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Quality and Performance in Healthcare

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Title: Quality and Performance in Healthcare


1
Quality and Performance in Healthcare
  • Chapter 1
  • Defining a Performance Improvement Model

2
Key Terms
  • Continuous Monitoring
  • Opportunities for Improvement
  • Performance Improvement Team
  • Process redesign
  • QI toolbox techniques

3
Process Improvement Model
  • Define the Problem
  • Identify and document process
  • Measure performance
  • Understand why (Analyze results)
  • Develop and test ideas
  • Implement solutions and evaluate

4
Establishment of a PI Program
  • Define and implement the organization-wide PI
    model.
  • Establish a staff education plan to train
    employees in performance improvement.
  • Prioritize and define PI measures.
  • Define data collection and reporting
    responsibilities.
  • Appoint PI teams when process variation exceeds
    established benchmarks.
  • Maintain a process of reporting significant
    findings and corrective actions to the board of
    directors and other stakeholders.

5
Team Based PI Processes
  • Create a flow-chart of the current process.
  • Brainstorm problem areas within the current
    process.
  • Research any regulatory requirements related to
    the current process.
  • Compare the organizations current process to
    performance standards and/or nationally
    recognized standards.
  • Conduct a survey to gather customer input on
    their needs and expectations.
  • Prioritize problem areas for focused improvement.

6
Performance Improvement as a Cyclical Process
7
Team-based performance improvement process
8
Performance Improvement Model
9
Performance Measure Example
of incomplete medical records that exceed the
medical staffestablished timeframe for chart
completion _______________________________________
__________________________________________________
_________ Average monthly
discharges
10
Benchmark Example
  • Community Hospital of the West Employee Turnover
    Rate

11
Community Hospital of the West Performance
Improvement Model
12
Performance Improvement Models
  • Supplement to Chapter 1

13
Demings 14 Principles
  • Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of
    service
  • Adopt the new philosophy
  • Cease dependence on mass inspection to achieve
    quality
  • End the practice of awarding business on the
    basis of price tag
  • Improve constantly and forever the system of
    service delivery
  • Institute training on the job
  • Institute leadership
  • Drive out fear
  • Break down barriers between business units and
    departments
  • Eliminate slogans, exhortations, and targets for
    the workforce
  • Eliminate work standards and quotas for the work
    force. Eliminate management by objectives and
    management by numerical goals
  • Remove barriers to pride in workmanship
  • Institute a vigorous program of education and
    improvement
  • Put everyone to work to accomplish the
    transformation

14
Crosbys 14 Points to Improving Quality
  • Appoint a management committee
  • Establish a quality improvement team
  • Set up measurements
  • Identify the cost of poor quality
  • Develop quality awareness
  • Undertake corrective action programs
  • Zero defects planning
  • Employee education
  • Implement a zero defects kickoff day
  • Begin quality goal setting
  • Practice error-cause removal
  • Give recognition to accomplishments
  • Develop a quality council
  • Do it over again

15
7 Steps to Problem Solving
  • Identify and define the problem
  • Measure impact on customers
  • Prioritize possible causes
  • Research and analyze root causes
  • Outline alternative solutions
  • Validate that the solutions work
  • Execute solutions and standardize

16
JCAHO 10 STEP PROCESS
  • Assign Responsibility
  • Delineate scope of care and service
  • Identify important aspects of care/service
  • Identify indicators
  • Establish thresholds for evaluation
  • Collect and organize data
  • Initiate Evaluation
  • Take actions to improve care and service
  • Assess the effectiveness of actions and maintain
    the gain
  • Communicate results to affected individuals and
    groups

17
12 Step QI Process
  • List and prioritize problems
  • Define project and team or individual
  • Analyze symptoms
  • Formulate theories of causes
  • Test theories
  • Identify room cause
  • Consider alternative solutions
  • Design solutions and controls
  • Address resistance to change
  • Implement solutions and controls
  • Check performance
  • Monitor control system

18
12 Step Strategy
  • Top management commitment
  • Internal evaluation
  • Determining customer requirements
  • Goals and performance measures
  • Customer driven management
  • Becoming a customer champion
  • Employee motivation and self-esteem
  • Empowerment and training
  • Empowering employees to solve and prevent
    problems
  • Communicating feedback
  • Recognition, rewards, celebrations
  • Rapid continuous improvement

