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Best Practices in EMS Overview. What is a best practiceWhy EMS needs best practicesThe theory of EMS DarwinismThe economy and best practicesBest practices dissected
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1. Best Practices inEmergency Medical Services Presented By:
Jonathan D. Washko, BS-EMSA, NREMT-P, EMD
Director – REMSA
AVP for CEMS Operations – North Shore/Long Island Jewish Health System
President – Washko & Associates, LLC
3. REMSA’s Military Support REMSA was a 2008 Recipient of the Freedom Award
Recently had 5 Medics on active duty in Afghanistan
Supported our troops in various ways
Keep REMSA Salary whole while on Active Duty
Provide 100% Benefits coverage while on Active Duty Including Family
Send along laptops, software & other needed items
Send monthly care packages to our employees Jon’s SlideJon’s Slide
4. What is a “Best Practice”Wikipedia defines it as… A Best Practice is the belief that there is a technique, method, process, activity, incentive or reward that is more effective at delivering a particular outcome than any other technique, method, process, etc. The idea is that with proper processes, checks, and testing, a desired outcome can be delivered with fewer problems and unforeseen complications. Best practices can also be defined as the most efficient (least amount of effort) and effective (best results) way of accomplishing a task, based on repeatable procedures that have proven themselves over time for large numbers of people.
5. Why EMS Needs “Best Practices” The Theory of EMS Darwinism
Service delivery model variations / inconsistencies
Lack of commonly accepted operational standards (like NFPA for Fire Service)
Mix of public / private / government ownership
Mix of for profit / non-profit models
Lack of standardized advanced managerial education platform
Industry has attempted to bridge educational gap with limited success
Success lies in sharing clinical & billing best practices but not operational ones
6. Why Best Practices? “As EMS providers, we invite the public to literally trust us with their lives. We advise the public that, during a medical emergency, they should rely upon our organization, and not any other. We even suggest that it is safer to count on us, than the resources of one’s own family and friends. We had better be right.
Regardless of actual performance, EMS organizations do not differ significantly in their claimed goals and values. Public and private, nearly all claim dedication to patient care. Efficient or not, most claim an intent to give the community its money’s worth. And whether the money comes from user fees or local tax sources, the claim is the same—the best patient care for the dollars available. It’s almost never true.
Our moral obligation to pursue clinical and response time improvement is widely accepted. But our related obligation to pursue economic efficiency is poorly understood. Many believe these are separate issues. They are not. Economic efficiency is nothing more than the ability to convert dollars into service. If we could do better with the dollars we have available, but we don’t, the responsibility must be ours. In EMS, that responsibility is enormous—it is impossible to waste dollars without also wasting lives.”
Jack L. Stout
7. The Theory of EMS Darwinism Darwinism / Evolutionary Theory
Isolated environments produce similar species that evolve in different ways from each other
Evolutionary adaptation to the environment occurs to ensure survival of the species
EMS has “evolved” under these principles
8. The Theory of EMS Darwinism EMS agencies are isolated from each other due to proprietary barriers created by varying system designs, ownership models and funding sources
Gives credence to the phrase “If you’ve seen one EMS system, you’ve seen one EMS system”
However, they are still of the same species…
Common operational denominators exist for every EMS system which provide the foundation for “Best Practices”
Acceptance of these “Best Practices” depends on your system design, necessity for change, culture and other factors
9. The Theory of EMS Darwinism
10. My industry “Best Practice”experience has been… Necessity may be the mother invention however…
…it also drives acceptance of the previously unacceptable
11. Current / Future Economic and Demographic Conditions If there ever has been a time where necessity will drive innovation, acceptance of the unacceptable and the merging of separately evolved species into one, it is now!
