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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
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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 • Develop processes for better communication between primary and specialty care • Medication reconciliation • Coordination outside of office hours
Lab Result Management “Where no news is not necessarily good news…”
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
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
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
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
Lab Management—3 Main Steps • Retrieve and review results • Communicate and interpret results to patients • Incorporate findings into care plan
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
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)
Lab Tracking Tools • Paper Forms • EHRS/EMR • Patient Portal/web access (after MD releases) • MS Access • MS Outlook
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
Communication Breakdown • Lack of clarity over reason for referral • Disruption in continuity of care • Delayed diagnosis • Unnecessary/duplicative testing • Dissatisfaction by all parties
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
Two to Tango • 63% of PCPs dissatisfied • 35% of Specialists dissatisfied • Room for improvement on both ends
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
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
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?
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
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?
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
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
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?”
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