19
FOCUS
  • F Find an opportunity
  • O Organize a team
  • C Clarify knowledge of the process
  • and measure impact on
  • customers
  • U Undercover the root cause of
  • process variation
  • S Select the process improvement

20
FORCE
  • F Focus on the opportunity
  • O Outline the opportunity
  • R Research the opportunity
  • C Create and implement an action
  • plan
  • E Execute the plan and evaluate
  • the effectiveness of the actions

21
FOCUS PDCA / PDSA
  • P Plan the project definition and
    organization
  • D Do data collection and analysis
  • C Check on recommendations
  • A Act on recommendations
  • P Plan the project definition
  • and organization
  • D Do data collection and
  • analysis
  • S Study the data
  • A Act on Recommendations

PLAN
DO
ACT
CHECK
22
Quality Indicators
  • Items which will automatically trigger review
  • A defined measurable dimension of the quality and
    appropriateness of an important aspect of care or
    service that will be monitored for compliance
    with agreed upon standards and criteria.

23
Quality Indicator
  • Address the degree of adherence to
  • generally recognized
  • contemporary standards of good practice and
  • achievement of expected outcomes of a particular
  • problem,
  • procedure and diagnosis
  • or service.

24
Appropriateness Indicator
  • Addresses the extent to which a particular
  • diagnostic or therapeutic procedure or
  • service is clearly
  • indicated,
  • effective,
  • not excessive or
  • inadequate in quantity and
  • is provided in the setting best suited to the
    patients needs.

25
Indicators of Performance
  • Efficacy the degree to which the
    care/intervention used for the patient has been
    shown to accomplish the desired/projected
    outcomes. (If something does what it is intended
    to do)
  • Appropriateness the degree to which the
    care/intervention provided is relevant to the
    patients clinical needs, given the current
    technological state of the art.
  • Availability the degree to which appropriate
    care/interventions are available to meet the
    needs of the patients served.

26
Indicators of performance
  • Timeliness the degree to which the
    care/interventions is provided to the patient at
    the time it is most beneficial or necessary.
  • Effectiveness the degree to which the
    care/intervention is provided in the correct
    manner, given by the correct state of the art
    methodology, in order to achieve the
    desired/projected outcome for the patient. (How
    successful the end results are)
  • Continuity the degree to which the risk of an
    intervention risk in the care environment are
    reduced for the patient and the healthcare
    provided.

27
Indicators of Performance
  • Safety the degree to which the risk of an
    intervention risk in the care environment are
    reduced for the patient the healthcare
    provider.
  • Efficiency of services the ratio of the
    outcomes or results of care for a patient to the
    resources used to deliver the care. (How well
    something is done)
  • Respect caring the degree to which a patient,
    or designee, is involved in his/her own care
    decisions, that those providing services do so
    with sensitivity respect for his/her needs
    expectations individual performance.

28
Criterion
  • A yardstick or gauge of what is acceptable
    quality and appropriateness of an aspect of care
    defined by the indicator.
  • Criteria may be related to
  • structure (physical facilities/resources)
  • process, (procedures)
  • or outcome of care or service

29
Hospital Wide
  • Death
  • Unexpected transfer to ICU
  • Acute MI during hospital stay
  • Pneumonia developed post-admission
  • Readmission within 30 days
  • Development of decubitus ulcer

30
Examples of Indicators
  • SURGERY
  • Elective Aneurysmectomy
  • discharged with persistent 100 or more increase
    in BUN/Creatinine or need for dialysis
  • with cross clamp time gt 1 hour or complications
    such as amputation
  • Craniotomy patient
  • discharged by death
  • with prolonged coma gt2 hours post craniotomy when
    patient was not comatose prior to surgery
  • discharged with hemiplegia

31
Surgical Case Review
  • Preop and postop diagnosis disagree with
    pathology
  • Indications for procedure not met
  • Trauma to organs during surgery
  • Unplanned removal of body part during surgery
  • Admission after OP procedure (post-anesthesia)
  • Surgical wound infection
  • Postop pulmonary embolus

32
OB
  • Excessive maternal blood loss
  • Infant weighing lt2500 grams after induction of
    C-section
  • Significant birth trauma
  • Term infant with hypoxic encephalopathy or
    seizure
  • Infant death

