PPRNet Research Team. Objectives. Take home message. PPRNet QI Research 6/10/2008



Similar documents
EMR Adoption Survey. Instructions. This survey contains a series of multiple-choice questions corresponding to the 5-stage EMR Adoption Model.

Mona Osman MD, MPH, MBA

Practice Partner Electronic Medical Record and Practice Management Solution

ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDS (EMR)

Patient Safety: Achieving A New Standard for Care. Institute of Medicine Committee on Data Standards for Patient Safety November, 2003

Managing Patients with Multiple Chronic Conditions

Using an EMR for Panel & Preventative Care Foundational Concepts and Tools

New Brunswick EMR Program. Functionality Workbook

Clinical Decision Support (CDS) Options in a CPOE System. Lolita G. White, PharmD Clinical Applications Analyst

Reducing Medical Errors with an Electronic Medical Records System

Patient Centered Medical Homes and Meaningful EHR Use: Competing for Scarce Resources or Dynamic Synergy?

By Debra Davidson, PhD, MSA, MS Luciane Tarter, RN, BSN. SBIRT grant for Behavioral Health APCP. Mo Health Net Health Home Program SBIRT

Vendor Evaluation Matrix Tool Presented By: Developed By: Version: Date: Description: Table of Contents:

APPENDIX C CROSSWALK OF PPC-PCMH-CMS STANDARDS AND ELEMENTS TO MEDICAL HOME CAPABILITIES BY TIER

Health Care System. Troyen Brennan, M.D., M.P.H. Executive Vice President & Chief Medical Officer

Measurable improvements in medication management

Using EHR Information to Support Workflows for Medical Homes: Get the right tool for the job

NCQA Standards Workshop Physician Practice Connections - Patient-Centered Medical Home (PPC -PCMH )

Solution Series. Electronic Medical Records. Patient Portal

Medweb Telemedicine 667 Folsom Street, San Francisco, CA Phone: Fax:

RIH Transitions of Care Collaboration with Coastal Medical To Improve Transitions for Patients Discharged Hospital To Home

Tips for Success. Defining EHR System Requirements

EMR Feature Checklist 1.0

Medication error is the most common

CNA and NSO Risk Control Self-assessment Checklist for Nurse Practitioners 1. Self-assessment topic Yes No Actions needed to reduce risks

Vendor Evaluation Matrix

Connected drug delivery systems : Increase patient compliance and enable comprehensive, coordinated treatments

Informatics Strategies & Tools to Link Nursing Care with Patient Outcomes in the Learning Health Care System

University of Louisville Hospital PGY1 Pharmacy Residency Program Summary

Assessment, Feedback, Incentives, exchange (AFIX) 2014 Provider Site Visit Questionnaire. Answer Guide

Hypertension Best Practices Symposium

How Incorporating EBP & CDS Can Improve Outcomes & Agency Efficiency

Using the EHR for Care Management and Tracking. Learning Objectives 9/4/2015. Using EHRs for Care Management and Tracking

Interview patient Perform Physician; Nursing; Medical Assistant Take history Document 7.1(Document a progress note for each encounter)

Disclosure. Meaningful use Objectives. Meaningful use. Fundamentals of Transitions of Care (TOC)

6/14/2010. Clinical Decision Support: Applied Decision Aids in the Electronic Medical Record. Addressing high risk practices

Look at what innovation can do

HIMSS Davies Enterprise Application --- COVER PAGE ---

Accountable Care for Pharmacy Executives

Kaiser Permanente: Transition Care Performance and Strategies

PROTOCOL TITLE: Ambulatory Initiation and Management of Warfarin for Adults

Truth or Consequences, Best Medication List Practices to Deliver Best Care. Leaning & Action Network Session

Electronic Prescriptions, Dashboards and University Hospital Birmingham

MEDITECH LSS Data Systems. Medical and Practice Management Suite

Continuous Quality Improvement using Centricity EMR

HIMSS Electronic Health Record Definitional Model Version 1.0

Evolution of a Closed Loop Medication Use Process

Quality Improvement Case Study: Improving Blood Pressure Control in a 3- Provider Primary Care Practice

CIS Clinic Information System Practice Management Tool

Baltimore Medical System * For more information: visit our website at apply@bmsi.org - Fax:

Electronic Health Records

Thrifty White Pharmacy 9/5/2014. Specialty Pharmacy. Specialty Pharmacy: The Opportunities and the Challenges

Clinical Decision Support

Using EHRs to extract information, query clinicians, and insert reports

Question & Answer Guide. (Effective July 1, 2014)

EMR Systems and the Conduct of Clinical Research. Daniel E Ford, MD, MPH Vice Dean for Clinical Investigation Johns Hopkins School of Medicine

Conflict of Interest Disclosure


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

MEDICAL UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY MEDICINE CHARLESTON, SC CURRICULUM VITAE Steven M. Ornstein, M.D.

