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1. Successful Interfacing with VA MedRecon Technology A Roundtable Discussion
VeHU 160
2. 2
3. 3 Why MedRecon? Prevent Adverse Drug Events
Coordinate Care
Address Adherence
Promote Shared Decision Making
Cost Avoidance
Foundation of Patient Centered Care
4. 4 VA Medication Reconciliation Initiative“Our mission is to support safe, effective, and patient centered medication reconciliation across the VHA system”
5. 5 MedRecon Initiative Products
6. 6 MedRecon Initiative Products
7. 7 The VA MedRecon Definition:Drawn from The VA MedRecon EPRP, Joint Commission & Current Literature
MedRecon is a process to ensure maintenance of accurate, safe, effective, and above all patient centered medication information,
by
8. 8 The VA MedRecon Definition:
Obtaining medication information from Patient, caregiver, and/family.
Comparing this to the medication information available on the electronic medical record including current medications, non VA medications, and medications given at other VA facilities (remote data) for the purpose of identifying and addressing discrepancies.
Assembling and documenting the updated medication information.
Communicating with and providing education to Patient, caregiver, and/or family regarding this information.
Communicating this medication information with the appropriate members of the VA and non VA healthcare team.
9. 9 Minimum MedRecon Documentation Requirements
Patient provided medication information
obtained at the episode of care must be represented in the electronic medical record (EMR)
Comparison of this to the medication information available on the EMR*
Final updated medication list highlights the added, changed, and discontinued medications
Discharge instructions=discharge medication information in the EMR
*This documentation shall include active medications, recently expired medications, non VA medications*, and medications given at other VA facilities (remote medications) highlighting the discrepancies identified
*This documentation shall include active medications, recently expired medications, non VA medications*, and medications given at other VA facilities (remote medications) highlighting the discrepancies identified
10. 10 Didactics
Break Outs: MedRecon 102, Documentation, Metrics, Provider & Patient Education
JC Town Meeting
200+ virtual and live participants-Every VISN, & key program offices
Clinical Application Coordinators
Educators
Nurses
Patient Safety and Quality Officers
Pharmacists
Providers
Researchers
11. 11 Common Themes: “It is hard to do!” Requires rethinking the “monologue”
Involves reliance on a team
Tools need to reflect the patient and healthcare team workflow and allow for iteration Pharmacists, Providers, Nurses, Caseworkers, Social Workers, Front Desk Staff, Patient Safety & Quality Staff, Medical Records, and Clinical Applications Coordinators all are intrinsic to making MedRecon work in your facility. Pharmacists, Providers, Nurses, Caseworkers, Social Workers, Front Desk Staff, Patient Safety & Quality Staff, Medical Records, and Clinical Applications Coordinators all are intrinsic to making MedRecon work in your facility.
12. 12 My List (Bob S.) Furosemide 40 2 pills in the morning, 3 if my ankles are up, take in the afternoon if going to church
Simvastatin 40 ½ pill in the morning, take it at bedtime on bridge nights
Metoprolol 25 1 pill in morning one at night, skip Friday night if OK with wife
Can’t take Sertraline (dizzy) –still down
Take Ambien 10 rarely for sleep- once a month
Full of context, amendments, adverse drug reactions and potential for ADEs, this list is Bob’s list—how we all interpret our treatment plans, personally, taking into account:
Shared Decision Making
Adherence
Choice
Literacy/Numeracy/AccessFull of context, amendments, adverse drug reactions and potential for ADEs, this list is Bob’s list—how we all interpret our treatment plans, personally, taking into account:
Shared Decision Making
Adherence
Choice
Literacy/Numeracy/Access
13. 13 At present, these are the issues: Many resources are unknown to local MedRecon Teams
It is difficult to obtain and document patient data
Maintaining an accurate medication list means amending orders
Remote data is a problem
Non VA list must be updated
Communication with the Non VA Provider requires ROI, storing demographics, and having a method of data transfer
14. 14 MedRecon Holy Grail Patient Data has a place in the chart
Bidirectional Communication
Customized care plan
One stop shopping “snap shot” dashboard
The Patient
The Organization
Order
Communicate
Software works for you to assemble, calculate, alert, retrieves & store medication information
Disease Model
Patient Centered Care
Connects to the non VA environs
Imbedded monitoring
15. Innovations on the Horizon:There are many! Kiosk
IMM
MHV
PRE
Greenfields
Phoenix
And your local innovative processes! 15
16. 16 What can you do to help (now)? Take an active role on your VISN or Facility MedRecon Team
Multi-discipline
Active Leadership Support
Measure if your changes represent improvement
Encourage documented communication between the patient and the healthcare team
Use existing tools
Start small
17. 17 Thanks!