33
Anesthesia
  • CNS complication within 2 post procedure days
  • Peripheral neurologic deficit within 2 post
    procedure days
  • Acute MI within 2 post procedure days
  • Cardiac arrest within one post procedure days
  • Death within 2 post procedure days
  • Unplanned admission within one post procedure day
    following OP procedure
  • Admission to ICU within one post procedure day
    with ICU stay gt one day

34
Medicine
  • Admission DX of diabetes mellitus with acidosis
    discharged by death
  • Admission DX of DM with acidosis without fasting
    blood sugar controlled between 250-280 within 72
    hours of admission
  • Admission DX of back/neck pain with myelogram
    revealing herniated nucleus pulposus without a
    request for neurosurgical consult
  • Admission DX of back/neck pain maintained on
    narcotics gt 24 hours without use of other
    conservative measure or without myelogram

35
Family Practice
  • Death related to ketoacidosis of DM
  • New discharge DX of DM without documentation of
    diabetic education
  • DX of pyelonephritis without antibiotic coverage
    consistent with urine culture and sensitivity
  • Discharge DX of pyelonephritis with positive
    urine screen/culture and without documentation of
    scheduled follow-up

36
Core MeasuresJCAHO Mandated Data Sets
  • Acute Myocardial Infarction
  • Heart Failure
  • Pneumonia
  • Pregnancy and Related Conditions
  • Surgical Infection Preventions
  • Effective with October 1, 06 Discharges
  • Cardiac Beta Blocker Therapy
  • Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis

37
Acute Myocardial Infarction
  • AMI-1 Aspirin at Arrival Acute myocardial
    infarction (AMI) patients without aspirin
    contraindications who received aspirin within 24
    hours before or after hospital arrival.
  • AMI-2  Aspirin Prescribed at Discharge - Acute
    myocardial infarction (AMI) patients without
    aspirin contraindications who are prescribed
    aspirin at hospital discharge.

38
Acute Myocardial Infarction
  • AMI-3 ACEI or ARB for LVSD-Acute myocardial
    infarction (AMI) patients with left ventricular
    systolic dysfunction (LVSD) and without both
    angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI)
    and angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB)
    contraindications who are prescribed an ACEI or
    ARB at hospital discharge. For purposes of this
    measure, LVSD is defined as chart documentation
    of a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF)
    less than 40 or a narrative description of left
    ventricular function (LVF) consistent with
    moderate or severe systolic dysfunction.

39
Acute Myocardial Infarction, Continued
  • AMI-4 Adult Smoking Cessation Advice/Counseling-
    Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients with a
    history of smoking cigarettes who are given
    smoking cessation advice or counseling during
    hospital stay.  For purposes of this measure, a
    smoker is defined as someone who has smoked
    cigarettes anytime during the year prior to
    hospital arrival.
  • AMI-5 Beta Blocker Prescribed at Discharge-Acute
    myocardial infarction (AMI) patients without beta
    blocker contraindications who are prescribed a
    beta blocker at hospital discharge.

40
Acute Myocardial Infarction, Continued
  • AMI-6 Beta Blocker at Arrival- Acute myocardial
    infarction (AMI) patients without beta blocker
    contraindications who received a beta blocker
    within 24 hours after hospital arrival.

41
Acute Myocardial Infarction, Continued
  • AMI-7 Median Time to Thrombolysis- Median time
    from arrival to administration of a thrombolytic
    agent in patients with ST segment elevation or
    left bundle branch block (LBBB) on the
    electrocardiogram (ECG) performed closest to
    hospital arrival time.
  • AMI-7a  Thrombolytic Agent Received Within 30
    Minutes of Hospital Arrival - Acute myocardial
    infarction (AMI) patients receiving thrombolytic
    therapy during the hospital stay and having a
    time from hospital arrival to thrombolysis of 30
    minutes or less.

42
Acute Myocardial Infarction, Continued
  • AMI-8 Median Time to PTCA- Median time from
    arrival to percutaneous transluminal coronary
    angioplasty (PTCA) in patients with ST segment
    elevation or left bundle branch block (LBBB) on
    the electrocardiogram (ECG) performed closest to
    hospital arrival time.
  • AMI-8a PCI received within 90 minutes of hospital
    arrival - Acute myocardial infarction (AMI)
    patients receiving primary percutaneous coronary
    intervention (PCI) during the hospital stay with
    a time from hospital arrival to PCI of 90 minutes
    or less.

