How To Improve Quality



Similar documents
Total Quality Management TQM Dr.-Ing. George Power. The Evolution of Quality Management

The Philosophy of TQM An Overview

Utilizing Lean / Six Sigma in Healthcare

MULTIMEDIA COLLEGE JALAN GURNEY KIRI KUALA LUMPUR

Lean Six Sigma Training The DMAIC Story. Unit 6: Glossary Page 6-1

Introduction to CONTINUOUS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT TECHNIQUES. for Healthcare Process Improvement

The Original Quality Gurus

The Importance of Project Quality Management. What Is Project Quality? The International Organization for Standardization (ISO)

BAPTIST HEALTH SCHOOL OF NURSING NSG 4027: PROFESSIONAL ROLES IN NURSING PRACTICE

Certified Quality Improvement Associate

PROJECT QUALITY MANAGEMENT

Chapter 3 02/18/1437. Foundations of Quality Management. Deming ( ) Leaders in the Quality Revolution

Healthcare Quality Assurance. Prof. Amal Khalifa

Total Quality Management and Cost of Quality

TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT

Introduction to STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL TECHNIQUES

The Investigation On Sustainability Of Total Quality Management In Higher Education Through Deming s Pdca Cycle

INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MATERIALS MANAGEMENT. Post Graduate Diploma in Materials Management Paper 18.E Total Quality Management PART - A

pm4dev, 2008 management for development series Project Quality Management PROJECT MANAGEMENT FOR DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS

Quality Process in Engineering ISO 9000 and Beyond. Presented by: Roxanne L. Pillar, P.E. October 2014

MG1352 TOTAL QUALITY MANAGENMENT UNIT I INTRODUCTION PART-A

Unit 6: Quality Management (PMBOK Guide, Chapter 8)

Introduction to Statistical Quality Control, 5 th edition. Douglas C. Montgomery Arizona State University

Appendix E Quality Improvement and Data Quality

Simple Data Analysis Techniques

Project Quality Management. Project Management for IT

Stenosis Surveillance 2009

Body of Knowledge for Six Sigma Green Belt

Bundling and the QIP. Jay B. Wish, MD NKF of Illinois 15 th Annual Interdisciplinary Nephrology Conference October 24, 2014

MEDICAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT: THEORY AND PRACTICE Previously titled: Core Curriculum for Medical Quality Management

TOPIC 8 QUALITY OBJECTIVE. Quality

Introduction to Project Management

THE SIX SIGMA GREEN BELT SOLUTIONS TEXT

Chapter 8: Project Quality Management

Managing End-Stage Renal Disease Improving clinical outcomes and reducing the cost of care for Medicare Advantage, Medicaid and Commercial Populations

Figure 1: Fishbone Diagram - Structure. Cause-and-Effect Diagram, Ishikawa diagram, Fishbone diagram, Root Cause Analysis.

Total Quality Management

American Society for Quality (ASQ) CERTIFIED SIX SIGMA GREEN BELT (CSSGB) BODY OF KNOWLEDGE 2014

Managing Project Quality

QUALITY GURUS (part 1) Manuel Rincón, M.Sc. September 24th, 2004

Quality Concepts. 1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Quality and Reliability Defined

Total Quality Management

Enabling Healthcare in Out-Patient Settings and The Patient Centered Medical Home of the Future

QUALITY MANAGEMENT PHILOSOPHIES:

SCPC's Quality Improvement is the Science of Process Management

Topic 12 Total Quality Management. From Control to Management. Deming s Fourteen Points for TQM

September 6, Dear Administrator Tavenner:

Tools & Techniques for Process Improvement

Quality measures in healthcare

Quality Management of Software and Systems: Continuous Improvement Approaches

Enhancing Student Understanding of Control Charts Using a Dice Activity

*Quality. Management. Module 5

Improving Service Level Performance - Phoenix Process Quality Management

Recognizing Your Value in the Delivery of Quality Care in Dialysis Patients

Understanding the PY 2015 ESRD QIP

Chapter 1 Modern Quality Management and Improvement. Statistical Quality Control (D. C. Montgomery)

