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Key messages. Australia has excellent health outcomesHowever, the health system is under intense and growing pressureHospitals are at the epicentre of this pressureMaintaining our excellent outcomes will requireAccountable organisationsEffective leadersPeer-to-peer benchmarking assists hospital leaders find innovative solutions.
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1. Improving Effectiveness in Health Care Service DeliveryDavid Dean, PhDGeneral Manager, The Health RoundtableInstitute of Public Administration AustraliaHobart, 4 November 2005
2. Key messages Australia has excellent health outcomes
However, the health system is under intense and growing pressure
Hospitals are at the epicentre of this pressure
Maintaining our excellent outcomes will require
Accountable organisations
Effective leaders
Peer-to-peer benchmarking assists hospital leaders find innovative solutions
3. Some Background David Dean
PhD in Social Science in 1978
Ten years as management consultant with Booz-Allen Hamilton
Led hospital improvement projects in Australia in early 1990’s
Set up own consulting business in 1993
Australian citizenship in 1995
General Manager of The Health Roundtable since 1995 The Health Roundtable
Founded in 1995 by Bill Kricker and John Youngman
Non-profit membership organisation open to major public hospital chief executives
Shares operational problems and innovations at hospital level
Started with 7 members in 1995
Has grown to 34 members in 2005 – about 1/3rd of all public hospital inpatients
4. The Health Roundtable … An Innovation Clearinghouse Health care from hospital perspective
Operational focus
Share problems
Share innovations
No role in public policy setting
No direct government funding
Provide CEO information network The roundtable concept provides a clearinghouse for sharing this expertise amongst a large number of major hospitals.
Rather than have each hospital send expeditions out to every other hospital to find new ideas, all take part in discussions of key topics at a central location, and take back the useful ideas to their home hospital.
The roundtable concept provides a clearinghouse for sharing this expertise amongst a large number of major hospitals.
Rather than have each hospital send expeditions out to every other hospital to find new ideas, all take part in discussions of key topics at a central location, and take back the useful ideas to their home hospital.