43
Acute Myocardial Infarction, Continued
  • AMI-9 JCAHO Only Inpatient mortality-AMI patients
    who expire during hospital stay.

44
Heart Failure
  • HF-1 Discharge Instructions -Heart failure
    patients discharged home with written discharge
    instructions or educational material given to
    patient or caregiver at discharge or during the
    hospital stay addressing all of the following
  • activity level
  • diet
  • discharge medications
  • follow-up appointment
  • weight monitoring
  • what to do if symptoms worsen.

45
Heart Failure, continued
  • HF-2 LVF Assessment-Heart failure patients with
    documentation in the hospital record that left
    ventricular function (LVF) was assessed before
    arrival, during hospitalization, or is planned
    for after discharge.

46
Heart Failure, continued
  • HF-3 ACEI or ARB for LVSD -Heart failure patients
    with left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD)
    and without both angiotensin converting enzyme
    inhibitor (ACEI) and angiotensin receptor blocker
    (ARB) contraindications who are prescribed an
    ACEI or ARB at hospital discharge. For purposes
    of this measure, LVSD is defined as chart
    documentation of a left ventricular ejection
    fraction (LVEF) less than 40 or a narrative
    description of left ventricular function (LVF)
    consistent with moderate or severe systolic
    dysfunction.

47
Heart Failure, continued
  • HF-4 Adult Smoking Cessation Advice/Counseling-Hea
    rt failure patients with a history of smoking
    cigarettes who are given smoking cessation advice
    or counseling during hospital stay.  For purposes
    of this measure, a smoker is defined as someone
    who has smoked cigarettes anytime during the year
    prior to hospital arrival.

48
Pneumonia
  • PN-1 Oxygenation assessment-Pneumonia patients
    who had an assessment of arterial oxygenation by
    arterial blood gas measurement or pulse oximetry
    within 24 hours prior to or after arrival at the
    hospital.
  • PN-2 Pneumococcal screening and/or
    vaccination-Pneumonia patients age 65 and older
    who were screened for pneumococcal vaccine status
    and were administered the vaccine prior to
    discharge, if indicated.

49
Pneumonia, continued
  • PN-3a Blood Cultures Performed Within 24 Hours
    Prior to or 24 Hours After Hospital Arrival for
    Patients Who Were Transferred or Admitted to the
    ICU Within 24 Hours of Hospital Arrival -
    Pneumonia patients transferred or admitted to the
    ICU within 24 hours of hospital arrival, who had
    blood cultures performed within 24 hours prior to
    or 24 hours after hospital arrival.
  • PN-3b Blood Cultures Performed in the Emergency
    Department Prior to Initial Antibiotic Received
    in Hospital - Pneumonia patients whose initial
    emergency room blood culture specimen was
    collected prior to first hospital dose of
    antibiotics

50
Pneumonia, continued
  • PN-4 Adult smoking cessation advice/counseling-Pne
    umonia patients with a history of smoking
    cigarettes who are given smoking cessation advice
    or counseling during hospital stay.

51
Pneumonia, continued
  • PN-5 Antibiotic timing-The time, in minutes, from
    hospital arrival to administration of first
    antibiotic for inpatients with pneumonia.
  • PN-5a Initial antibiotic received within 8 hours
    of hospital arrival and
  • PN-5b Initial antibiotic received within 4 hours
    of hospital arrival - PN-5a Pneumonia patients
    who receive their first dose of antibiotics
    within 8 hours after arrival at the hospital PN
    5b Pneumonia patients who receive their first
    dose of antibiotics within 4 hours after arrival
    at the hospital.

52
Pneumonia, continued
  • PN-6) Immunocompetent patients with
    Community-Acquired Pneumonia who receive an
    initial antibiotic regimen during the first 24
    hours that is consistent with current guidelines
  • (PN-6a) Immunocompetent ICU patients with
    Community-Acquired Pneumonia who receive an
    initial antibiotic regimen during the first 24
    hours that is consistent with current guidelines.