Shrinking public funding mechanisms, uncertain healthcare dollars and rising unemployment in the face of a large aging boomer generation will force industry innovation and change
Funding / service level / employment compensation tradeoff’s or service delivery model design changes…you decide (as may the current presidential administration)
12. Best Practices in EMS - Disclaimer Best practices mentioned in this presentation are based on my personal exposure / experience with numerous EMS systems across the US, Canada and other European nations
I know many other best practices beyond those mentioned in the presentation exist, I have just not had the privilege of seeing or learning about all of them as of yet
If you know of a best practice and would like to share it please feel free to do so anytime during the presentation
13. Best Practices in EMS
15. Best Practices in EMSDeployment Science Setting service reliability standards and then meeting them for emergency and non-emergency service
e.g. Life threatening emergencies responded to within 8 minutes 90% of the time
Measure response times ACCURATELY (no smoke and mirrors)
Fractile measurement approach not average
Call received in 9-1-1 center to on scene
16. Best Practices in EMSDeployment Science Using deployment methodologies that match supply and demand both temporally and geospatially
Production Model EMS / SSM / Peak Load Staffing
Station/post move-ups based on demand not geography
Realize that deployment methodology and response time service reliability are just as important as the medicine we provide
Life-saving treatment is worthless if it is not provided in time
Deployment methodology drives labor costs up or down which has a direct effect on the quality of medicine we can afford to provide given the current reimbursement mechanisms
17. Best Practices in EMS Deployment Science Technological edge
Live decision support tools for making resource deployment decisions in real-time
MARVLIS
SIREN
DECCAN
CAD vendor specific features
Balanced matching of service demand needs with human needs
Zoll Resource Planner
In-vehicle smart routing systems that use live or historical road network data to adjust routes and candidate rankings
19. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Vehicle design conducive to long-term, in ambulance shifts
DVD / entertainment systems
Larger front cabs to allow for reclining in front of unit
Field supervisors capable of on-site / on demand lost unit hour mitigation
Solve a variety of issues that would take an ambulance out of service or cause service inefficiency
Resupply of medical supplies, fixing of vehicle problems, availability of backup equipment, bariatric stretcher delivery
20. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Managerial Front
Recognition of “generational differences” and how to overcome them
Moving away from performance based compensation programs
Recognition that physical separation of employees from management leads to unions and/or poor employee / employer communications
Recognition that the best clinicians don’t necessarily make the best organizational leaders
21. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Managerial Front Continued…
Recognition that our leaders and managers need training in leading and managing people not just systems and processes
You don’t have had to grow up in it to lead it and manage it (especially if these things come naturally)
Recognize the importance of balancing internal promotional opportunities and the need for outside talent to stay fresh
22. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Recognition that 24 hour shifts in busy urban EMS systems are not conducive for safety or quality patient care
Appropriate for suburban / rural areas with high difficulty of coverage indexes or proper economics
Recognition that EMS is a 24x7 business and should be managed as such
Lessons from other public safety disciplines
FD / PD management systems
Integration of ICS into daily routines to improve EMS familiarity
FD is using this against many private EMS services
23. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Technological Edge
Online scheduling systems
Allow for online management of schedule, shift trades, PTO, OT pickup, etc.
Integration into CAD or other decision support tools
Zoll Crew Scheduler, eCore, ADP, Telestaff, eSchedule, Others
Employee communications
Twitter / Facebook VERY effective tool if managed and administrated properly (push based messaging vs pull)
