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Preparing Patients and Caregivers to Participate in Care Delivered Across Settings: The Care Transitions Intervention Monique Parrish, Dr.PH, MPH, LCSW – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preparing Patients and Caregivers to Participate in Care Delivered Across Settings:


1
Preparing Patients and Caregivers to Participate
in Care Delivered Across Settings  The Care
Transitions Intervention
  • Monique Parrish, Dr.PH, MPH, LCSW

2
Background Coleman Care Transitions Model
  • Qualitative Studies
  • Inadequately prepared for next setting
  • Conflicting advice for illness management
  • Inability to reach the right practitioner
  • Repeatedly completing tasks left undone

3
The Silent Care Coordinators
  • By default, older patients and family caregivers
    function as their own care coordinators
  • First line of defense for transition related
    errors
  • Model explicitly recognizes their role as
    integral members of the interdisciplinary team

4
Randomized Controlled Trial
5
Variable Intervention Control P-Value
Age (years) 76.0 76.4 0.52
Female () 48.2 52.3 0.26
Married () 58.2 53.8 0.23
Lives alone () 30.9 30.8 0.99
Sad or Blue () 30.3 26.4 0.24
CHF () 16.5 12.9 0.17
COPD () 17.0 18.5 0.61
Arrhythmia () 12.8 19.0 0.02
CAD () 14.1 13.5 0.81
Chronic Disease Score 6.8 7.1 0.31
6
Variable Intervention Control P-Value
Prior Hosp () 1 past 6 mo 29.3 26.1 0.36
Prior ED () 1 past 6 mo 40.3 38.9 0.69
D/C Destin. Home () Homecare () SNF () Other () 50.8 24.7 21.0 3.5 52.9 25.9 19.3 1.9 0.71
Friday D/C () 14.6 16.5 0.48
7
Variable Intervention Control Adjusted P-value
Re-hospitalized w/in 30 days 8 12 0.048
Re-hospitalized w/in 90 days 17 23 0.04
Re-hospitalized w/in 180 days 26 31 0.28
8
Variable Intervention Control Adjusted P-value
Readmit for Same Dx w/in 30 days 3 5 0.18
Readmit for Same Dx w/in 90 days 5 10 0.04
Readmit for Same Dx w/in 180 days 9 14 0.046
9
Care Transitions
  • Care Transitions refers to the movement
    patients make between health care practitioners
    and settings as their condition and care needs
    change during the course of a chronic or acute
    illness.

10
The Care Transitions Intervention
  • Designed to encourage older patients and their
    caregivers to assert a more active role during
    care transitions

11
The Four Pillars
12
Four Pillars
  • Medication Self-Management
  • Patient Centered Health Record (PHR) Primary
    Care Provider/Specialist Follow-Up
  • Knowledge of Red Flags

13
Pillar 1 Medication Self-Management
  • Focus reinforcing the importance of knowing each
    medication when, why, and how to take what is
    prescribed, and developing an effective
    medication management system

14
Pillar 2 Personal Health Record (PHR)
  • Focus providing a health care management guide
    for patients the PHR is introduced during the
    hospital visit and used throughout the program

15
Key Elements of the Personal Health Record
  • Record of patients medical history
  • Red flags, or warning signs
  • Medication list and allergies
  • Advance Directives
  • Structured Checklist of critical activities
    (instructions, f/u appointments)
  • Space for patient questions and concerns

16
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17
Goal Attainment
  • What is one personal goal that is important for
    you to achieve one month after you get home?

18
Response Categories
  • I have not worked on it
  • I have not met that goal, but am working on it
  • I have met the goal as well as I expected
  • I have met the goal better than I expected

19
Findings
  • Patients who worked with the Transition Coach
    were more likely to achieve their goals around
    symptom control and functional status

20
Pillar 3 Primary Care Provider/Specialist
Follow-Up
  • Focus enlist patients involvement in scheduling
    appointment(s) with the primary care provider or
    specialist as soon as possible after discharge

21
Pillar 4 Knowledge of Red Flags
  • Focus patient is knowledgeable about indicators
    that suggest that his or her condition is
    worsening and how to respond

22
Key Elements of Intervention
  • Transition Coach (Nurse or Nurse Practitioner)
  • Prepares patient for what to expect and to speak
    up
  • Provides tools (Personal Health Record)
  • Follows patient to nursing facility or to the
    home
  • Reconciles pre- and post-hospital medications
  • Practices or role-plays next encounter or visit
  • Phone calls 2, 7 and 14 days after discharge
  • Single point of contact reinforce, ensure follow
    up

23
Intervention Activities
  • Hospital Visit
  • Home Visit
  • 2-Day Follow-Up Call
  • 7-Day Follow-Up Call
  • 14-Day Follow-up Call

