1 / 35

Exploring Ideas for Improving Care Coordination

Exploring Ideas for Improving Care Coordination. Eric A. Coleman, MD, MPH Associate Professor Divisions of Geriatric Medicine and Health Care Policy and Research University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. 4 Key Areas for Change. Develop systems to notify patients of test results

Download Presentation

Exploring Ideas for Improving Care Coordination

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exploring Ideas for Improving Care Coordination Eric A. Coleman, MD, MPH Associate Professor Divisions of Geriatric Medicine and Health Care Policy and Research University of Colorado Health Sciences Center

  2. 4 Key Areas for Change • Develop systems to notify patients of test results • Develop processes for better communication between primary and specialty care • Medication reconciliation • Coordination outside of office hours

  3. Lab Result Management “Where no news is not necessarily good news…”

  4. Burden of Test Result Management Per week, full-time PCP needs to review: • 360 chemistry results (SMA7 = 7) • 460 hematology results • 12 pathology reports • 40 radiology reports

  5. Physician Perspective • 43% of physicians surveyed report being satisfied with the way they manage test results • 83% report experiencing a delay in reviewing lab results with potential to adversely affect care • Implications for: • Efficiency • Safety • Risk management

  6. The Black Hole?? • 25% of physicians routinely inform patients of normal lab results • 67% of physicians routinely inform patients of abnormal lab results • 24% had a reliable system for identifying patients overdue for f/u labs

  7. What Can We Learn from the Literature? • 33% of abnormal TSH values do not receive timely follow-up • 36% of abnormal pap smear are ‘lost’ to follow-up • 25% malpractice claims due to failures in follow-up

  8. Lab Management—3 Main Steps • Retrieve and review results • Communicate and interpret results to patients • Incorporate findings into care plan

  9. Break It Down—Test Results • Protocol for normal results, no action required • Protocol for normal results, action required • Protocol for abnormal results no action required • Protocol for abnormal results action required • Protocol for abnormal results urgent action required • Protocol for detecting when test not obtained

  10. Communication Strategies • Pre-formatted letters for sharing results with patients on paper • Portal to EMR to allow patients to view once MD as released • Phone calls for abnormal results • E-Visits for abnormal results (with appropriate time compensation)

  11. Lab Tracking Tools • Paper Forms • EHRS/EMR • Patient Portal/web access (after MD releases) • MS Access • MS Outlook

  12. Using MS Outlook to Track Labs • Most clinics already have the software • Low cost approach; • free self-guided tutorial • However, all tracking systems require up front time • Track a test from the time it was ordered to the time that the results are given to the patient using built-in features • Will provide reminders or warnings when a task is overdue or a test has not returned • Can also generate mailing labels to mail results to patients

  13. Improving the Referral Process

  14. Communication Breakdown • Lack of clarity over reason for referral • Disruption in continuity of care • Delayed diagnosis • Unnecessary/duplicative testing • Dissatisfaction by all parties

  15. Generalist/Specialist Communication • Specialists report receiving information 32% of the time • Generalist report getting referral letter 55-80% of the time • Patients are a “silent partner” who may self-refer

  16. Two to Tango • 63% of PCPs dissatisfied • 35% of Specialists dissatisfied • Room for improvement on both ends

  17. Improving the Referral Experience • Redesign flow of information • Referral agreements between IPA and Practice for how communication will occur • Clearly stated referral questions and answers • Friendlier consultant letter format • State preferred method of communication

  18. Service requested: Evaluation Evaluation and initial management Evaluation and ongoing management Procedure Second opinion Other Reason for referral Preferred communication Fax Email Voicemail Mail Other Referral Agreements

  19. Care Coordination Out of the Office

  20. Develop a Flow Chart or ‘How To Guide” for Clinic • How do I get an appointment? • How do I get my labs? • How do get I care from specialists? • How do I get care after hours?

  21. After Hours • Flow diagram—care seeking after hours • Answering machine that says “go to ED” not acceptable • Don’t have too solve problem 100%--call back in a few hours to see how they are doing • Initiate first steps of therapy (UTI, hyperglycemia) • Malpractice concerns—need documentation

  22. Out of Hours—Telephone Charting

  23. Move to Action! • What is the status quo in your clinic? • What advice would your patients give us? • What have you tried? • What went well? • What did you learn? • What will be your next PDSA? • What tools or resources will you need?

  24. Medication Reconciliation

  25. Medication ReconciliationWhat Are We Looking For? • Create a single list • Identify discrepancies (incompatible regimens) • Drug/Disease=pertinent positives and negatives • Drug/Drug=most common, most serious

  26. Engaging the Patient • Encourage patient to bring all medications or list to every encounter • Provide with a dedicated tote bag • Key=> must positively reinforce behavior • Initial MA or RN review

  27. Scripting Patient Care Coach or give permission to speak up: • Every time a prescriber takes out a prescription pad, ask “would you like to see my medicine list” or “will this new medication interfere with my current meds?”

  28. Personal Health Record Reason Side Effects ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ My Medications are: Medication Dose ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ ______________________________ Allergies: _____________________ Remember to take this Record with you to all of your doctor visits

More Related