Many ePCR / eScheduling / time and attendance systems allow for broadcast and individual messaging
Email systems may or may not be effective
Reader boards with “Flash & Pizzazz”
Office Live / SharePoint Server
24. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Affordable and simple situational awareness & interoperability systems
CAD companies solutions often lack or lag
New industry popping up to solve these issues
FleetEyes
GPSLogic
BCS
FirstWatch
25. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Recognition of the fact that our patients care about:
Timeliness
Customer Service
Look & Feel (Professionalism)
Ambulance (Ride, Cleanliness, Organization)
Quality Patient Care (Assumed)
Measurement & benchmarking of these quality markers (if you can’t measure it you can’t manage it)
MHR’s EMS Survey Team (Operational outcomes QI)
Traditional Clinical QI
26. Best Practices in EMS - Operations Demand Management Systems
Community / advanced paramedic programs
Help to mitigate system abusers that fall through the social safety net
Provide recidivism protection for certain patient demographics for hospital readmissions (CHF example)
Specialized services (Echo, SCT, SWAT, Haz-Mat)
911 call centers match right patient to right resource type at the right time and right cost
Medical necessity screening system for 9-1-1
28. Best Practices in EMS - Supply & Logistics Centralized deployment facilities / hubs
EMS providers not responsible for checking supply levels, washing vehicles or maintaining vehicles
Fleet-wide standardization of ambulance design
Assembly line style standardized resupply systems “speed loaders”
Streamlined restocking processes
Improves supply reliability
Improves resupply efficiency
Eliminates waste
“Lean Manufacturing”
29. Service Points Workflow Val’s Slide
Val’s Slide
30. Best Practices in EMS - Supply & Logistics Technological Edge
Just in time ordering systems that minimize the need for warehousing of vast amounts of supplies
Online inventory, asset tracking and ordering systems provided by vendors
AmbuTrak
IOS
Bar coding / RF ID systems
Electronic check-in/out equipment accountability systems
32. Best Practices in EMS - Fleet Practices Preventative maintenance (PM) programs that mimic the airline industry
“Green” initiatives including solar charging systems, bio-fuels, lighter/smaller vehicles, etc. (carbon fiber boxes coming soon)
Bridging the Ford 6.0 liter issues
Refurbishing 7.3 liter chassis
Class action law suit
Gas / diesel
33. Best Practices in EMS - Fleet Practices Technological Edge
Onboard “black box” driving computers that provide G-force feedback and record/transmit data wirelessly
Road Safety
Cameras that capture significant events
DriveCam, EnVision Cam
Wireless in-vehicle routers that provide internet access via the cellular data networks
InMotion / Sierra Wireless
Convergence technologies (combine all of the above - plus)
GPSLogic
Fleet maintenance tracking software that allows for part failure analysis that is integrated into the PM system
34. Best Practices in EMS – Fleet Practices Safety
Vehicle safety initiatives
Concept Vehicles
AMR, LifeEMS, SJC Side Load
Stretcher improvements
Improved patient loading systems
Bariatric management systems
NFPA 1917 vs KKK ???
36. Best Practices in EMS - HR Management Proactive headcount management practices
Measurement of certain KPIs
FTE weighting (FT, PT, PRN)
PTO usage
Turnover management (anticipate loss)
Streamlined policies & procedures directly linked with accreditation standards (C.A.A.S. / C.A.M.T.S. / A.C.E.)
Academy style orientation programs for new hire employees
Internal EMS education for EMT & Paramedic certifications with working scholarships
Paid PD/FD style educational academy
Policies on social networking impacts on the workplace
37. Best Practices in EMS - HR Management Technological Edge
Online employee tools for benefit management and administration
Online policies and procedures access
Paperless employee files with secure access available to management 24x7
Streamlined business systems that talk to each other
HR Systems <-> eScheduling <-> Pay Roll <-> CAD <-> ePCR <-> eCertification Systems
38. Best Practices in EMS – HR Management Candidate selection
Personality and intelligence screens that match job functions
AVESTA
Criticall
ADP
40. Best Practices in EMS - Training / Education Online systems for off-site training & Certification Tracking
Web based meetings / presentation systems
WebEx, GoToMeeting, NEFSIS, etc.
