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Process Redesign, Implementation and Impact Analysis. Director of Informatics Department of Emergency Medicine Boston University School of Medicine Co-chair, Emergency Care Special Interest Group Health Level 7 Immediate Past Chair Section of Emergency Medical Informatics
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Process Redesign, Implementation and Impact Analysis Director of Informatics Department of Emergency Medicine Boston University School of Medicine Co-chair, Emergency Care Special Interest Group Health Level 7 Immediate Past Chair Section of Emergency Medical Informatics American College of Emergency Medicine Todd Rothenhaus, MD FACEP
Boston Medical Center • Level 1 Trauma Center • 127,000 annual visits • 38 full time attendings and NPs • >200 rotating house staff per year • >150 full time RN staff • 5 geographically separate locations
The Emergency Department • People • Architecture • Communication
Health Care “Deliverables” • Medications • Procedures • Education
ED IT Adopters • “Well Tuned” Emergency Department • Disaster Area • Begging HIS to computerize • CPOE Victim • Reluctant Adopter • Homegrown Developer
The Perfect EHR • Simplicity • Flexibility • Elasticity • Invisibility
Basic ED workflows • Most “variable” workflows • Triage • Discharge • Patient Entry • 1 versus 2 step triage • Meet/greet • Full versus variable/minimal triage • 5 level triage (CDS) • Triage directly to a room • Bedside registration
ED Workflow Ideas • Patients brought directly to the treatment area get a different kind of triage than patients who wait. • “Uncouple” triage and RN care. • Roll out EDIS to supporting departments • Registration • Admitting • Housekeeping • Radiology
loose coupling • Coupling is the dependency between interacting systems. This dependency can be decomposed into real and artificial dependency: • Real dependency is the set of features or services that a system consumes from another system. Real dependency always exists and cannot be reduced. • Artificial dependency is the set of factors that a system has to comply with in order to consume the features or services provided by other systems. Artificial dependency always exists, but it or its cost can be reduced. • Loose coupling describes the configuration in which artificial dependency has been reduced to the minimum.
EDIS Evaluation • Grid/RFP • Use Case Scenarios • EHR Functionality Requirements and Conformance Criteria (CCHIT)
Use Case Actors Roles in the ED Triage RN, Primary RN, Physician, Tech, Transport, etc. Roles in the EDIS
Potential Use Case Scenarios • A 64 year old trauma patient on 6 medications and with extensive PMH presents to the ED. He needs plain x-rays, a full body CT, morphine, tetanus, and Ancef (entry orders sent). • A 19 year old girl with an ankle sprain presents to fast track and is sent to x-ray prior to being seen by a physician (entry orders sent). • A 63 year old man is admitted to the ward for nausea an vomiting. He is found to have a positive troponin and his admission is changed to telemetry (disposition departure). • A patient’s primary care physician calls the ED looking to find out what happened to a patient seen yesterday. He wants no know what was done and where the patient was admitted (patient lookup and chart evaluation). • A patient seen with a resident or PA is discharged. The attending physician wants to review her charts for the day, read the note, write a note, sign the chart, and send the chart to billing (chart workflow).
EDIS Reports • Legacy data • System generated reports • Data mining the back end
How is data captured • “Active” tracking vs. “passive” tracking • “Gaming” the system
How (not) to Lie with EDIS Statistics • The best • Overall LOS • Waiting time • The worst • Time to be seen by MD • Disposition to departure
Profiling and benchmarking • Physician statistics • Patients per hour • RN statistics • Patient-hours per hour
Summary • Small changes in workflow can substantially perturb ED operations • Implementations take much longer to recover from that you think