ASN Dialysis Advisory Group ASN DIALYSIS CURRICULUM

Six Sigma Applications in Healthcare. Muder Alkrisat PhD, MSN, RN, CSSBB, CSHA, HACP Director of Clinical Process Improvement

Quality Management and International Standards

Common Tools for Displaying and Communicating Data for Process Improvement

Introducing the. Tools for. Continuous Improvement

Practice Readiness Assessment

Using Quality Assurance Standards. Don t assume quality, ensure quality

Advanced Product Quality Planning APQP

BODY OF KNOWLEDGE CERTIFIED SIX SIGMA YELLOW BELT

Project Quality Management

Class Objectives. Total Quality Management. TQM Definitions. TQM Definitions. TQM Definitions. TQM Definitions. Basic concepts on TQM

Lecture 1: Introduction to Software Quality Assurance

Profile: Incorporating Routine Behavioral Health Screenings Into the Patient-Centered Medical Home

August 8, Dear Dr. Conway:

Overview. Elementary Quality Tools

PHARMACEUTICAL QUALITY SYSTEM Q10

Robert Okwemba, BSPHS, Pharm.D Philadelphia College of Pharmacy

A STRUCTURED APPROACH TO ORGANIZATIONAL IMPROVEMENT

Dialysis Patients' Bill of Rights and Responsibilities

Home Dialysis Benchmarks Workgroup. Peritoneal Dialysis (PD)

Applying ACO Principles to a Pediatric Population UH Rainbow Care Connection: Transforming Pediatric Ambulatory Care with a Physician Extension Team

Learning Objectives Lean Six Sigma Black Belt Course

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN AERONAUTICAL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEERING. Quality Gurus: Philosophy and Teachings

a Foundation for Change

STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL

Performance Management and Quality Improvement 101. Jack Moran, PhD Public Health Foundation

Primary Care Practice Facilitation Curriculum

TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

Accountable Care Organization Workgroup Glossary

Curriculum for Nephrology Fellowship

Practice guide. quality assurance and IMProVeMeNt PrograM

Guidance for Industry. Q10 Pharmaceutical Quality System

Is a kidney transplant right for me?

Quality Tools, The Basic Seven

Chronic Kidney Disease and the Electronic Health Record. Duaine Murphree, MD Sarah M. Thelen, MD

1 Variation control in the context of software engineering involves controlling variation in the

Quality Perspective: Managing Software Development Projects

Transcription:

ASN Dialysis Advisory Group ASN DIALYSIS CURRICULUM 0

ASN Dialysis Curriculum Continuous Quality Improvement in Dialysis Units Uptal D. Patel, MD Affiliations Duke Clinical Research Institute Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics, Duke University 1

Disclosures Disclosures Research funding from: National Institutes of Health, American Society of Nephrology, Veterans Affairs, and Food and Drug Administration Past research funding from: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Abbott, Merck, and RPA 2

CQI Principles: Industrial Management Science Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) originated in the industrial and management sciences Systems theory or thinking developed in system dynamics, provides a holistic perspective emphasizing feedback for greater self-regulation Walter Shewhart, PhD a physicist, he developed many quality methods and tools, father of statistical quality control, Plan Do Check Act (PDCA) cycle, and the run chart W. Edward Deming, PhD a statistician, he shared his expertise in statistical process control and quality methods to help Japan s post-ww II economic recovery. Also known for his System of Profound Knowledge and 14 Points For Management that sought to understand and reduce variation Total Quality Management (TQM) a management approach that evolved from quality assurance methods in Japanese industry from the works of Philip B. Crosby, W. Edwards Deming, Armand V. Feigenbaum, Kaoru Ishikawa and Joseph M. Juran. Its principles emphasize customer-driven quality, top management leadership and commitment, continuous improvement, fast response, actions based on facts, employee participation, and a TQM culture. Deming WE. Out of the Crisis, Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2000 3

