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2. Louis Diamond works for Thomson Reuters Healthcare and Science. No products will be discussed during the presentation. . Disclosure . 3. Learning Objectives . Describe the basic dimensions of qualityDiscuss the definitions and uses of evidence based medicineOutline the basics of clinical perf
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1. Quality Measurement 101: What You Need to Know for Successful Quality Initiatives at your Organization Louis H. Diamond, MD
June 2010
2. 2 Louis Diamond works for Thomson Reuters Healthcare and Science. No products will be discussed during the presentation.
3. 3 Learning Objectives Describe the basic dimensions of quality
Discuss the definitions and uses of evidence based medicine
Outline the basics of clinical performance measures
Outline the ARRA HIT and quality measurement requirements
Describe the national quality measurement and improvement enterprise
4. 4 The Triple Threat Need to cover the uninsured
Know how to do
Deep political divide
Bridge the quality gap
Complex solutions and multi-dimensional
Controlling costs
Do not know how to do
A central problem
5. 5 Trends in Bridging the Quality and Performance Gap Continued interest in measuring quality AND cost of care/efficiency
Focus on P4P and re-imbursement re-alignment
Public reporting of performance metrics
Shift in focus from measuring performance of health plans and hospitals only to the physician and now to “accountable clinical organizations” (ACOs)
NQF adopts multiple measurement sets for physician level performance assessment AND have developed national priorities for action
Health information technology and performance improvement “merge” – ARRA-2009 Federal Stimulus legislation.
PPACA calls for expanded role for NQF---set national priorities, facilitate additional measure creation and provide input to CMS on measure selection
6. 6 Trends in Bridging the Quality and Performance Gap (cont’d) CMS implementing P4R programs for physician level measures, to be followed by a P4P programs
IOM makes recommendation on P4P, the creation of “learning” systems, and EBM adoption and use
Building out the HIT infrastructure to support quality measurement and POC DSS (CDS)
The recognition of the limitations of evidence
Commitment to patient centeredness – the voice of the patient
7. 7 Definition of Quality (IOM) The degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge
8. 8 Cost/Quality Trade Off Curve
9. 9 The Dimensions of Conducting Quality Improvement Quality measures
Clinical decision support – CDS – point of care decision support
Engage healthcare professionals
Engage and activate patients and families
Implementation components - leadership, culture, supportive HIT, tools, e.g. Six Sigma, rapid cycle
Drivers-accreditation and certification; financial incentives
10. 10 Performance Improvement: Patients and Populations
11. 11 Evidence Based Medicine: Definition Evidence-based medicine is the conscientious and judicious use of current best evidence from clinical care research in the management of individual patients
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15. 15 Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs): Definition Systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate health care for specific clinical circumstances
16. Quality: Dimensions and Measurement Structural, process and outcomes
Over use, under use and misuse
Safety, practice consistent with current professional knowledge and customization
Care should be safe, timely, effective, efficient, equitable and patient centered (STEEEP) 16
17. 17 A Model of the Influence of External Drivers on Quality
18. 18 Quality Measures from a Patient’s Perspective Staying healthy
Dealing with acute disease
Dealing with chronic disease and disability
Dealing with end of life
19. 19 Clinical Performance Measure (A Quality Measure) A measure - a rate
Assesses if a service has been delivered
And an outcome achieved
Attributes to the provider being assesses
Covers prevention, diagnosis, management, decision making, implementation, technical proficiency and communication
Used for internal quality improvement/public reporting, for P4P, for MOC
20. 20 Examples of Domains of Performance with a Focus on the Domain of Quality
21. 21 Use/Quality Measures Spectrum
22. 22 Dimensions of a Good Quality Measure Process and outcome
Derived from a CPG or otherwise derived from evidence
Precisely defined – numerator, denominator, exclusions
Methodological – data source, sampling, time window, scoring, display
Fully specified-eMeasure
Actionable
Tested (e.g. collectable and reliability)
23. 23 A Formula for Success: The CDS Five Rights To improve care outcomes with CDS you must provide:
the Right Information…
Evidence-based, useful for guiding action and answering questions
…to the Right Stakeholder…
Both clinicians and patients
…in the Right Format…
Alerts, Order Sets, answers, etc.
…through the Right Channel…
Internet, mobile devices, clinical information systems
…at the Right Point in the Workflow
To influence key decisions/actions
24. 24 CDS Intervention Types Relevant data presentation: flowsheets, surveillance
Order creation facilitators: order sentences, sets
Reference information: infobuttons, Web
Unsolicited alerts: proactive warnings
Documentation templates: patient history, visit note
Protocol support: pathways
25. 25 Workflow Opportunities
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28. 28 Performance Measurement and Quality Improvement “System”
29. 29 Health Information Technology: National Enterprise
30. 30 National Priorities Improve the Health of the Population
Engage Patients and Families in Managing Health and Making Decisions about Care
Improve the Safety of America’s Healthcare System
Ensure Patients Received Well-Coordinated Care across all Providers, Settings, and Levels of Care
Guarantee Appropriate and Compassionate Care for Patient with Life-Limiting Illnesses
Eliminate Waste While Ensuring the Delivery of Appropriate Care
31. 31 This presentation discusses a NPRM and not the final rules. The reader is cautioned that the final rules will likely differ from the current drafts published in the Federal Register on January 13, 2010.
The NPRM published on 1-13-2010 in the Federal Register contains slight differences from the NPRM released by CMS on 12-30-2009 including pagination and page numbers.
32. 32
33. 33 MU Goals Improve quality, safety, efficiency and reduce disparities
Engage patients
Improve coordination of care
Ensure privacy and security of PHI
Improve population health and interact with public health programs
34. 34 HITECH MU Requirements Expand in Stages
35. 35 CMS RHQDAPU + JCAHO Core Measures + MU Quality Measures = Complex Medicare Quality Reporting
36. 36
37. 37 The Chronic Care Model
38. Contact Louis Diamond
VP and Medical Director
Healthcare and Science
Thomson Reuters
D: 301-468-0666
C: 202-285-6729
louis.diamond@thomsonreuters.com