Medication Reconciliation
Will fundamentally change how we practice medicine by systemizing the management of the medical treatment plan, placing checks and balances at every interface, and instituting an ongoing dialogue with the patient and his/her healthcare team.
18. Projects, Solutions, and Updates
19. 19 Objectives of this Presentation
Update attendees on the wide number of projects that all have some relevance to Medication Reconciliation
Describe specific VistA projects that are in progress or planned
Discuss the prioritization of related changes that will improve the experience of Medication Reconciliation
20. 20 Projects Related to MedRecon
Enhancements to the Class I VistA MedRecon Reports
Phoenix Medication Form
Active Prescriptions Awaiting Patient Request To Be Dispensed
VHA Innovation Project – D/C Remote Meds
Integrated Medication Manager
21. 21 Enhancements to the Class I VistA MedRecon Reports
PSO*7*316 and GMTS*2.7*92
Under SQA Review
Addresses Tool #2 (Medication Worksheet)
Primarily corrects standards issues and problems with the original June 2008 release
PSO*7*314 and GMTS*2.7*94
To address Tool #1 (Medication Reconciliation)
PSO*7*foo and GMTS*2.7*bar
At this time, these patches have not yet been assigned numbers
22. 22 Phoenix Medication Form Class III New Service Request
http://vista.med.va.gov/nsrd/Tab_GeneralInfoView.asp?RequestID=20071110
Could be considered “Tool #5” as part of VistA reporting options for MedRecon purposes
Status update
presented to OHI IT Patient Safety for review March 29, 2010
May 2010 – under revision to include remote medication data in the report
23. 23 Active Prescriptions Awaiting Patient Request To Be Dispensed
Re-entry of a 2003 New Service Request
http://vista.med.va.gov/nsrd/Tab_GeneralInfoView.asp?RequestID=20090509
Identified as one of the top two corollary needs for MedRecon at the Sept 2009 conference in Ann Arbor
There is a Round 2 Innovation entry selected to address the same business need as well
24. 24 VHA Innovation Projects
D/C of Remote Medications
http://wiki.v08.med.va.gov/groups/cdpmva/
http://wiki.orlando.med.va.gov/fmi/iwp/cgi?-db=GreenField&-loadframes (Entry #168)
http://vaww.infoshare.va.gov/sites/chio/HMIS/VHAInnovationProgram/greenfieldwikisites/Wiki%20Pages/Home.aspx (Top Level Web Site)
Other Innovations Round 2
https://vha.ideascale.com/
25. 25 Integrated Medication Manager
New user interface for managing medications, observations, goals and interventions
http://vista.med.va.gov/nsrd/Tab_GeneralInfoView.asp?RequestID=20080116
Additional “child” NSRs to address a second phase of development
Active work on Business Requirements Document and Use Cases
26. 26 Clinical Reminder Order Checks
Coming with CPRS version 28
Clinical Reminder Terms and Clinical Reminder Definitions will be able to generate Order Check Text for selected Orderable Items
VERY POWERFUL!
Use with caution to prevent system overload while trying to solve all the world’s problems
VistA Outpatient Pharmacy patch PSO*7*344 will make additional Rx data available to reminders in support of this enhancement
Test version 2 is at test sites as of May 2010
27.
Medication Reconciliation Monitor
The Why and The How
28. 28 Introduction A study of the Institute of Medicine from 1997 and released in 1999, confirm that from 33.6 admissions to hospitals in the US there was a 2.9% to 3.7% of occurrence of adverse events. From all annual deaths 98,000 were due to medical errors.
Medical errors carry a high financial cost. The Institute Of Medicine report estimates that medical errors cost the Nation approximately $37.6 billion each year; about $17 billion of those costs are associated with preventable errors.
The IOM emphasized that most of the medical errors are systems related and not attributable to individual negligence or misconduct.
29. 29 Introduction Joint Commission International Center for Patient Safety reports that communication of medical information at transition points of care have been cited as a major cause of medication errors.
It has been estimated that 46% of medication errors occur during a patient’s admission to or discharge from a clinical unit and/or hospital.*
*(From :”The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” VeHU 2007-Class 212 Medication Reconciliation)
30. 30 Background Medication Reconciliation was established as a goal during 2005, for full implementation by January 2006.