5. 34 Organisational Members –over 50 Hospital facilities
6. Australia’s health care system has delivered excellent outcomes …
7. Low & declining infant mortality
8. High & improving life expectancy
9. Lower standardised mortality rate
10. Health Costs 20% Higher than UK - Half of USA
11. A Good Health Care Report!
12. But – can we maintain these outcomes?
13. Ageing of the population
14. Global consumer access to information - aortic aneurysm example
15. New (expensive) treatments
16. Dramatic rise in drug expenses
17. Health Costs growing 6.9% pa - much faster than the economy as a whole
18. Health care now costs $4,000 per person
19. Ageing Workforce
20. Global competition for health workers
21. Key messages Australia has excellent health outcomes
However, the health system is under intense and growing pressure
Hospitals are at the epicentre of this pressure
Maintaining our excellent outcomes will require
Accountable organisations
Effective leaders
Peer-to-peer benchmarking assists hospital leaders find innovative solutions
22. These pressures are focused most acutely on hospitals
23. Pressures on the Health System
24. Expecting 25% growth in elderly (80+) this decade to 3.9% of population
25. Over 80s already 11% of all Patients
26. . . . and 22% of all emergency beddays
27. Elderly use 8 times as many bed days as younger people
28. Pressures on the Health System
29. Robotic
Surgery
30. New Knowledge and Technologies Genomics
Proteomics
Metabolomics
Molecular Imaging
Nanotechnology
Bioinformatics
Molecular Therapeutics
Molecular Imaging
31. Pressures on the Health System
32. Public Hospital funding share continues to decline – now below 35%
33. Little new overnight bed capacity added to the system in a decade
34. Most growth has been in same-day admissions …
35. … while public hospital bed nights have dropped almost 1% per year
36. Increases in Emergency medical patients have led to reductions in Elective surgical patients
37. … with Emergency patients occupying over 62% of beds, up from 56% in 1996
38. VOLUME PREDICTIONSPredicting the Future is Tricky!
39. Predictions from 1991 predicted 28% fewer bed days than actually used in 2001
40. An additional 1.8 million bed nights (5,000 beds) will be needed by 2011 Due to elderly growth + population growth at current levels of hospital usage
... Creating more strain on public and private hospital systems
41. Alternative is to make dramatic reductions in elderly length of stay
42. Pressures on the Health System
43. Medical Workforce Example
44. Nursing Workforce Example
45. “We have met the enemy, and he is us”
46. Our own worst enemy ... Rigid work demarcations
Professional entry barriers
“Silos” of expertise
Endless paper documentation
No “memory” beyond patient discharge
Five-day culture for a seven-day problem
Lack of leadership and direction
“Rearrange the deck chairs” solutions
47. Every system is perfectly designed to produce the results it gets.(D. Berwick)
48. How to Improve Effectiveness? Accountable Organisations
Effective Leaders
49. Accountable Organisations required in a rapid change environment Clear Goals
Clear Accountability for Results
Agreed Resources
Delegated Responsibility
Long-term Vision
50. Accountable Organisations
51. Resource Centre Managers
52. Resource Centre Building Blocks Clear accountability
Clear task definition
Clear output expectation
Clear output measurement
Rapid feedback
Single source of funds
Clear operational plan
53. Devolution of decision making Complexity and Rapid Change require devolution of decision making
Central planning works only in stable, routine environment
Optimal working unit size – less than 150 people
Highly skilled resource managers are incompatible with central planning
Clear accountability for resources and results is essential
Health organisations need devolution for competent patient care
54. Resource Centre structure allows views from multiple directions
55. Long-term Vision & Tenure Required to Manoeuvre the Healthcare Supertanker Elliott Jaques research in 1970’s and 80’s
Major Facility Managers need ability to plan 5-10 years ahead
Health System Leaders need ability to plan 10-20 years ahead
56. Accountable Health Care Organisations in Australia? Clear Goals
Clear Accountability for Results
Agreed Resources
Delegated Responsibility Too many goals
Rapid turnover of executives
Capped budgets but uncapped expectations
Increasing centralisation
57. We have no shortage of national priorities … Seven national health priority areas (NHPAs):
arthritis and musculoskeletal conditions (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, osteoporosis)
asthma
cardiovascular health
cancer (breast, cervix, colorectal, non-Hodgkins, non-melanocytic skin, lung, lymphoma, melanoma and prostate)
diabetes mellitus
injury prevention and control
mental health.
58. … but little translates to the actual health care agreements with States … “1. Eligible persons are to be given the choice to receive, free of charge as public patients, health and emergency services of a kind or kinds that are currently, or were historically, provided by hospitals.
2. Access to such services by public patients free of charge is to be on the basis of clinical need and within a clinically appropriate period.
3. Arrangements are to be in place to ensure equitable access to such services for all eligible persons, regardless of their geographic location.”
59. … “provide free access within clinically appropriate period” …
60. States differ in how accountability and responsibility flow to hospitals Victoria – Regional health boards
NSW – Area health services
Queensland – Zones and Districts
WA – Regional health boards
SA – Metropolitan regions
NZ – District Health Boards
61. Victoria and New Zealand appear to have more efficient systems
62. Leadership is a key issue: Average tenure at the top only 2.5 years
63. The Health Roundtable Role Explore key issues affecting hospitals
Analyse benchmarking data with trusted peers
Encourage short-cycle improvement projects
Provide peer support
64. Benchmarking for Innovations … Voluntary comparisons
Search for differences
Data Methods
Clinical Practices
Accept “approximate” data
No “right or wrong”
Opportunity focus
Gradual fine-tuning
65. …Not for Accountability to Government Mandated
Uniform
Tightly defined
Score – “win/lose”
Denial “by losers”
Gaming the system
“Inspectors” needed
66. We use data mining process to find interesting differences Data aggregated at DRG level for each health service facility
At least one facility must be 25% below the benchmark average to qualify for review
Discuss the data with the lead hospital to identify innovative practices (or data glitch!)
67. Case Study 1: Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
68. “Good Practices” Interview of Facility --Same-Day Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy Screen for patients with “normal” anaesthetic ratings
Schedule for morning list
Extend day surgery recovery to 7pm
Provide discharge meds kit for pain
Follow up next day
69. Case Study 2: Hip Revision or Replacement
70. “Good Practices” Interview of FacilityHip Revision or Replacement
71. Knowledge of differences only the first step in diffusion of innovative ideas
72. We use Roundtable discussions to share ideas and promote action
73. Other Innovations Spread by The Health Roundtable
74. Roundtable Success Factors Voluntary participation by hospital chief executives
Emphasis on practical operational issues
Ownership of process by the members themselves
Face-to-face discussion of real data with peers
Multi-disciplinary involvement of staff
Expect all members to share innovative ideas
Honour Code to prevent harmful use of data
Independent, professional analytical support
75. Key messages Australia has excellent health outcomes
However, the health system is under intense and growing pressure
Hospitals are at the epicentre of this pressure
Maintaining our excellent outcomes will require
Accountable organisations
Effective leaders
Peer-to-peer benchmarking assists hospital leaders find innovative solutions
76. Thank you!For more information: www.healthroundtable.org.au