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Your Background?. PhysiciansNP or PA providersAdministratorsNursing staffQuality improvement facilitatorsIT staffVendors. 2. My Background. 5/20/2012. Sammamish Diabetes and Lipid Clinic, PLLC. 3. . Family Practice, started solo from scratch in 1983 after residency in a semi-rural Seattle sub
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1. Improving Quality Improvement with an EHR Working Smarter, not Harder to Provide Better Care
TEPR+ 2009
Donald T. Stewart, MD FAAFP
DonS@SammamishDiabetesAndLipid.Org
2. Your Background? Physicians
NP or PA providers
Administrators
Nursing staff
Quality improvement facilitators
IT staff
Vendors
2
3. My Background 5/21/2012 Sammamish Diabetes and Lipid Clinic, PLLC 3
4. My Background Participant in Practice Partner Research Network since 2003
Participant in Washington State Diabetes Collaborative 2006-2007
NCQA Recognized Diabetes Physician
Solo in a Micropractice since July 2007 focusing on primary care for patients with diabetes and lipid disorders
5/21/2012 Sammamish Diabetes and Lipid Clinic, PLLC 4
9. What is Quality Improvement? The Institute for Healthcare Improvement http://www.ihi.org
provides a tremendous resource for these issues
10. Model for Improvement - 3 Questions(developed by Associates in Process Improvement) What are we trying to accomplish?
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What changes can we make that will result in improvement? Setting Aims
Time specific, defined population, measurable
Establishing Measures
Quantitative measures of things that matter
Selecting Changes
Which changes will actually lead to the improvement we desire?
11. Plan-Do-Study-Act(W. Edwards Deming) Testing Changes
The PDSA cycle is a description of the process of testing and implementing changes, assessing the results, and then acting upon them.
12. Traditional GoalsWhat is the matter? Process goals
Patients seen on time
All patients have vital signs
Medication Lists reviewed every visit
Outcome goals
BP < 130/80
HgbA1c < 7.0
13. Patient-Centered Goals: What Matters to the Patient? “I receive exactly the care I want and need exactly when and how I want and need it.”
Only 25% of adult Americans strongly agree
Only 12% of low-income Americans strongly agree
Respondents are aged 19-69 years, Sept 2005 – April 2006. From HowsYourHealth.org
14. Patient-Centered Goals:What Matters to the Patient When patients strongly agree that
“I receive exactly the care I want and need exactly when and how I want and need it.”
They have these attributes of care:
15. Attributes of Carein Satisfied Patients I have one person I think of as my personal doctor or nurse. Yes: 95% No: 60%
It is very easy for me to get medical care when I need it . Yes: 85% No: 10%
Most of the time, when I visit my doctor’s office, it is well-organized, efficient, and does not waste my time. Yes: 80% No: 20%
The information given to me about health problems is very good. Yes: 80% No: 25%
I am confident that I can manage and control most of my health problems. Yes: 75% No: 15%
17. Patient-Centered, Collaborative Care Patient-centered vs doctor-centered care: the essence of professionalism is putting the patient’s (not the doctor’s) needs at the center.
Collaborative care: when members of the health-care team work with patients to provide professional, often “evidence-based” support, to address problems that matter to the patient, resulting in “activated patients” who have the tools and confidence to deal effectively with their problems.
19. How does this relate to technology? No practice can afford to achieve high levels of quality care within the traditional, non-technological model of medical care.
20. Daily Time Required for Quality 2500 patient panel
Grade A & B Preventive Services: 7.4 hours
Chronic Disease Management: 10.2 hours
Acute Care: 4.6 hours
Total time/day: 22.2 hours
Optimal Panel Size for an 8-hour work day:
2500*8/22.2 = 901 patients
22. How can Technology Help? Technology can improve efficiencies in a medical practice, and can reduce overhead expenses, but we need to go “outside the box” for a quantum leap in progress
23. The Conundrums Not enough PCPs in the pipeline to allow for one provider for every 901 patients
No payment structures available to pay for quality at a rate that incentivizes it
Patients not motivated to get preventive services
Infrastructure that is necessary, without technology, is quite unaffordable
24. Technological Aids For Efficiency Electronic Health Records
Once implemented, increase office efficiency and decrease overhead costs
Secure Patient Portals
Ideally built into the EHR, for communication and education
Registries (best if included in EHR)
Track patients with targeted illnesses and aid population management
Automated Patient Recall and Reminders
To increase the probability that patients will follow-up
E-prescribing
Reduce errors, automate refills, automatically document
25. Technological Aids For Efficiency Are all expensive, all require provider and staff resources, and are all valuable.
But, they do not solve the problem of how to provide care that matters to the patient in a cost-effective way.