CQI Principles: Health Care Context Health Systems Research: Avedis Donabedian, MD, MPH Donabedian transformed the approach to thinking about health systems In his seminal paper, he introduced the paradigm for evaluating and monitoring the quality of health care through three interrelated (but distinct and not necessarily causal) aspects of the patient s experience: Structure: attributes of care providers, settings, other contexts (e.g., facility attribute, physician training, and administrative attributes) Process: care provided or characteristics of its provision (e.g., prescription medication, ordering tests, and physician referrals) Outcome: a patient characteristic that is presumed to result from the care provided (e.g., death, hospitalization, and infection) Of these three indicators, outcomes often remain the sole measure of quality Outcomes, by and large, remain the ultimate validation of the effectiveness and quality of medical care. But outcomes must always take context into account and cannot distinguish between efficacy and effectiveness. Donabedian A. Evaluating the Quality of Medical Care. Millbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 1966; 44(suppl):166 206. 4

Quality and Accountability: Summary QC vs QA vs QI vs PI Quality Control (QC): ensuring products/services are made/delivered to high standards, often through inspection, monitoring, recording Quality Assurance (QA): ensuring the processes will produce high quality products/services, often through internal/external audits Quality Improvement (QI): continuous process of identifying problems, examining solutions, and regularly monitoring solutions for improvement Performance Improvement (PI): measuring output and modifying processes/procedures to increase output, efficiency, or effectiveness Dual monitoring system for End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) State survey agencies perform QA to require facilities meet minimum standards of operation to prevent harm (conditions of coverage) ESRD Networks perform the QI function to improve processes intended to improve patient outcomes 5

Quality Improvement: Approach FOCUS-PDCA: an iterative management process Find a process to improve (improvement opportunity see next slide) Organize a team of individuals who understand the process Clarify current knowledge of the process (literature, policies, rules) Understand the causes of variation in the process (special/root causes?) Select the improvement that needs to take place Plan how the improvement opportunity will be studied based on what needs to be done (Desired changes? Expected output/target/goals?) Do the process improvement, data collection, data analysis (execute) Check the results to observerd vs expected, determine if the plan worked Act by adapting/adjusting the plan if it did not work, or standardizing the change by writing a policy if it did work Also known as the Deming circle/cycle/wheel, Shewhart cycle, Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) cycle, or Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control (DMAIC) in the Six Sigma programs 6

Quality Metrics in ESRD ESRD Process Measure Comorbid Process Measure Outcome Measure Dialysis adequacy Lipid management Standardized mortality rate Vascular access (fistula > graft > catheter) Glycemic control Standardized hospitalization rate Target hemoglobin Diabetic foot care Standardized transplantation rate Mineral metabolism control Nutritional status Infection rates Secondary cardiovascular protection Adequate immunizations Age-appropriate screening Quality-adjusted life years Patient safety Patient satisfaction Adapted from: Himmelfarb J, Kliger AS. End-stage renal disease: measures of quality. Annu Rev Med 2007; 58: 387 399 7

7 Basic Tools of QI: Ishikawa Diagram Also called fishbone diagram, cause-and-effect diagrams, or Fishikawa Created by Kaoru Ishikawa to demonstrate causes of a certain event using causal diagrams in which each cause is a source of variation The lines originating off the horizontal axis represents main causes, and lines branching off those represent subcauses for example: Main causes in the service industry: surroundings, suppliers, systems, skills Main causes in manufacturing: machine (technology), method (process), material (raw/ consumables/information), man/mind power, measurement (inspection), milieu/ Mother Nature (environment), management/money, maintenance Commonly used in product design and quality defect prevention Useful in structuring a brainstorming session 8