VACHS Patient Safety Group developed a policy, strategies, tools and educated their staff
On 2008, a HFMEA was appointed to improve the process
NPSG #8 in 2009 added required documentation
Several modifications were done to the existing Clinical Reminders to facilitate documentation
31. 31 Manual Record review
32. 32 Manual Record review
33. 33 Medication Reconciliation MonitorThe Why After last revision on January 8, 2010 DUSHOM recommendations were to include in their Monitors and Guidelines for FY 10 Medication Reconciliation:
Medication Reconciliation (MedRecon) (NEW)
In addition to addressing the Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goal (JCNPSG) the MedRecon Performance Monitor addresses a recent OIG recommendation that MedRecon be monitored by every VAMC facility.
It is also imperative that the VA establish a system wide MedRecon Monitor to support continuous quality improvement, develop meaningful documentation and monitoring tools, and assess compliance at multiple levels of the enterprise.
The MedRecon Monitor will make a difference in the delivery of care at VA facilities by measuring the terminal step in MedRecon which requires that a current medication list be given to each patient upon discharge from a hospital admission.
34. 34 Medication Reconciliation MonitorThe Why The monitor has its own objectives:
The objectives of this monitor are designed to assess Medication Reconciliation in VAMC Facilities at the point of discharge by asking two MedRecon related questions at the time of the post discharge phone call.
The facilities need to have a “post discharge telephone contact “ (PDTC) call note to document this new information.
35. 35 Post Discharge Call
36. 36
37. 37
38. 38 VA Caribbean Health Care Systemefforts on MedRec documentation San Juan have two Clinical Reminders to document Outpatient and Inpatient MedRec
Marketing has been very difficult, since still need some adjustments in terms of check the new meds orders in the “orders” tab, and not having the close printer necessary to hand-out the current list to each patient at the time of the visit in the outpatient setting.
39. 39 Documentation as OP Clinical Reminder
40. 40 Admission Documentation
41. 41 Health Summary-Med Recon
42. 42 Clinical Reminder Satisfied
43. 43
44. Improving Compliance of Inpatient Med Reconciliation Deborah Baruch-Bienen, MD, FACP
Acting Chief, Medicine Service, STVHCS AMD
Associate Professor of Medicine, UTHSCSA
Bioethics Consultant 2010
45. 45 Introduction For hospitalized patients med rec is required
On admission
On discharge (copy to patient)
In addition, when a patient changes services, the accepting team must not only review current inpatient meds, but review the original outpatient med rec from that admission
46. 46 Our Institution’s History Documentation for medicine reconciliation was poor, resulting in an RFI from the Joint Commission (TJC) after their June 2008 visit.
47. 47 Process Improvement We identified the following obstacles to instituting Admission and Transfer Med Rec:
Lack of education residents/staff
Lack of standardization for med rec documentation in templates
Lack of standardization for note titles used and an abundance of unnecessary note titles in CPRS
48. 48 Templating for Med Rec Templating med rec for increased TJC compliance requires the following;
Standardization of note titles & templates
Inactivation of Unnecessary note titles
Ease of use for providers
The following describes templates for both inpatient physician notes
Project aimed at ALL ward services:
Medicine, surgery, psych, SCI, KD, research, ECTC, & KTCC
49. 49 Fixing CPRS Documents From late Aug through Nov 2008, all physician inpatient notes were reviewed by a physician and CAC
Ensured all services had needed templated notes:
History and Physical admission note
Transfer Accept Note
Daily Progress note
At the same time, we inactivated
ALL UNNESSARY NOTE TITLES
50. 50 Fixing CPRS Documents Key to success: template notes with REQUIRED radio boxes reconciliation statements to choose from.
Two slightly different fields were inserted into the template for the inpatient admission (H&P) & for transfer accept notes.
This FORCED the doctor to pick a med rec statement.
51. 51 Admission Med Rec All inpatient services given customized templated note title mandatory for all admissions
The outpatient med list automatically templates in, however, providers are expected to modify based on information given to them by last med rec, patient, care givers, or other sources
Providers then must choose from a list of statements that explain HOW they reconciled the medicine list
52. 52 Med Rec Mandatory Field
53. 53 Transfer Accept Med Rec
54. 54 Transfer Accept Med Rec
55. 55 Data Collection During Summer 08, templated notes existed, however, fields not mandatory, education still variable, and doctors had other note titles to choose from that bypassed the templated med rec.
56. 56 Results Daily audits performed 16 Sept – 22 Oct, 31 Oct – 3 Nov
100% audits Admission & Transfer Accept notes.