24
First Interaction (Hospital or Home Visit)
  • Introduce the Program
  • Structure of the intervention visits and calls
  • Role and purpose of the coach
  • Accessibility of the coach
  • Introduce and complete the Personal Health Record
  • Assure Coverage of Intervention Activities
    Checklist (Four Pillars)

25
2, 7 and 14-Day Phone Calls
  • Follow-up on issues discussed during
    hospital/home visit.
  • Review the Four Pillars as they apply to each
    patient at the appropriate stage in the
    transition (see Intervention Activities
    Checklist)

26
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27
Anticipated Cost Savings
  • For 350 chronically ill older adults with an
    initial hospitalization, anticipated net costs
    savings over 12 months
  • US 295,594

28
Coaching
  • What is coaching?
  • How does coaching differ from what nurses, social
    workers, and community workers do to help
    patients?

29
Key Attributes for the Transition Coach
  • Ability to shift from a doing role to a
    coaching role
  • Skill and knowledge to manage and reconcile
    medications
  • A strong enough sense of empowerment to empower a
    patient and/or caregiver
  • Ability to engage in critical thinking within the
    framework of a care plan

30
Took Kit for Coaches
  • Medication Discrepancy Tool (promoting Medication
    Safety)
  • Intervention Activities Checklist
  • PHR

31
Introducing the Medication Discrepancy Tool (MDT)
  • Patient-centered
  • Applicable across a variety of health settings
  • Identify patient- and system-level factors
  • Items need to be actionable at point of care

32
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33
Non-Intentional Non-Compliance
  • Prior to hospitalization, a patient was
    prescribed Digoxin 0.25 mg daily
  • The patients discharge instructions read,
    Digoxin 0.125 mg daily
  • The patient had only the pre-hospitalization 0.25
    mg Digoxin pills and had been taking these since
    discharge

34
Intentional Non-Compliance
  • A patient was admitted to the hospital for COPD
    exacerbation
  • Following discharge, he was not using his
    maintenance steroid inhaler because he believed
    that that medication makes my breathing worse

35
D/C Instructions Incomplete or Illegible
  • The patients hospital discharge instructions
    were written as follows
  • KCl 10 mEq BID

36
14 Percent Experienced 1 Med Discrepancies
  • 62 percent experienced one
  • 25 percent experienced two
  • 8 percent experienced three
  • 5 percent experienced four or more

37
Patient-Level Contributing Factors
Non-intentional non-adherence 34
Money/financial barriers 6
Intentional non-adherence 5
Didnt fill prescription 5
Other 1
Subtotal 51
38
System-Level Contributing Factors
D/C instructions incomplete/illegible 16
Conflicting info from different sources 15
Duplicative prescribing 8
Incorrect label 4
Other 7
Subtotal 49
39
30-Day Hospital Re-Admit Rate
Patients with identified med discrepancies 14.3
Patients with no identified med discrepancies 6.1
P0.041
40
The lack of quality measures for care transitions
remains a significant barrier to quality
improvement
41
Brief History of the Care Transitions Measure
(CTM)
  • Qualitative studies shaped items
  • Transition-specific items gt Common set of items
  • Items discriminate among facilities
  • CTM endorsed by NQF in May 2006

Supported by The National Institute on Aging
and The Commonwealth
Fund
42
CTM Items
  • The hospital staff took my preferences and those
    of my family or caregiver into account in
    deciding what my health care needs would be when
    I left the hospital
  • When I left the hospital, I had a good
    understanding of the things I was responsible for
    in managing my health
  • When I left the hospital, I clearly understood
    the purpose for taking each of my medications

43
Demand for the CTM
  • Over 1400 requests for permission to use from 15
    Countries
  • Adopted by WHO multi-national (Europe) hospital
    quality collaborative
  • Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield P4P
  • Maine to vote on statewide public reporting

44
Qualitative Evaluation
  • To evaluate the efficacy of the intervention
  • To augment the quantitative findings

45
Conclusion Qualitative Data
  • Patients appreciated the follow-up, expertise,
    support and accessibility of the Transition
    Coach.
  • Reception of the PHR was mixed, with ½ using it,
    and ½ not at 30 days post-intervention.
  • Barriers to successful implementation of
    intervention

46
Transition Coach
  • Competence
  • She was always able to answer my questions
  • Accessibility
  • There was somebody I could go to if I needed, if
    I had any questions, I knew I had somebody I
    could call.
  • Security
  • I was pretty skeptical about it. But it turned
    out to be a real beneficial thingthe program
    gives you a real inner comfortwhen youve
    confirmed that youre doing it right and you know
    what to expect.
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