The Commonwealth Fund International Health Policy Surveys

Electronic Medical Record Etiquette For Alec

Clinical Decision Support Systems. Dr. Adrian Mondry

Improving Appropriate Use of Proton Pump Inhibitors as Gastrointestinal Prophylaxis in the Hospital Setting

Reconciling the Differences. Karen Lippett B.Sc.Phm Humber River Regional Hospital Renal Dialysis Unit

Opportunities for Evidence-based Clinical Decision Support Systems: An Application for Oncology. BPM Roundtable Eindhoven University of Technology

Evaluating the Implementation of a Primary Care Weight Management Toolkit

Cedars Sinai Medical Center (CSMC) Learning Objectives. Why Medication Reconciliation?

Training Medical Assistants: Enhancing the Role of CMAs in Hypertension Control

Transcription:

Lynne S. Nemeth, PhD, RN Medical University of South Carolina PPRNet Research Team Ruth G. Jenkins, PhD Paul J. Nietert, PhD Andrea M. Wessell, PharmD Heather Liszka Rose, MD, MS Loraine F. Roylance, MA Steven M. Ornstein, MD Objectives Provide context for evaluating QI research interventions within a practice based research network (PPRNet) Describe evaluation of a broad QI intervention in 99 primary care practices (A TRIP) Extend a conceptual framework to identify potential practice interventions to be tested (MS TRIP) Take home message Learning about how quality improvement interventions are implemented can inform study design Future QI interventions might be more feasible and effective if we collect information about what is most commonly adopted within intervention sites PPRNet is a practice based learning and research organization designed to improve health care in its member practices and elsewhere in the United States. PPRNet QI Research TRIP II: RCT, 20 CVD indicators, 20 practices (2001 02) A TRIP: Demonstration project of >80 indicators focused on primary care in 99 practices (2002 06) AA TRIP: RCT sub project of A TRIP focusing on ETOH screening and brief intervention (2004 07) C TRIP: RCT to investigate CRC screening in 30 practices (2006 10) MS TRIP: Demonstration project in 22 practices developing a set of medication safety indicators in ambulatory care practice (2007 2010) 1

Nemeth, Feifer, Stuart and Ornstein Implementation Science 2008: 3:3 Context for PPRNet QI Theoretically informed process using three models: Improvement Model (Feifer & Ornstein, 2004; Joint Commission Journal of Quality and Safety) Intervention Model (Feifer et al, 2006; Evaluation and the Health Professions) Social influence, marketing Readiness for change Organizational learning, adult learning Complexity Practice Development Model (Nemeth et al, 2008; Implementation Science) QI Activities Practice Reports (quarterly) Show practice s performance over time Comparison to Other PPRNet practices PPRNet ABC (90 th percentile) (Wessell et al, American Journal of Medical Quality, 2008) National benchmarks (if available) Practice activation, evaluation and feedback: site visits and network meetings Data Sources Focus group style interviews on site and at network meetings Site visit observation of key attributes related to improvement model Follow up phone or email contacts with practice liaisons Practice level surveys on specific topics Performance data extracted from the EMR PPRNet TRIP Quality Improvement Model Key Elements Prioritize Performance Involve All Staff Redesign Delivery System Activate the Patient Use EMR Tools PPRNet TRIP QI Model Practices have used the model to organize plans for improvement in the practice We catalogued QI activities related to site visits A compendium of strategies was developed (35) In the ATRIP final survey, adoption of these strategies was rated by practices Each of the following strategies (18) listed was rated by a nurse and physician as =>3 1 5 scale (1= never used, 5 =always used). * Jt Comm J Qual & Safety, August 2004, 30(8):432-441. PPRNet, 2003 2