Able to drill down for causes of fall outs resulting in improved templates & service specific education
Consistent improvement with daily 100% audits seen
Numbers not weighted
57. 57 Sustainable Success
58. 58 Conclusion By examining the real time process of inpatient medicine reconciliation documentation, including reasons for fall outs, and as a result of dedicated time & staff for process improvement, we have been able to improve and sustain compliance with Med Rec for inpatients from an unacceptable performance to BLUE scores for the TJC measures for success!
59. Medication Reconciliation: West Palm Beach VA Medical Center Nann Chavalitanonda, Pharm.D., BCPS
Clinical Pharmacist-Internal Medicine
60. 60 Medication Reconciliation Outpatient Medication Reconciliation is performed at EVERY visit with a provider, using a clinical reminder
An outpatient medication list is printed for the patient to review and update prior to his/her appointment
Inpatient Medication Reconciliation is completed by providers, floor clinical pharmacists, and nurses using a clinical reminder
61. 61 Medication Reconciliation
62. 62 Medication Reconciliation
63. 63 Outpatient Medication Reconciliation Check
Compliance for Outpatient Med Reconciliation can be done through a routine created by IRM and pharmacy
Evaluates compliance with the provider completing the med reconciliation reminder
Evaluates the input of 2 health factors
HF1=Medication Reconciliation Performed
HF2=Visit Not related to Med Reconciliation
64. 64
65. 65
66. 66
67. 67
68. 68
69. 69 Outpatient Medication Reconciliation Check
After the Med Recon routine has been run, the date can be sorted and reviewed at the service level.
Data may be sorted by clinic location and then evaluated by date.
If the date of the appt and the date of the HF entry are on the same day, the provider is compliant with medication reconciliation.
Information can be reviewed on a case by case basis for specific provider issues
70. 70 Transfer Note/Handoff Communication
Progress note is utilized by a provider whenever a patient changes level of care (transitions from ICU to acute care ward, etc)
Condition of the patient upon transfer, the provider they are transferring care to, and pertinent medical issues of the patient.
Provider will enter a list of medications the patient should be transferred/continued.
71. 71 Transfer Note/Handoff Communication
72. 72
73. 73 Med Reconciliation Performance Monitor
The current post-discharge process requires a post-discharge phone call be placed to the patient within 48 hours of discharge from an inpatient hospital stay.
Were you provided a copy of your updated medication list upon discharge?
Do you know where to get more information?
74. 74 Post D/C Phone Call Tools
CPRS template was created for the discharge nurse to document phone call using a specific progress note title and health factor.
These allow us to build tools to track performance data.
75. 75
76. 76
77. 77 Post D/C Phone Call Tools Clinical Reminder Report created to obtain compliance data for IPEC monitors.
Combination of reminders, location list, patient’s list, health factors, progress note title and reports template are used.
Extract exact number of patients who should be contacted
Exclude wards such as NH
Allows reasons why patient could not be contacted
78. 78 Post D/C Phone Call Tools Location list created excluding wards
Inpatient wards excluding non-discharge wards
Reminder to obtain total amount of discharges (denominator) Reminder to obtain post-discharge compliance. Pt contacted and responded “yes” (numerator)
Patient list created which are used in the reminder reports as the patient sample to determine compliance
79. Portland Patient Safety Center of Inquiry Blake Lesselroth, MD, MS
80. 80 Portland Strategic Overview
81. 81 APHID Solution Point of service patient-facing software
Developed by Portland VA Medical Center (PVAMC) in partnership with the VHA National Center for Patient Safety (NCPS)
Efficient way to engage patient
Leverages consumer multimedia technology
82. 82 APHID Solution Supports administrative transactions including clinic check-in
Compiles all active, remote, non-VA, discontinued, and expired medications into composite list
Completes medication and allergy history using pictures and web buttons
83. 83 Hospital Admission Med Recon Hospital Admission Med Recon (HAMR) program based on APHID model
Accessed using CPRS “Tools” menu on mobile computer
Staff members generates CPRS data objects and notes
Several workflow models piloted (nurses and residents)
Currently testing in surgical holding
84. 84 Patient Centered Medical Home Portland VA Medical Center one of six funded Patient Centered Medical Home Demonstration Labs
Grant funding to develop, implement, and evaluate model of care for fragile CHF cohort
Goal is to establish Cards-PC “care platforms” equipped and supported with IT tools
85. 85 Home Health Med Recon APHID technology using home-based nursing care model
Anticipate nurses using mobile technology including laptop computers
New software capabilities to address unique task and setting
Focus upon medically fragile heart failure population
86. 86 Organizational Change Engage stakeholders and clinical champions to incentivize staff
Carefully consider context, built environment, and patient consumer
Employ User Centered Design strategies and provide infrastructure to support goals
87. 87
DISCUSSION