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Health Care Transformation

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Critical access hospital/rural health clinic system, integrated since 1991 ... Clinic manager critical missing element. Immunization nurse improved efficiency ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Care Transformation


1
Health Care Transformation
Luncheon Panel
  • The journey toward a medical home
  • in Harlan, Iowa
  • Don Klitgaard, MD, FAAFP
  • MMC Medical Director
  • With Duane Magee, patient

2
Goals of our discussion
  • Process of transformation what have we been
    doing in past 2 years to become a PCMH
  • Physician experiences with changes
  • How has this affected the patient experience?
  • What have we learned so far through the process?

3
Who Are We?Myrtue Medical Center Harlan, IA
  • Critical access hospital/rural health clinic
    system, integrated since 1991
  • Medical staff 7 Family Physicians, 1 Med/Peds,
    1 general surgeon, 3 PAs, 2ARNPs
  • Nursing staff 35, Office staff - 22
  • Main clinic in Harlan, community of 5200 in rural
    Iowa, and 3 satellite clinics in Avoca, Shelby
    and Elk Horn
  • Full scope of practice Inpatient, ER, NH, OB,
    procedures, clinic coverage

4
Harlan, Iowa
5
Harlan, Iowa
6
Myrtue Medical Center
7
Real patients the Magee family
8
Practice Demographics
  • 20,787 active patient e-records
  • Newborns to 107 year olds
  • Wellness to acute illness to chronic disease care
  • 38,000 clinic visits in last year
  • 6.5 million gross clinic revenue
  • 159,000 net clinic income
  • Payors 39 Medicare, 30 Wellmark BC/BS, 20
    other commercial insurers, 7 Medicaid, 4
    self-pay

9
Where we started in 2005-06 ripe for
practice-level change
  • Interim, then new CEO
  • No clinic manager
  • Nurses union turmoil large nurse turnover
  • Many failed practice improvement projects
  • Failed EHR implementation/lost IT staff
  • Stressed Medical, office, and nursing staff
  • We want to improve and change but we know that we
    need help to do it!

10
The Imperative to Change
  • According to the Future of Family Medicine
    Report
  • unless there are changes in the broader
    healthcare system and within the specialty, the
    position of family medicine in the United States
    may be untenable in a 10-20 year time-frame,
    which would be detrimental to the health of the
    American public.

11
Do we really have to change?
  • You dont have to change, survival is optional,
    C. Edwards Deming

12
Enter the TransforMed NDP
  • What is it about? (vision)
  • What changes are we making through it? (process)
  • What are we learning through the process?
    (outcomes)

13
TransforMED Mission
  • The mission of TransforMED is to lead and
    empower family physicians in implementing the new
    model of care

14
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15
The TransforMed Project
  • AAFP-funded National Demonstration Project - 8
    million initial investment
  • Applied January 2006
  • Selected April 2006
  • 24 month project began June 2006 and ended May
    31, 2008
  • Evaluation period will end December 2008

16
National Demonstration Project
  • 36 sites from around the country were selected to
    study the new model.
  • These practices were randomly assigned to
  • one of two groups
  • 18 facilitated practices will engage in a
    transformative process to fully implement a new
    model of care
  • 18 self directed practices will be provided the
    information to implement the model of care in a
    self directed manner.

17
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18
Facilitated Practices
19
Goals of the NDP Evaluation
  • To generate and disseminate new knowledge about
    the process of practice transformation.
  • To evaluate and compare the effects of two
    transformation approaches (i.e., facilitated vs.
    self-directed) on practice and patient outcomes.

20
Goals of the NDP Evaluation
  • To determine the effect of the New Model (PCMH)
    implementation on the following
  • Patient outcomes
  • Patient-centered care
  • Staff/physician working relationships
  • Financials of the practice

21
What we agreed to
  • Implementation - all aspects of the New Model
    during the 24 months
  • Evaluation staff/patient satisfaction surveys,
    clinical/chart reviews, financial reviews, etc.
  • Dissemination lessons learned during the NDP
    will be shared in many venues
  • Staff commitment lead physician and staff
    member for learning collaboratives in KC, monthly
    phone conferences, ongoing e-mails, on-site
    visits with TransforMed staff

22
What we received in return
  • A worthy vision gets to the heart of medicine,
    especially FM/primary care
  • Practice Enhancement Facilitator 1 for each 6
    practices
  • Exposure to best practice ideas in all areas of
    practice redesign
  • Ongoing consultant support
  • Some specific IT product assistance

23
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24
Patient experience PCMH concept
  • Concept make sense?
  • Importance to patients, families, employers,
    community

25
Myrtue Medical Center Clinics Projects
  • Where to start?
  • How do you eat an elephant.?
  • Prioritized by
  • Easy wins/low-hanging fruit needed practice at
    team design and needed confidence-builders
  • Largest obstacles to improved care earlier
  • What made sense in the big picture some
    projects built on others