Ishikawa Diagram Figure adapted from Fistula First fistulafirst.org 9

7 Basic Tools of QI: Check Sheet Simple document for collecting real-time location-specific event data Designed for quick, easy, efficient data recording using checks Can be divided into regions with varying significance Reading data involves observing the location and number of marks on sheet Common types of check sheets: Classification classifies trait such as a defect into categories Location indicates location of a trait on a picture of a part or item Frequency indicates presence or absence of a trait or combinations of traits Measurement scale indicated by checking appropriate interval of measure Checklist indicates completion of indicated tasks 10

Check Sheet Figure adapted from Fistula First fistulafirst.org 11

7 Basic Tools of QI: Control Chart Also called Shewhart charts, or process-behavior charts Created by Walter Shewhart to differentiate natural variation in a process from significant changes, or common and special causes of variation Control charts include points that represent a statistic (e.g., mean, proportion) of a quality characteristic taken from samples at different times; a center line representing the mean of the statistic (mean of means or proportions); and upper & lower control limits ( natural process limits ) indicating thresholds at which the process is statistically unlikely (3 standard errors from center line) There are various types of control charts that may be best suited to the process being observed (quality characteristics, nonconformances, cumulative sums, fractions, and numbers) 12

Control Chart Figure adapted from Ocrinc G, et al. The SQUIRE (Standards for QUality Improvement Reporting Excellence) guidelines for quality improvement reporting: explanation and elaboration. Qual Saf Health Care 2008; 17(Suppl 1): 13 32 13

7 Basic Tools of QI: Plots Histogram: vertical bar chart displays variation and the distribution of the data Figure adapted from wikipedia.org 14

7 Basic Tools of QI: Plots Pareto chart: plot that combines a bar graph (descending order) with a line graph (cumulative total), it displays distribution of items ranking the frequency of problems based upon Juran s Pareto principle (i.e., 80% of the effects arise from 20% of the possible causes) Figure adapted from wikipedia.org 15

7 Basic Tools of QI: Plots Scatter diagram: plot to analyze possible relationships between 2 variables, it illustrates the degree of correlation (but not causation) Figure adapted from wikipedia.org 16

7 Basic Tools of QI: Flowchart Diagram to represent an algorithm or process, demonstrating the steps through a system Process operations (activity) are represented with boxes/rectangles while decision points are represented by diamonds The flow of control is represented by arrows connecting the figures Most commonly used for identifying problems, but also used to analyze, design, document, or manage any process Figure adapted from Fistula First fistulafirst.org 17

7 Basic Tools of QI: Flowchart Figure adapted from Fistula First fistulafirst.org 18

Quality Improvement: Future Directions ESRD Quality Improvement Plan (QIP) First Pay-for-Performance (P4P) in a Medicare PPS Compares norms for dialysis facilities across the country, altering payments based on each facility s patient scoring on QIP measures Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009 Seeks to improve American health care delivery and patient care through an unprecedented investment in health information technology by providing assistance and technical support to providers, enabling coordination and alignment within and among states, establishing connectivity to the public health community, and assuring the workforce is properly trained and equipped to be meaningful users of electronic health records (EHRs) Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) Integrative approach to patient care in which patients participate at the center of their healthcare, with care coordinated by a lead physician Sponsored by National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) 19

Quality Improvement: Pitfalls and Challenges Potential Pitfalls of P4P programs for ESRD Weak evidence base for CPGs reduces process-outcome link Tyranny of small numbers outliers not uncommon among relatively small patient panels per nephrologist and among small dialysis centers Case-mix adjustment often inadequate, little variation explained by MD Feedback loop frequent and timely feedback is needed to be effective Spectrum of quality indicators optimal panel not clear Integrated data systems absent for many, hindering data capture Pediatric and other small facilities face additional challenges Challenges of QI Increasing quality requirements but, long history of experience in ESRD Fear of change needs to be removed prior to successful implementation Costs for EHRs substantial investment required but need likely inevitable Success takes time but improving quality can be viewed as a journey Himmelfarb J, et al: End-stage renal disease measures of quality. Annu Rev Med 58: 387-399, 2007 20