from meaningful use to transformation xavier university cintas center may 20, 2011 breakout session...
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From Meaningful Use to TransformationXavier University Cintas Center
May 20, 2011
Breakout Session T2
Getting Better All the Time: An Applied Guide to Quality Reporting
and Performance Measurement
PanelistsBarb Reagan, RN
Director of Quality Improvement
HealthBridge
Mark WitteChief Executive Officer
The Family Medical Group
Mark Wess, MD, MScAssociate Professor, UC GIM
Director, UC Center for Health Informatics
Multiple Quality Initiatives
• Bridges to Excellence (BTE)• RWJ Aligning Forces for Quality (AF4Q)• CMS Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS)• ARRA, HITECH, Meaningful Use• NCQA Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) or
Neighborhood (PCMN)• Accountable Care Organizations (ACO)• Payers – P4P• and others
http://www.allhealth.org/community-initiatives.asp
Common Themes• Accountability• Action• Alignment
– recognition – funding
Data management and measurement assisting
change process
Quality Reportingfor Improving Outcomes
Barb Regan, RN
Cincinnati Initiatives- the beginning of quality reporting
Aligning Forces for Quality (AF4Q)• Initiative through the RWJF that focuses of a full
continuum of health care delivery (2007)• Multiple phases of the initiative-HealthBridge focused on
quality reporting for Management of Chronic Illness and Patient Centered Medical Home pilot
• As part of these 2 pilots, HealthBridge realized:– Most EHRs could not produce quality reporting– Free text data hard to captured and report on– Multiple ways to enter the same information in EHR – Most EHR are not designed to manage a full patient population
with chronic disease
Shared Experiences• Providers all thought they scored higher
– Sure there was a problem with the report– Review of data against chart (ehr or paper)– Wanted to score better next year
• Beneficial for staff members review the data before submission– Especially true when one staff member assigned to provider– Blanks make a great visual– Awareness of data needed for quality reporting– Realized they played a role in quality improvement
• All providers wanted a better way to track their patient with chronic conditions– More frequent reporting and monitoring of data
Key Lessons Learned- The 3 C’s
• Codified– Data in codified fields can be queried – Work with your EHR to build as many reportable fields as
possible templates flow charts medication lists- NDC codes, RxNorm codes
Medication ListAspirin 81mg Once a dayASA 81 DailyAspirn
• Consistent– Train staff and providers to enter data in reportable fields
if implementing a new EHR, the time to start is now have provider and staff review progress Correct bad data-give credit where credit is due
Height Weight6 ft 3 in 175.25
75 inches 175 ¼ lbs.
6’ 3” 175..25
Diabetic Foot Exam Date
Diabetic Foot Exam Value
05-01-2010 normal
05-07-2010 nl
05-10-2010 .
Key Lessons Learned- The 3 C’s
• Connected– Interface with your HIE (Health Information Exchange)
one connection to receive community results data placed in discrete fields PDF or scanned results cannot captured easily for quality reporting gateway for your EHR to securely send and receive data
Hemoglobin A1C Value Reference RangeHbA1c 6.5 4.3-5.6 A1C 8.2% 4.3-5.6hb 7.2 Normal Range
12.0-15.5 G/DL
Key Lessons Learned- The 3 C’s
Meaningful Use
“The key to Meaningful Use is to know how to measure performance and give feedback to providers.”
Dr. David Blumenthal, Former National Coordinator for Health IT
• Quality reporting is needed for Meaningful Use– Attestation process requires documentation to meet the
thresholds (ex. 40% eRx)– Providers experiencing the same problems attesting to
meaningful use – Certified EHRs still struggle producing documentation– Minimalist approach to quality reporting
HealthBridge realized practices needed assistance with quality reporting
Greater Cincinnati Beacon Community• Cooperative agreement with the government to achieve
measurable improvements in health care quality, safety and efficiency
• 30 month strategy to improver outcomes and manage population health
• Aim: Wed HIT-HIE-QI• Uses HIT tools to link health providers and other community–
wide resources in new and innovative ways• Each community developed and submitted their own health IT
related strategies and will work as a collaboration to implement and track performances
• 3 part strategy: decrease cost per capita, improve healthcare quality and manage and improve population health
• **BEACON IS A COMMUNITY**
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Registry- Tool for Quality Improvement
Why Use a Registry?• All patient, all-payer, all disease registry• Provides a comprehensive preventive care, chronic disease
management system that looks for GAPS IN CARE• Emphasis on interoperability, integration and interfacing• Comprehensive and versatile reporting capabilities• Customizable alerts and decision support• Real-time graphical clinical dashboard• Patient Portal• Patient report card• Patient reminders• Patient outreach• Integrated PQRI module• CMS certified registry and sit on the National PCMH Committee
Outcome Manager- collects administrative and clinical data for total snapshot of your patient
Alert Summary provides real-time evidence based protocol to find gaps in patient care
Generate patient reminders from your alert lists. Letters or voice over IP phone messages
Patient Report Card
Dashboard- real-time reporting on clinical measures by provider and group
In Summary
Quality is not an act, it is a habit.
Aristotle
Barb Regan, RNHealthBridge513-247-5256
Getting Better All the Time: An Applied Guide to Quality Reporting
and Performance Measurement
The Family Medical GroupA doctor’s story
Mark Witte, MD
You are who your record says you are.