53
Pneumonia, continued
  • (PN-6b) Immunocompetent non-Intensive Care Unit
    (ICU) patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia
    who receive an initial antibiotic regimen during
    the first 24 hours that is consistent with
    current guidelines. -Immunocompetent patients for
    both ICU (PN-6a) and non-ICU (PN-6b) with
    pneumonia who receive an initial antibiotic
    regimen during the first 24 hours that is
    consistent with current guidelines.
  • PN-7 Influenza vaccination-Pneumonia patients age
    50 years and older, hospitalized during October,
    November, December, January, or February who were
    screened for influenza vaccine status and were
    vaccinated prior to discharge, if indicated.

54
Pregnancy and Related Conditions
  • PRC-1 VBAC -- Rate of patients who have had a
    vaginal delivery after a cesarean section."
  • PRC-2 Neonatal Mortality -- Live-born neonates
    who expire within 28 days after birth.

55
Pregnancy and Related Conditions
  • PRC-3 Third or Fourth Degree Laceration --
    Patients who have vaginal deliveries with third
    or fourth degree laceration (tear).

56
Surgical Infection Prevention
  • SCIP- Inf-1 Prophylactic Antibiotic Received
    Within 1 Hour Prior to Surgical Incision-Surgical
    patients who received prophylactic antibiotics
    within one hour prior to surgical incision.
    Patients who received vancomycin or a
    fluoroquinolone for prophylactic antibiotics
    should have the antibiotics administered within
    two hours prior to surgical incision. Due to the
    longer infusion time required for vancomycin or a
    fluoroquinolone, it is acceptable to start these
    antibiotics within two hours prior to incision
    time.

57
Surgical Infection Prevention, continued
  • SCIP- Inf-2 Prophylactic Antibiotic Selection for
    Surgical Patients- Surgical patients who received
    prophylactic antibiotics consistent with current
    guidelines (specific to each type of surgical
    procedure).
  • SCIP- Inf-3 Prophylactic Antibiotics Discontinued
    Within 24 Hours After Surgery End Time-Surgical
    patients whose prophylactic antibiotics were
    discontinued within 24 hours after surgery end
    time.

58
Surgical Infection Prevention - Each indicator is
stratified in the following manner
59
Surgical Infection Prevention, continued
  • SCIP- Inf-4 Cardiac Surgery Patients With
    Controlled 6 A.M. Postoperative Serum Glucose -
    Cardiac surgery patients with controlled 6 A.M.
    serum glucose ( 200 mg/dL) on postoperative day
    one (POD 1) and postoperative day two (POD 2)
    with Surgery End Date being postoperative day
    zero (POD 0).

60
Surgical Infection Prevention, continued
  • SCIP- Inf-6 Surgery Patients with Appropriate
    Hair Removal- Surgery patients with appropriate
    surgical site hair removal. No hair removal, or
    hair removal with clippers or depilatory is
    considered appropriate. Shaving is considered
    inappropriate.
  • SCIP- Inf-7 Colorectal Surgery Patients with
    Immediate Postoperative Normothermia- Colorectal
    surgery patients with immediate normothermia
    (96.8-100.4 F) within the first hour after
    leaving the operating room.

61
Cardiac
  • SCIP-Card-2  Surgery Patients on Beta Blocker
    Therapy Prior to Admission Who Received a Beta
    Blocker During the Perioperative Period - Surgery
    patients on beta blocker therapy prior to
    admission who received a beta blocker during the
    perioperative period.  The perioperative period
    for the SCIP Cardiac measures is defined as 24
    hours prior to surgical incision through
    discharge from post-anesthesia care/recovery
    area.

62
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis
  • SCIP-VTE-1   Surgery Patients with Recommended
    Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis Ordered -
    Surgery patients with recommended venous
    thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis ordered during
    the admission.

63
Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis, continued
  • SCIP-VTE-2   Surgery Patients Who Received
    Appropriate Venous Thromboembolism Prophylaxis
    Within 24 Hours Prior to Surgery to 24 Hours
    After Surgery - Surgery patients who received
    appropriate venous thromboembolism (VTE)
    prophylaxis within 24 hours prior to Surgical
    Incision Time to 24 hours after Surgery End Time.

64
CMS Core Measures
  • Acute Myocardial Infarction
  • Heart Failure
  • Community Acquired Pneumonia
  • Pregnancy and Related Conditions

65
  • http//www.jointcommission.org/
  • Performance Measurement
  • Core Measures
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