On demand content provision (proprietary or purchased)
Online testing / certification systems
Industry specific applications (Centrelearn, Ninth Brain)
Simulation Labs
Sophisticated simulators / manikins
Lab designed just for simulation training scenarios
Real-time on-duty scenario training / testing
41. Best Practices in EMS - Training / Education Using training and education programs to supplement your system’s revenue and offset training overhead costs
AHA training
Private industry training
Ancillary healthcare services training
Government / military
Portable training programs with portable simulation labs
Increase training reach to remote markets
Open up new opportunities
Rural services
Accreditation of training programs and centers
Affiliations with higher educational institutions
In-house Paramedic training programs
43. Best Practices In EMS - Quality Improvement Using ePCR systems to improve QI efficiency, effectiveness and portability
Using advanced automated QI systems that enable 100% auditing of charts against clinical documentation and protocol standards
Adopting QI workflows that improve employee communication, feedback loops and remediation for improved behavior modification
44. Best Practices in EMS – Quality Improvement Recognition that CLINICAL QI and BILLING QI go hand in hand and should be closely tied
Break barriers between Billing and Ops/QI
Peer review programs more viable with ePCR
Using data to drive decision making on clinical upgrades, downgrades and changes
Using clinical data in assessing operational issues
46. Best Practices in EMS - Billing / Finance Paperless ePCR systems making A/R a much more efficient and effective process
Granular financial statements that group each service line and operation individually for improved decision making abilities
A/R tracking by customer with monthly financial trigger processes to identify payer/patient problems
Invisible Bracelet technology emerging that supplements the old Medical ID Bracelet with demographic information (Meds, Allergies, Contacts, Insurance information)
47. Best Practices in EMS - Billing / Finance Lean business processes that measure productivity and performance
Internal Federal Compliance auditing by an independent agency / auditor
Quality based reimbursement initiatives at the Federal level
Online payment and account management options
Electronic insurance clearing houses will limit the need for skip-tracing efforts (but at a cost)
49. Best Practices in EMS - Communications “Situational awareness” / “decision support”
EMD System
Call classification for resource triage (priority based dispatching processes)
Pre-arrival instructions
Demand management systems
Pandemic / CBRN screening system
Live data surveillance systems
Syndromic / bio-terrorism
Operational
Sentinel event
Geospatial
50. Best Practices in EMS - Communications CAD systems
AVL / GPS integrated
Dynamic road network speed algorithms for routing and candidate ranking
Real-time demand surveillance
Real-time deployment decision support systems
Live off-site redundancy & backup systems
Phone / Radio systems
Phase II wireless compliance
IP based communications systems (NG911)
Digital IP based radio systems
51. Best Practices in EMS - Communications Non-emergency trip optimization decision support systems are coming soon
System that analyzes the mathematics associated with the performing and scheduling NET trips
Requested / Promised Pickup Time
Call segment weights (on-scene time, drop-off time)
Route travel times (travel – transport)
Provides predictive availability of system resources for improved throughput (more with less) and accurate scheduling of calls for patients
52. Technology Trends Best Practices in EMS
53. Best Practices in EMS – Technology Trends Traditional EMS centric software business models are set to fail us as an industry (and already have)
Once market penetration hits, maintenance fees can’t sustain the infrastructure therefore these companies are forced to diversify to survive and customer service / enhancement cycles don’t meet our expectations or needs
Compare and contrast any SAAS based business model against this traditional one
ePCR / eScheduling / eHR / ePayroll / eBilling vs ANY CAD System
Emergence of “CAD can’t so we will” companies
Ability to meet our needs (new functions and features)
Customer service
54. Best Practices in EMS – Technology Trends Software as a service (SAAS) will soon dominate most (if not all) of our technologies
Cloud based computing & data storage
Billing / CAD / Payroll systems are HERE or coming!
Highly cost effective due to economies of scale these systems bring without the need for infrastructure or on-site support
High reliability due to “groups” ability to buy into technology they could never afford on their own
55. Best Practices in EMS – Technology Trends EMS Industry has been fickle in accepting SAAS
Customer ROI, cost effectiveness or “Flash and Pizzazz” appears to drive adaptation
Senior leadership whom don’t trust the technology or think they have to have it local to maintain control
Reliability / Redundancy issues (internet)
Private industry quicker to adopt then government (jobs at stake)
K.I.S.S. principle typically used may keep some away
E.g. The use of OTC GPS units
57. Best Practices in EMS - EMS System Designs System designs must comprehend EMS economics to survive
Not effected by typical elasticity of supply & demand
Population size, age, socio-economics & other demographics