26
Our transformation process where and how to
start
  • Team building/Vision sharing soft, but critical
  • Main focus in the first 2-3 months
  • Honest Self-Assessment brutal reality check
  • First month
  • Goal development/Timeline setting
  • Started thinking about and discussing right away,
    details gradually took shape over the first 3-4
    months

27
Our transformation process - Overview of the
projects
  • Projects the work starts in earnest
  • Staff empowerment/redesign
  • Advanced Access Scheduling
  • EHR Implementation Oh, the pain.
  • Clinic process review
  • Chronic Disease Management
  • Clinical decision support/Point of care reports
  • Wellness integration

28
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Staff redesign/empowerment
  • Daily nursing huddles easy/effective
  • Lead nurse selection and development
  • Clinic manager critical missing element
  • Immunization nurse improved efficiency
  • Health coaches/Chronic Disease Management nurses
    manage registries, proactive care

29
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Open Access/Advanced Access Scheduling
  • Accurately matching supply with demand
  • Started with a 2 week internal study of
  • Supply hours available by provider by day
  • Demand appointments requested by provider and
    as a whole
  • Gave us an accurate picture of problem times
    supply/demand mismatches
  • Made changes in scheduling to help opened more
    open slots on busiest days/times, added evening
    hours
  • Continual reassessment and revision process
  • This can now drive good decisions on need for
    more staff as well as how to handle holidays,
    vacations, crunch times better

30
Patient experience - access
  • Open/Advanced access
  • Extended hours
  • Saturday hours
  • Impressions of access changes?

31
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • EHR implementation/use go live was 2/07
  • HUGE change for all, especially Med Staff
  • Planning, planning, more planning crucial 2 yrs
  • Many benefits
  • Intraoffice e-messaging
  • E-prescribing
  • Real-time documentation with templates
  • Expanded access to information
  • Allows for a new level of population-based care,
    point of care improvements, etc
  • An extremely useful tool, but not an end

32
Patient experience Technology
  • EHR
  • E-prescribing
  • Change in patient experience laptops,
    information access, rxs

33
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Clinic process review - started asking many hard
    questions
  • How does information flow around our office? How
    should it flow in an efficient, effective medical
    home? Who does what process, and should they?
  • rx refills, NH questions, phone messages, lab
    results
  • How can we as a Medical staff make group
    decisions to make our staffs days (and patients
    care) better?
  • Standardized care - templates, flow sheets,
    standing orders
  • Moving towards true team care of patients
    especially those with chronic diseases
  • Not easy, but big returns in efficiency!

34
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Chronic Disease Management /Population
    Management/Health Coaches
  • Diabetes, asthma, hypertension, CHFwho?
  • First had to develop disease registries not
    easy
  • Foster a true team approach to care OUR team of
    physician, nurse, scheduler, health coach (as
    opposed to calls from insurers nurse, CMS
    reviewer, etc.)
  • Allows flexibility simple reminder calls to
    lengthy face-to-face interventions, either
    planned or opportunistic
  • Health Coaches to monitor populations of patients
    get them in for needed care, provide proactive
    interventions, help give patients more
    empowerment and control
  • HUGE potential for improved care

35
Patient experience Chronic disease management
  • See value with family, as employer?

36
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Clinical decision support/Point of care (POC)
    reports 2008?
  • Offers enhanced disease registry functions not
    available in EHR
  • POC reports based on EHR data run through a
    protocol engine
  • Single page report
  • Makes visits much more productive
  • Easily identifies needed care
  • Can delegate which things nursing can do by
    standing order and which a physician should
    discuss with the patient
  • When paired with CDM, much potential for large
    improvements in patient/population care quickly
  • However, another level of technology
    cost/interface barriers

37
Patient experience Point of care reminders
  • Would you like this?
  • See benefits as patient?

38
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Financial review
  • Individual physician and group finances evaluated
  • Offer insights into possible areas of improvement
  • Highlights the need for ongoing dialogue and
    education of the medical staff about business,
    billing and coding issues
  • Emphasizes the underlying inherent conflict in
    many physicians between the business of medical
    practice and the practice of medicine just let
    me take good care of my patients

39
Myrtue Medical Center ClinicsCurrent Projects
  • Office Redesign in process
  • Satellite clinic remodels
  • Plans for major clinic overhaul to optimize care
    under the PCMH model
  • Wellness integration in process
  • MMC funding/leading community Wellness Center
    project open late 2009
  • Will offer many opportunities to encourage
    wellness and integrate into our practice

40
Patient experience Wellness
  • Impressions from a parent, school administrator,
    individual

41
Continuing toward a PCMHFuture Projects
  • Website enhancement/Patient portal
  • Scheduling and refill requests
  • Electronic bill pay
  • E-visits/e-mail communication
  • Secure lab results
  • Collect PMH on-line
  • Referral tracking Trudy
  • Enhanced communication with hospitals/specialists
  • Kiosks in office check-in, update demographics,
    enter symptoms, instant claims adjudication
  • The list keeps growing!

