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Acknowledgement: Co-authors, Sponsor, and Participants. Marjorie Pearson, PhD, @ RANDLisa Smith, RN, BSN, BS, @ UHCRaj Behal, MD, MPH, @ Rush University Medical CenterJulie Cerese, RN, MSN, @ UHCHelga Brake, PharmD, CPHQ, @ Northwestern HospitalJoanne Cuny, RN, BSN, MBA, @ UHCRyan Mutter, PhD,
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1. Implementing Process Redesign Strategies for Improving Hospital CareShinyi Wu, PhDAssistant Professor, Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering University of Southern California and RAND September 15, 2009, presented at AHRQ Conference
2. Acknowledgement:Co-authors, Sponsor, and Participants Marjorie Pearson, PhD, @ RAND
Lisa Smith, RN, BSN, BS, @ UHC
Raj Behal, MD, MPH, @ Rush University Medical Center
Julie Cerese, RN, MSN, @ UHC
Helga Brake, PharmD, CPHQ, @ Northwestern Hospital
Joanne Cuny, RN, BSN, MBA, @ UHC
Ryan Mutter, PhD, @ AHRQ
Michael Harrison, PhD, @ AHRQ
The participating healthcare organizations
3. Why Redesigning Hospital Care? Literature:
Hospital care at night is not as safe or patient-centered as care provided during weekdays
National Health Service (UK) Hospital at Night Model:
Found mismatch between activity at night and staffing structure (e.g., experience, competencies)
UHC “Improving Survival” project and pilot “Care @ Night” project
Identified third shift had a significantly lower survival rate, mismatch between patterns in admissions / discharges, and about 50% paging non-urgent
4. Test A Structured Process Redesign Intervention to Help Hospitals Improve Efficiency and Value Design, deliver, and evaluate an intervention “24/7 Care Delivery Model”
Aimed to redesign care delivery in hospitals for efficiency and consistency around the clock
Intervention components:
Redesign strategies: modifying workload demand vs. adjusting staffing model
A structured approach to facilitate improvement
Compare overall and relative importance of redesign strategies
Demand vs. Demand+Supply
5. 24/7 Redesign Strategies: Four “demand” and a customized “supply” best practices
Developed from the NHS model, literature review, and advisory group recommendations
6. UHC Commit to ACTion Facilitation Approach A set of implementation tools including best practices
Organizational commitment from each participating organization
Designated improvement team & a team leader with time commitment
Identified executive sponsor, a nurse champion, and a physician champion to provide support and resources
Collaborative learning facilitated via teleconference and emails
Separate facilitation by intervention arms
Operated as a member service, on voluntary basis
7. Commit to ACTion Implementation Process
8. Evaluation Methods Quasi-experimental design with three arms
15 academic medical centers across the US
Demand intervention: 4 hospitals, including 4 meds & 2 surgical services, 10 nursing units
Demand+supply intervention: 6 hospitals, including 4 meds & 3 surgical services, 13 nursing units
External comparison: 5 hospitals, including4 meds & 4 surgical services, 12 nursing units
Implementation assessment
Triangulation and coding of data from CTA observations, document review, CTA data analyses, and two rounds of interviews
Impact assessment
Participants perceived impact and lessons learned
Diff-in-Diff analyses of efficiency and quality measures
9. Results: CTA Participation Was High But Took Longer
10. Implementation Results
11. Perceived Major Gains Opportunities to communicate with and learn from other hospitals
Data to understand current practice and staffing gaps
Multidisciplinary perspectives and discussions
Demand strategies improved care routines, coordination, workflow, and decreased interruption
Supply strategies helped better distribute nighttime and weekend workload
12. Lessons Learned Lack of geographical localization is the biggest barrier for 24/7 care redesign
Physicians’ and leaders’ buy-in and push for changes are important
Especially for complex care processes & clinical authorization
Key facilitators to changes
Senior leader support
Team leader facilitating implementation and successfully communicating to staff
Clearly presented data reports can be powerful tools
Even for making major changes in staffing arrangements
13. 24/7 activities set the stage for continual and subsequent change efforts
Long-term, multi-factorial, pilot unit-based intervention is difficult
Recommendations from participants for others:
Engage frontline staff and direct care providers
Involve people with operation authority on the units
Orient team members and staff
Maintain constant communication with everyone
Recognize that active support from leadership may be needed More Lessons Learned
14. Conclusions & Implications Hospital participation in CTA was high
The process was longer than anticipated
Resulted in some changes in care delivery systems and processes at all hospitals
Most clinical outcomes changed as expected, but not efficiency measures
Each of the 24/7 redesign strategies was implemented in some hospitals and had different effects on outcomes
Demand strategies improved efficiency and consistency of care processes
Supply strategies might be needed to improve care around the clock
Can 24/7 strategies be implemented without CTA facilitation?