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Effective Consultation via Case-Conferencing John Roberts, MSN, RNCS Donna Gallagher, MS, RNC, ANP, FAAN. 2003 National AETC Faculty Development Workshop August 14-16, 2003. Session Objectives. Discuss group clinical consultation
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Effective Consultation via Case-ConferencingJohn Roberts, MSN, RNCS Donna Gallagher, MS, RNC, ANP, FAAN 2003 National AETC Faculty Development WorkshopAugust 14-16, 2003
Session Objectives • Discuss group clinical consultation • Describe one strategy for successful implementation of a group consultation series • Review the perils and pitfalls of this approach • Highlight the successes
Level IV Clinical Consultation • Purpose • Change in Clinical Problem Solving • Change in clinical decisions for better or more appropriate care • Impart state-of-the-art knowledge around specific HIV patient care
Level IV Clinical Consultation • Method • Interaction between clinical consultant & clinical consultee(s) • Patient specific question via appropriate medium • Provider (learner) driven
NEAETCClinical Consultation Series • Rapid, ongoing changes in HIV care • Difficult for dedicated providers to keep up • Tertiary centers have different options for education • Community practices have limited options
NEAETCClinical Consultation Series • Bring the consultant and information to the consultees • Diverse groups of community providers • Stable attendance • Peer support
Dimock CHC Lynn CHC OASIS Consortium Lowell CHC Lawrence CHC Worcester VNA Great Brook Valley CHC Worcester Family CHC Health Care for the Homeless Umass ID Rounds BIDMC HIV Rounds Brightwood CHC Brockton CHC Jordan Hospital Cape Cod Hospital Outer Cape CHC Haverhill TCA Overview of Current Programs
Finding Sites • Title III grantees • Community provider networks • Industry generated leads • Consumer feedback • State DPH feedback
Developing sites • Outreach to individual providers • Schmooze factor • Meet with HIV team/providers • Needs assessment • Formal & informal • Develop list of topics • Understand audience for site
Speakers • Sources of speakers • AETC PIs and staff • AETC developed faculty • Industry leads • Local experts • Added advantage of expanding access to local resources • Relationship building • National experts • Pharmaceutical partnership • Difficult to direct content
Speakers • Guiding speakers to incorporate cases • Make the Case the Up Front Goal • Give Speakers Sufficient lead time to refine cases • Provide case and format examples • Team with a Clinician coordinator
Case Incorporation • Speakers • Develop case to open and interweave with content • Encourage audience to bring cases to present • Key contact(s) for each site • NEAETC clinical faculty person present to interject cases
Pitfalls • Speakers who don’t pause • Pharmaceutical developed (canned) curriculum • Inflexible or inexperienced speakers • Faculty that is unable to respond to audience direction
Successful Topic suggestions Diverse spectrum of HIV disease • Post conference updates • HAART • Resistance • System focused • Gender focused • Women, Gay men, Transgender
Successful Topic suggestions • HIV, Mental Health & Substance Abuse • HIV Neurology • Pulmonary Complications of HIV • Gynecologic Complications of HIV • Hematologic Complications of HIV • HIV Dermatology
Program QI • Speaker contact by clinical faculty • Able to discuss content • Clinical review • Clinician at program • Administrative review • Program evaluations
Making it work • Stable location • Consistent time • Regular advance notice • Email & flyer • Pharmaceutical support • Food, honoraria, costs • CE credit • Streamline paperwork • PIF checkoffs
How are we doing • Who attends by site • Aggregate data
What do we hope to Offer Providers? • Education • Peer support • Access to a consultation network to enhance state of the art care
The future? • More sites, expanding geography • Expand topics • Blend audience • MAI initiative – case mgrs, etc. • Creativity with shrinking $$ • Distance learning