-II • ACOVE findings • Overall, 54% of QIs met • High numbers of QIs met for common diseases in older persons (e.g., hypertension, diabetes) • Low numbers ( 29-41%) of QIs met for geriatrics conditions (e.g., urinary incontinence)
Background-III • Previous research has identified barriers to effective management of geriatric conditions • Inadequate case recognition • Lack of physician knowledge • Poor patient adherence to treatment plan • Inadequate follow-up • Lack of time and resources to address issues
Individual Approaches • Advantages • One person can initiate • Doesn’t take much time to get going • Can borrow or adapt existing instruments • Disadvantage: • Only a partial step
Strategies for Saving Time in Clinical Practice 1) Delegate data collection
Physician-Patient Encounter $$$$ Out-of-Office Preparation Office Visit $$ $ • Reduce time but increase effectiveness/efficiency of the inner circle • Always push to outermost possible circle whenever possible
Pre-visit Questionnaire 1. Past medical history- Current medications- Drug allergies- Surgical & medical hospitalization- Social history (habits, sociodemographics)- Preventive services, including lifestyle 2. Home safety checklist 3. Advance Directives
Pre-Visit Questionnaire • Specific questions on: • Vision • Hearing • Dentition • Falls • Urinary incontinence • Nutrition • Depressive symptoms • Functional status
Obstacles to Delegating Screening/Case-finding to Office Staff • Cost • Training • Capability of acting on results
Strategies for Saving Time in Clinical Practice • ) Delegate data collection • ) Minimize data recording time • Dictation • Templates • Word processing programs • Computerized medical records
Strategies for Savings Time in Clinical Practice • ) Delegate data collection • ) Minimize data recording time • ) Keep information needed for decision- making readily available • Pocket guides • PDA programs • Useful books • Computer retrieval system
Strategies for Savings Time in Clinical Practice • ) Delegate data collection • ) Minimize data recording time • ) Keep information needed for decision- making readily available • ) Delegate plan execution • Network of health professionals • Health educators
The Bottom Line • Individual approaches: • can improve efficiency in recognizing geriatric problems • may not do much for managing detected conditions • are a start in the right direction
The Next Step • To improve care, change must focus on three key levels • patient • provider • practice • Does not need to be expensive • Should follow the Chronic Care Model
Redesigning Care for Chronic Geriatric Conditions • Fundamentally changes the office visit • Consistent with Chronic Care Model • Draws upon many resources (office, community, patients, families) • Can address both recognition and management • Principles can be adapted to many conditions
Redesigning Care for Chronic Geriatric Conditions-II • Identify a target population (e.g.,outpatients 75+ years) • Case-finding for untreated conditions • urinary incontinence • falls • Standardized multi-component intervention
Multi-component Intervention-I • Efficient collection of condition-specific clinical data, including information collected by non-physicians and automatic orders for simple procedures • Medical record prompts to encourage performance of essential care processes
Multi-component Intervention-II • Patient education materials and active patient role in follow-up • Physician decision support and education
The ACOVE-2 Intervention • Recently implemented in two group practices in California • Real doctors, real patients • Evaluated as part of a clinical trial
Case Finding • Brief screening questions to patient or proxy to identify bothersome incontinence, cognitive impairment/dementia,and falls or fear of falling • Questions administered by office staff (in person or by telephone) prior to visit • Patient (or proxy) responses are given to provider at clinic appointment
Case-finding Questions-I • Bothersome incontinence • Had a problem with losing your urine that is bothersome enough that youwould like to know more about how it could be treated
Case-finding Questions-II • Memory loss • 3-item recall • Recently had more trouble than in the past with memory for day-to-day happenings around the house, such as remembering where he/she put things, recalling recent events, forgetting what you told him/her, or what he/she told you, remembering plans, appointments or phone calls? (surrogate)
Case-finding Questions-III • Falls or fear of falling • Fallen 2 or more times? • Fallen 1 time and hurt yourself or needed to see a doctor because of the fall? • Been afraid that you would fall because of balance or walking problems?
Initiating the Intervention • If case-finding is positive, condition-specific materials are attached to the chart • Structured visit note (or sticker) • Visit follow-up sheet • Physician can also initiate the intervention • If multiple conditions are triggered, may need to schedule a “planned” visit
Structured Visit Note (or sticker) • History items and simple procedures (completed by the intake office staff) • More detailed historical and exam elements, and ordering diagnostic tests (completed by physician) • Impression and plan (completed by physician)
Patient educational materials • Assembled for each condition • Include community resources • Readily available to the clinician to facilitate treatment • Include follow-up visit sheet
Visit follow-up sheet • Condition-specific • Prompts the patient to: • monitor the response to treatment • report problems or complications (including inability to adhere to the recommended treatment) to the clinician • Patients are encouraged to bring follow-up sheet to appointment to stimulate discussion
Decision Support-Physician Education • Small group educational sessions aimed at practical approaches to each of the four conditions within the context of a busy practice (1 initial, 1 follow-up) • Written decision support briefs that describe the management of the condition (http://www.geriatricsatyourfingertips.org/) and community resources to help in management
Flexibility • Intervention group practices must address all conditions using all components of the intervention • Flexibility in how the components are administered and the content of components • Decide how much of the intervention is performed by office staff rather than physicians • Can modify content and supporting materials
Quality Scores after Interventionfor Dementia, Falls & Incontinence * p<0.001 for difference in QIs passed between I and C groups.
Patient Report of Receipt of Educational Material: Incontinence
Change in Physician Knowledge about Dementia, Falls and Incontinence* *21-item knowledge test on geriatric care of falls, dementia and incontinence. † p=0.05 for difference comparing Intervention and Control groups.
Physician Perceptions:Relevance, Confidence and Frustration *5-point scales, 1=Not at all, 5=Extremely. † p<0.05 comparing difference between I and C.
Summary of main findings • Screening can identify a large number of older patients with falls/gait impairment and incontinence. • A practice-based, low tech intervention can improve care, though not satisfaction, for falls and incontinence among older, community-dwelling patients. • The intervention’s effectiveness was only moderately effective.
Why wasn’t ACOVE-2 more effective? • Failure to delegate data collection? • Not enough recognition of inadequate practices with subsequent modification? • Not enough patient empowerment? • Physician priorities? • Obstacles to providing quality care?
Costs of Mounting this Practice Change • Start-up ($3,330 per 10 physician practice) • establishing a screening mechanism • customizing forms • identifying condition-specific local community-based resources • training physicians and office staff • installing clinic materials
Costs-II • Maintenance • time spent administering screens (3 minutes) • additional staff time needed for the historical and examination components that are delegated to office staff (3 minutes per positive screen), • costs of stocking and updating the forms