We need use technology to involve the patients themselves in the process
26. Automated History Taking Instant Medical History:
a commercial software which integrates with most if not all EMRs, and which allows the patient to enter the history, ideally before the visit from home, in an unhurried way. It can also be run from a kiosk in the reception area.
IMH can automatically run research-validated screenings on the patient triggered by the answers given to the questions it asks.
33. Advantages of Instant Medical History Low cost
High levels of patient satisfaction
More compulsive and thorough than most providers have the time to be
Collects not only the history, but also what matters to the patient using validated tools
No staff time or provider time necessary – all the work is done by the patient
34. Now, imagine a way to provide: patients with the information they want in real time
providers with patient data that matters to the patient summarized for their care
stratified in behaviorally sophisticated categories (e.g. confidence)
cumulated patient-centered data to improve all patient care and your office practice processes
35. Imagine the patient doing that for you and also loading a simple registry for you to sort your patients based on: Demographics: name, age group, gender, financial status
What matters: pain, emotion, confidence, meds that make the patients ill, more than one MD,
What is the matter: high BP, diabetes, angina, CHF, history of stroke, respiratory disease, last BP, last cholesterol if 50+, last sugar if diabetes
Prevention: mammogram, bowel cancer screening, Pneumovax
36. HowsYourHealth.org 20+ Years of research/testing pedigree
Dartmouth Medical School
(John Wasson MD)
37. HowsYourHealth.org Free for patients; nominal charge for clinicians when customized
Collects information on general health status but also information on what matters to the patient using validated tools
Perhaps the best over-all measure of Quality of Care yet developed
No staff time or provider time necessary – all the work is done by the patient
41. Action Form Generated for each individual patient providing summary of issues that matter to the patient as well as issues that should be addressed
44. Population Summary Report
46. Advantages of HowsYourHealth.org Patient assessment and feedback system
Unmask the true patient needs and agenda that might undercut your best efforts
Automatically tailors information to your patient’s needs and chronic conditions
Additional versions for hospitalized and very sick/frail patients
Meets or supports many requirements for CMS/NCQA Medical Home designation
47. Advantages of HowsYourHealth.org Patient Portal for Best Information, Links, Problem-Solving and Shared Decision-Making
Non-commercial, well-tested tools and information that saves you time while you better inform your patients
Behaviorally Sophisticated Methods to Improve Patient Outcomes
Portable Personal Health Record for Your Patients and Your Records
Minimize risks and frustrations of fragmented information
48. Advantages of HowsYourHealth.org Patient Registry that Your Patients Complete for You
With one click list your patients/addresses by condition, abnormal lab, functional limit, screening not done
Sort and contact patients by behaviorally useful categories such as lack of confidence with self management
self management
49. Advantages of HowsYourHealth.org Practice Improvement System that Instantly and Automatically Gives You Performance Data
Patient experiences and bio-clinical measures offered with several national standards
Customization options so that HowsYourHealth fits what you and your patients need
Add questions, change reports, import format for Electronic Health Record
Patient Pre-Visit Planner and “Reviewer of Systems” for Your Patients and Payer
Makes an office visit more efficient and your billing more complete
50. Model for Improvement :a new look What are we trying to accomplish?
How will we know that a change is an improvement?
What changes can we make that will result in improvement? Setting Aims
Based on What Matters to the Patients
Establishing Measures
Through web-based assessments like Hows YourHealth? and IMH
Selecting Changes
PDSA cycles with prompts in EHR, web portals and even visit scheduling.
51. Questions? 5/21/2012 51 Sammamish Diabetes and Lipid Clinic, PLLC