Bill Parcells
The Family Medical Group• 11 physicians – largest independent Family Practice
Group in Greater Cincinnati.• 5 mid level providers• 3 locations• 31,000 patients in our EMR• 85 employees• Level 3 certification as a patient centered Medical home.• Top workplaces in Greater Cincinnati, Enquirer Media• Best Doctor Group, CityBeat Magazine
The Family Medical Group-61,151 encounters in 201-Handle 12,000 phone calls a month.-50,000 + hits on our website-Social Media presence – Facebook/TwitterParticipants in the following community initiatives
– Patient Centered Medical Pilot– Primary Care Innovation Group– WE Thrive Collaborative on Childhood Obesity– REC enrollee with HealthBridge– Your Health Matters– OHIO KePro’s Quality Measurements– Case Management project with Anthem– Care Coordination Project with Good Sam Hospital– Childhood immunization initiative with the Hamilton County
Board of Health– Part of a local effort to establish a health center for the
uninsured in Price Hill
Intro to the Family Medical Group
Who are we?
A system of patient care.
Every system is perfectly designed to get the results that it gets. Paul Battalden, Clinical Microsystems
Important Foundations• Patient Centered Medical Home is not about the
doctor doing more, but the organization becoming more effective.
• PCMH teaches us that effective/outcome driven/patient centered Healthcare requires a commitment to data management
• PCMH challenges us to find a common language. A language that providers, staff and, most importantly, patients speak.
A case study• Regina A. Kohls, MD• 2700 hundred patients in her panel.• TFMG Physician profile. We have created a
profile of every providers practice that includes the following:– Demographic information ( gender, ages, etc.)– Clinical data (diagnostic codes, quality scores, etc.)– Financial data – Practice utilization of services– Community involvement– Patient feedback– Staffing feedback
Your Health Matters
• Public reported on 5 diabetes measures-– A1C– LDL– Blood Pressure– Aspirin use– Smoking cessation
– Her score for the first submission -9%
Lessons of Public Reporting • Humility• All are measured on the same criteria• Outside view that addresses internal issues• Forced us to look at how we were
documenting data• Some challenges to the criteria (aspirin)• Improvement process must begin with a plan• Long term commitment
Dr. Kohls’ plan• Helped create a new template/flowsheet in our
EMR. Leader on our EPIC optimization team. (Not about the doctor doing more)
• Created her own sheet to engage with patients. Every person with diabetes is given a sheet with the explanation of the measures. (Language)
• We want it to be the score of the doctor and patient.
• We created a patient information center on facebook.
What are some of the results
• We are waiting for the final audit, but we know there is at least a 30 percent increase in our score. (Data management)
• In the DRP (NCQA) submission, Dr. Kohls scored 100%.
What are the recommendations
• “Be not afraid.”• Use it as a tool for practice transformation.• We dedicate physician meeting time to
this.• Use it as an opportunity to train staff.• Engage MA’s in auditing process so that
they see how they are impacting the doctor/patient score.
One EMR – Multiple Practices
Mark Wess, MD
Islands of Transformation
UHGMCRes
UC-PCN 1UC-PCN 2
UHMed-Peds
Certified
UHGMCFac UC-PCN 3
UC-PCN 4UC-PCN 5
UC-PCN 6UC-PCN 6
UC-PCN 7 UC-PCN 6
Pending
Starting
Legend
PCMHUC-PCN 7
Team Approach = Success
• Provider• Office staff• EMR staff• Data extract and reporting staff• Office champion(s)• Patients
UC EMR Positives• Improved PCP capture• Location of care captured• Improved disparate data capture
– Templates– Cues for documentation– HealthBridge results– Improved awareness of prior
documentation and gaps– Flow sheet views
UC EMR Limitations
• Limitations of functionality supporting reporting needs
• Lack of interoperability between fields• Free text allowed in high value fields• Multiple fields and locations for the same
type of information • Unintended use of field, decreased data
quality• Variations in design and use by individuals
Data Analysis and ReportingInfrastructure for data extraction and analysis
– Hardware, software, individuals– Consistent data “cleansing”– “Combine” data into one parameter– Number at goal for each parameter– Percent at goal– Ranking within practice– Process and outcome ranking scores within groups
Reporting– Monthly reporting by provider– Entire practice sees results– Raw patient data for providers to see and use
Action Steps on Reporting: Improving Documentation of Care• Simplify number of locations• Structured data
– Radio buttons, Yes-No, limited text choices, date format consistent (select from calendar)
• Coded data– Especially diagnoses, medications, allergies
• Field edits or staff education on correct data entry (do not use %, mg/dL, etc.)
• Add EMR fields for missing data• Educate staff on correct documentation
– Feedback on data quality
Action Steps on Reporting
• Provider or office action steps for improvement– Targeted
• missing ASA, LDL
– Global• mail merge letter to patients
– Patient activation• diabetes day, focused office visit on barriers
to DM goals and interventions planned
Major Lessons Learned• Engaged team members including patients• Capture data in a consist and reportable
manner• Consistently report to team members• “Office” needs to take action to improve
documentation and optimal care• Outcomes matter (D5), but also consider
process adherence (foot exam)• Metrics reflect the team
Results
• Improving scores – patients and providers• NCQA PCMH designations• AF4Q public reporting with BTE payments• Beacon participation• P4P
Ongoing and continued efforts for improvement
Transformed culture and care processes
We thank you for your time and attention
Questions Welcome