Pricing / quantity does not drive increases or decreases in overall service area demands (volume)
May shift it from one provider to another however
Free market competition drives up costs / prices down / drives down quality / forces stupid loss leader ideologies in order to gain market share
System fragmentation decreases economies of scale, significantly increases costs of operations and typically provides for poor patient care (response times)
58. Best Practices in EMS - EMS System Designs No EMS system design is “perfect”
“Successful” ones include the following features:
Limited or zero local tax subsidy
Service accountability through performance guarantees and standards
Ability to replace the provider for performance failures
59. Best Practices in EMS - EMS System Designs “Successful” ones include the following features:
Closed market with sole source provider performing emergency and non-emergency services (most economically efficient model)
Rates and performance controlled through publically accountable external entities (not internal)
Ham & Eggs breakfast analogy
(Chicken has a stake but the pig is committed)
Balance patient care, employee wellbeing and financial responsibility
60. Best Practices in EMS - EMS System Designs Recognition that the deployment model used within an EMS system has a direct correlation on system costs and patient care effectiveness and outcomes
Demand driven systems provide considerably better service reliability to a much larger patient population
Fixed geographic based systems provide good service to the first patient, but not necessarily the second, third and so on (work well for areas with low second call probability)
History, economics, unions and politics are typical determiners of EMS system design type until the EMS system kills the wrong person or costs too much money
61. Best Practices in EMS - EMS System Designs Recognition that we may not make as large of an impact as we once thought
So busy proving that we could no one ever stopped to ask the questions if we should (until recently)
ALS may not be as important as once thought
True clinically significant response times
Understanding Risk/Cost/Benefit (Read Freakonomics)
Low risk/ROI probabilities coupled with “scary” public perception situations drives irrational responses / behaviors
Pediatric Drowning vs. Gun Ownership & Child Shootings
Foundation that IAFF/IAFC is using to sway public opinion and politicians
63. Best Practices in EMS - Pandemic Response EARLY screening / surveillance during the 9-1-1 call
NAED SRI Screening / Card 36 Pandemic Flu
Based on findings, first responders (FD/PD) and EMS personnel “suit up” PRIOR to entry / patient contact
Protect your assets (lessons learned from SARS)
Reverse isolation of patient
Protocols / processes for system overload, denial of service or altered response configurations
6-1-1 Information lines / 9-1-1 call center demand shifting
Public & public safety information systems imperative
64. Best Practices in EMS - Pandemic Response Consider supply needs PRIOR to the incident
Isolation supply caches
Cleaning / decontamination supply caches
Enough for everyone (FD/PD/EMS/Family)?
ICS system / Command & Control may rest with the Health Department
Poor experience with ICS / EMS / Public Safety
Public health focus on the epidemiology / medicine / treatments
Communication channels may be limited or non-existent
65. Best Practices in EMS - Pandemic Response Consider personnel needs (different then disaster)
Shelter in place requirements / isolation impact
Logistical needs of your personnel
Consider other infrastructure support needs
All items needed to provide service
AMFYOYO – remember this will be large scale, wide spread and concurrent events nation / world wide
Communicate / Communicate / Communicate
The public
Employees & their families
Public safety agencies
Health Department / CDC / WHO
66. Worst Practices in EMS
67. Worst Practices in EMS Lack of Standardization (we need an NFPA for EMS!)
Standardization of operational, clinical & financial measurements
Standardization of technology
EKG Data (move away from proprietary standards)
Standardization of clinical data (on our way)
NEMSIS -> HL7
Limited common industry voice in Washington on issues other then reimbursement
68. Worst Practices in EMS Funding/reimbursement INSANITY
Over regulation that drives up system costs and complexity with VERY small return on investment (lives saved)
Allowing the Fire Service to “scare” the public with emotionally based tactics to sway politically based outcomes (Freakonomics)
Private EMS is under attack!!! (in case you haven’t figured that out yet)
69. Worst Practices in EMS Lack of a common union representing the industry…Luke….if you only knew the power of the dark side of the force….
Good for employers…bad for industry…also based on who is in political power
IAFF
Lack of substantial lobbying dollars
The fact that I am having to say this is a worst practice for our political process
70. A Final Thought…
71. www.jackstout.com A new web resource now available on line
Sponsored by / provided by
Todd Stout of FirstWatch
Jonathan Washko of Washko & Associates, LLC
CAEMS (Coalition of Advanced Emergency Medical Systems)
David Williams (Help to collect the articles for this collection)
All of Jack’s writings now available for download
JEMS Interface Articles
4th Party Manuals
Other writings
Looking for help to transcribe his works to make them searchable on the internet
72. Best Practices in EMS Questions & Answers
Share Your Best Practices…