42
Patient experience Website, etc
  • Would you use and anticipate other to also?

43
Our transformation process
  • Ongoing assessments metrics
  • Metrics, common in business, are largely unused
    in most smaller practices
  • Wait times, staff satisfaction, patient
    satisfaction, billing/coding reviews and
    improvements, individual physician and practice
    level financial assessments
  • Very helpful internally to identify
    opportunities, gauge process change effectiveness
  • If not understood completely and used punitively,
    will derail progress measuring complex process

44
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49
Practice
NDP
Practice
NDP
March, 2008
June, 2007
50
Sowhat have we learned?(at MMC and in the NDP)
  • Change is hard and slow
  • Transformation on many levels
  • of practices culture change
  • of physicians personal change
  • of patient expectations
  • Practices not used to system-level changes
  • Personally, I think this will be a 3-5 year
    process, even with a motivated, unified practice
    with adequate resources

51
What have we learned?
  • Relationships matter
  • Practices capacity for change and ability to
    follow through is heavily dependent on strong
    relationships within the practice
  • Need to build and foster strong relationships on
    all levels to be successful with changes
  • Especially important at times when practice under
    much stress i.e. EHR implementation

52
What have we learned?
  • Medical practices are extraordinarily complex
  • Small changes often have large impacts
  • Large, difficult changes may be necessary but
    have small impacts overall
  • Change management is an essential skill that
    practices need to be successful
  • Eidus theorum of change difficulty

53
What have we learned?
  • Leadership is Key
  • Need strong leaders in all areas
  • Physician/mid-level
  • Clinic manager/nursing
  • Administration/financial
  • IT systems
  • If not all on the same page, ability to make
    changes hampered or halted

54
What have we learned?
  • Transformation has to happen on the personal
    level also
  • Is a gradual change from physician-centered
    thinking and office practices to team-based,
    patient-centered care
  • This is just as hard as (or harder than ) the
    practice-level process changes

55
What have we learned?
  • Technology has great potential, but several
    problems limit its current usefulness and
    widespread implementation.
  • lack of interoperability
  • Expense
  • amount of resources and energy needed to make
    things work together

56
What have we learned?
  • PCMH is more than the sum of its individual parts
  • Measurements (NCQA, etc) are important and get at
    many parts of the PCMH, but not the full essence
  • Medicine is art in addition to science
  • Patients want healing, not just diagnosing or
    curing

57
The old model of care doesnt make sense in the
PCMH context
  • Coordinated, not just episodic care
  • Proactive, not just reactive care
  • Emphasis on achieving and maintaining wellness,
    not just treating illness
  • Team-based care
  • Comprehensive care
  • We need high tech and high touch

58
The Case for The Medical Home
59
Many current national trends align well with the
PCMH model
  • Emphasis on quality and transparency
  • Patients, employers, CMS, payors, health systems
  • Emphasis on patient-centered care
  • Convenient, timely, patient-friendly
  • Emphasis on technology not just in our
    practices but in individual patients lives
  • Google Health, Revolution.com, WellMark/UHC,
    etc. will change health care perceptions and
    expectations
  • Emphasis on practice redesign/innovation
  • PCPCC, TransforMed/AAFP, IHI
  • Emphasis on wellness promotion/disease prevention

60
Where does that leave us?
  • Buyers of care should find what they have been
    buying unacceptable
  • Providers of care should find it unethical and
    even immoral to continue to provide episodic,
    uncoordinated care
  • Patients should be at the center of a redesigned
    system that needs both
  • Transformation of medical practice
  • Reformation of payment for care to support it

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62
How do the participating practices feel about the
TransforMed NDP?
  • Extremely excited and encouraged
  • Much harder than we thought initially
  • Absolutely worth it and imperative!
  • Privileged to be part of the process

63
How can stakeholders help?
  • Support/fund pilot projects
  • Need to include PCPCC blended payment model
  • Continued fee-for-service
  • CDM fee
  • Additional P4P incentives
  • Support those working to affect change
  • Funding educational efforts, learning
    collaboratives
  • Tap into national/state primary care academies
  • Support innovators/early adopters
  • Technology improvements
  • Support for PCMH concept in your sphere of
    influence
  • Support Primary Care education
  • In medical schools, primary care residencies

64
Website Resources
  • Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative
    www.pcpcc.net
  • TransforMed www.transformed.com
  • AAFP www.aafp.org
  • Center for HIT www.centerforhit.org
  • Institute for Healthcare Improvement
    www.ihi.org
  • Iowa Healthcare Collaborative www.ihconline.org
  • Myrtue Medical Center www.myrtuemedical.org

65
Why I want to see the PCMH succeed in the U.S.
66
Contact information
  • Don Klitgaard, MD
  • 1220 Chatburn Avenue
  • Harlan, IA 51537
  • 712-755-5130 (PCMH)
  • 712-579-1911 (cell)
  • Dklitgaard_at_myrtuemedical.org
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