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2. ReACH Structure and Objectives. Partnership to advance home health care qualityVNSNY Center for Home Care Policy and Research (CHCPR)Home care QIOSC
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1. ReACH NationalDemonstration CollaborativeReducing Acute Care Hospitalization Overview
Penny H. Feldman, PhD
ReACH Principal Investigator
Visiting Nurse Service of New York
Center for Home Care Policy and Research
2. 2 ReACH Structure and Objectives Partnership to advance home health care quality
VNSNY Center for Home Care Policy and Research (CHCPR)
Home care QIOSC – Quality Insights of PA
16 QIOs
169 home health agencies (HHAs) from 20 states
Objectives
Test a collaborative model for HHA practice improvement
Reduce acute care hospitalization rates
3. 3 ReACH Partnership Model
4. 4 Background PAQH: a unique collaboration among home health care organizations to advance the quality of home care for key clinical issues affecting vulnerable populations.
During the Diabetes Learning Collaborative, agencies successfully integrated system-level changes and codified key improvements for diabetes patients across their agencies. The lessons learned from this Collaborative directly inform the efforts for the ReACH Collaborative
(Optional: ___agencies within the __ (state) participated in the ACH pilot). The initiative resulted in a set of evidence-based change strategies and an improvement framework that have been adapted for implementation during the ReACH Collaborative
The lessons learned from this first collaborative – regarding development and implementation of change strategies, training and technical assistance needs, and measurement and evaluation efforts – will inform the efforts of the ReACH Collaborative.
PAQH: a unique collaboration among home health care organizations to advance the quality of home care for key clinical issues affecting vulnerable populations.
During the Diabetes Learning Collaborative, agencies successfully integrated system-level changes and codified key improvements for diabetes patients across their agencies. The lessons learned from this Collaborative directly inform the efforts for the ReACH Collaborative
(Optional: ___agencies within the __ (state) participated in the ACH pilot). The initiative resulted in a set of evidence-based change strategies and an improvement framework that have been adapted for implementation during the ReACH Collaborative
The lessons learned from this first collaborative – regarding development and implementation of change strategies, training and technical assistance needs, and measurement and evaluation efforts – will inform the efforts of the ReACH Collaborative.
5. 5 Context ~8100 Medicare-certified HHAs; ~3.4m discharges
Mandated “OASIS” assessments & publicly reported outcomes
Impending pay for performance
<20% agencies accredited
Variable quality/weak quality infrastructure
Dispersed work force/poor support for frontline managers
No history of voluntary industry partnerships
CMS-funded Home Health Quality Improvement Campaign (HHQI) 2007-2008
6. 6 ReACH Project Goal The Collaborative is designed to test, implement and spread key strategies to reduce hospitalization for all patients “at-risk” in participating agenciesThe Collaborative is designed to test, implement and spread key strategies to reduce hospitalization for all patients “at-risk” in participating agencies
7. 7 ReACH Best Practices “Target” group selection (e.g.,region, office, dx)
Risk Assessment
Emergency Plans and Risk-Appropriate Care Plans
Front load visits and increase contacts (phone calls; telemedicine) for high risk patients
Medication reconciliation
Improved MD communication (Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation (SBAR))
8. 8 ReACH Evaluation
9. 9 ReACH Process Results
10. 10 ReACH Process Results
11. 11 ReACH Process Results
12. 12 ReACH Hospitalization Results Home care episodes resulting in acute care hospitalization for target group:
13. 13 HHQI – National ACH Campaign Results Comparison of 7,452 Medicare-certified HHAs
4,352 Early Participating (EP) Agencies
972 Later Participating (LP) Agencies
2,128 Non Participating (NP) Agencies
ACH rate over a 12-month period:
March 2007 February 2008
EP 30.73% 30.48%
LP 32.06% 32.33%
NP 34.61% 35.39%
HHAs achieving at least 5% improvement:
EP (38.4%) LP (37.9%) NP (34.6%)
14. 14 Challenges to ReACH Implementation QIOs
Varied expertise and skills
Varied agency selection processes
HHAs
Varied QI experiences and skills
Competing priorities
Staff changes
ReACH mechanism
Long-distance faculty
Reliance on QIOs to transmit skills/knowledge
Technical issues related to virtual communication
Evaluation
Varied target groups
Varied implementation of varied strategies and tools
15. 15 Lessons Learned QIOs’ need/demand for TA, tools, support
HHAs’ positive response to Collaborative Learning model
Importance of face-to-face information transfer (local learning sessions) and TA
Efficiencies from leveraging QIO resources
Recruitment, TA, Data
Value of
Peer to peer reinforcement, shared experiences
Web-based data collection
Central resources
Leadership involvement key
16. 16 Collaboration – Next Steps Geriatric CHAMP Program
Promote National Framework to Advance Geriatric Home Care Excellence
Build geriatric capacity in significant number of HHAs
Achieve significant, measurable improvement in home care for older persons through
E-learning programs
A National Community of Practice to support quality improvement and share the Framework findings
Corollary activities and products
Collaborations (e.g., NAHC, VNAA, state associations; QIOSCs; accrediting bodies; consumer groups)
Funding – Atlantic Philanthropies, John A. Hartford Foundation, California Health Care Foundation, New York State Health Foundation, others