Prioritize Performance Involve staff to determine approaches to improvement (4.34) Focus improvement efforts on ~3 items/quarter (3.93) Redesign Delivery Systems Limit prescription phone refills for medications when visits are overdue (4.30) Nursing staff alert providers about clinical parameters not at goal. (4.26) Incorporate schedules at least three months in advance so the next follow up can be scheduled at the current visit (3.94) Use electronic systems to remind patients of services needed (3.94) Redesign Delivery System Review office processes to decrease redundancy (3.85) Nursing staff reviews medications with patients (3.71) Schedule chronic disease labs before visit (3.68) Reschedule chronically ill/health maintenance patients that no show (3.65) Help patients to acquire medications via prescription assistance programs (3.64) Activate the Patient Reinforce protocols for prevention/disease management with consistent staff messages (3.45) Distribute prevention/disease management goals in a handout (3.23) Use EMR Tools Use EMR templates to guide nursing staff with patient screening (3.99) Use flow sheets, lab tables and/or health maintenance to remind practice of services needed (3.97) Use EMR Tools Use visit note templates to guide process of care (3.97) Improve documentation of relevant A TRIP diagnoses and measures (3.59) Update activity status for deceased or inactive patients (3.51) 3

Top Ten Strategies Involve staff to determine approaches to improvement (4.34) Limit phone refills when pt visits are overdue (4.3) Nsg staff alert clinicians re: clinical parameters not at goal (4.26) Use EMR templates to guide nsg staff pt screening (3.99) Use flow sheets, lab tables or health h maintenance to remind practice of services needed (3.97) Use visit note templates (3.96) Incorporate schedules at least 3 months ahead (3.94) Use electronic systems to remind pts of services needed (3.93) Focus improvement on limited # of items per quarter (3.93) Review office processes to decrease redundancy (3.84) A Culture of Safety the biggest challenge in moving towards a safer health system is changing the culture from one of blaming individuals for errors to one in which errors are treated not as personal failures but as opportunities to improve the system and prevent harm Institute of Medicine, 2001 (Nemeth et al, 2007 Journal of Nursing Care Quality) MS TRIP Indicator Categories Avoidance of Inappropriate Therapy Inappropriate Dosing (weight, age, renal function) Drug Drug Interactions Drug Disease State Interactions Adverse Drug Event Prevention Avoidance of Inappropriate Therapy Prioritize Performance, Redesign Delivery System Develop a practice wide approach for managing viral URI and evaluating medications in the elderly Review ineffectiveness of antibiotics for colds in advance; reinforce with office posters Provide elderly patients with a list of meds that should be avoided Avoid inappropriate or rarely appropriate meds in the elderly, attending to warnings in prescription writer Review and evaluate patients for medications that should be avoided during chronic care or wellness visits Inappropriate Medication Dosing (age, weight, and/or renal function) Prioritize Performance, Involve all Staff: Clinical staff review lab data prior to visit in chronic care patients; flag out of range lab values for provider to act upon Develop a consistent process to call pt back re: lab data Redesign the Delivery System: Assure weight is consistently measured at each visit Obtain labs in advance to adjust dosing as needed Use dose advisor in prescription writer; act upon warnings when prompted Apply disease and medication specific templates in health maintenance tables Drug Drug Interactions Prioritize Performance: Record all medications patient is taking Involve all Staff: Educate staff calling in refills fll on high hrisk medications on the interactions within indicators Redesign the System/Use EMR tools: When entering/reviewing medications heed all drug interaction warnings (click MORE for ALL warnings) Have patients always bring list of all medications 4

Drug Disease State Interactions Provide specific warning to patients about interactions related to their specific therapy as appropriate Redesign Delivery System /Use EMR Tools: Apply disease and medication specific HM templates as indicated Assure problem lists are accurate to activate disease state interactions Identify (using query tools) and contact patients with specific disease and medications that interact Adverse Drug Event Prevention Involve all Staff/Redesign the System: Ensure lab f/u ordered, monitored appropriately Clinical staff prompt providers re: out of range results Develop an anticoagulation monitoring system Advise patient of specific f/u for medication regimens Provide a patient handout on medication safety Use Health Maintenance medication templates and act upon the specific reminders Implications Adapt QI interventions to suit local context, yet ensure consideration of specific strategies Measurement involves comprehensive qualitative data collection and survey methods to identify effective approaches, but maximize survey response as needed Evaluate high and low performers in the context of what has or has not been changed in practice 5