Title: Making Data Work for You
1Making Data Work for You
- Use of the Registry in Pro-Active Care
- Celeste A. Frangeskou, RN, BSN
- State Collaborative Coordinator
- Texas Association of Community Health Centers
(TACHC) - cfrangeskou_at_tachc.org (512) 329-5959
2Goal of the Collaboratives
- To close the gap between what we know to do and
what is actually done for every patient in the
practice. - To make planned and deliberate changes to the
care delivery system so that in the future we can
do what cannot be done today. - To ultimately improve patient outcomes and delay
or prevention complications associated with
chronic care diseases and improve office
efficiency. - To sow the seeds of equity of healthcare for all.
- Source Health Disparities Collaborative Pre-work
Manual, May 2003 Collaborative Charter Problem
Statement
3Importance of Measurement
- Not about good or bad its about managing the
practice in a better way. - Tracking Population outcomes
- What percentage of our patients are due for an
HbA1c or have an HbA1c gt9? - Feedback for any level of clinical quality
- Performance improvement
- Accreditation
- Grant
4Issues in the Organization of Diabetes Care
- The biggest issue in care organization is that
patients are only seen when they show up with a
problem. - They are seen at random times in the middle of
chaotic days to be seen by providers who are
stressed out, behind schedule and disorganized. - Important questions to ask
- Can you identify all (or nearly all) the patients
with diabetes seen at the practice? - Do you know what services those patients should
be offered in any given year? - Do you have a system for tracking how you are
doing?
5Clinical Information System
- A registry defines your total population of
patients. Know who your patients are. - Provide reminders for care that is due at the
time of the visit and remind the provider who is
due for a visit. - Provides feedback for providers and patients.
- Identify relevant patient subgroups and provide
proactive care. (Those that are in need of better
management) - Facilitate individual patient care planning
through the registry.
6Clinical Information System Redesign Changes
- Populating PECS for your center.
- Running monthly reports
- Patients who havent been seen in the past year.
- Practice level reports - where is the gap in
care? - Improved Patient Care Planning
- PECS encounter notes updated and in the chart
before the provider sees the patient. - Reminder reports who is due for care who do
you want to recall?
7Clinical Information SystemKeys to Success
- Define your clinical data needs
- What do you need to track?
- For the provider
- For the practice
- What do you want to be reminded about?
- For individualized patient care planning
- Patient care summaries for the visit
- Identification of relevant subpopulations of in
need of proactive care. - Which Monthly Reports do you need?
- Performance improvement initiatives
- Accreditation
- Grant
8Clinical Information SystemKeys to Success
- Identify the best person on the team to manage
the CIS and - Train a back-up person
- Define the roles and responsibilities
- Always, always, always back up your data.
- Incorporate ways to verify data integrity
- Identify 5 patients and do a chart review to see
if what is in PECS is accurate.
9One Team Overview
- Family Practice Services at 5 sites just south of
Boston, MA - Approximately 650 patients with diabetes
- POF 205 patients
- Spread site 45 patients
- Computers used for appointment scheduling and
patient registration - No clinical databases before PECS
- In the process of converting to an EMR
10First use of the RegistryWho needs an office
visit?
- Query for patients who havent had an office
visit gt90 days, check appointment schedule to
confirm no appointment - F/U phone call to make an appointment, letter
sent if unable to reach by phone - Track appointments in PECS weekly and f/u no show
and cancelled appointments - Note placed in chart to follow medication
protocol Effective for patients who would
schedule an OV to get med refill then N/S or
cancel.
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14Other Uses
- PECS encounter used as diabetes flow sheet to
guide adherence to care guidelines with items
needing attention highlighted - Query to identify patients
- with HbA1C gt 8.0 for case management and
referral to diabetes educator or nutrition - no visit gt 90 days
- no eye exam gt 1 year
- Creating new field in Consults/Education to
track - - return to clinic for labs
- - eye exam report forms
- Documenting and follow-up of self-management
goals - PECS summaries and graphs to communicate the
progress of the project to staff, leadership, and
BOD
15Uses outside the CHC
- We are using the registry data
- To assess status and report on projected outcomes
for grant projects. - To describe current efforts, support our ability
to sustain and spread our improvements, and
identify needs in care delivery for grant
applications. - To complete the application process for Diabetes
Self-Management Education Recognition. - To form Community Partnerships.
16Tips and Traps on using the registry for
pro-active care
- Tips
- Secure leadership support to provide funding for
registry development and maintenance - Incorporate a system for data entry to keep
registry database/PECS encounters current/have
back-up data entry staff - Highlight needed interventions/easier for
providers to use - Utilize the report functions that are built into
the system - Continuous education and collaboration with staff
- Traps
- Reliability of data
- -Deletion of referral checks (ex.for eye
exam) - -Staff and provider resistance to using form
at every OV - Trying to complete every field, only enter data
you will use
17Plans to use the Registry
18 A Clinical Information Systems PDSA
- HDC2005 Learning Session 2
- Atlanta, GA
- May 11-14, 2005
19A Case Study
- Community Health Center in Nebraska participating
in the CVD collaborative - Struggling with making improvement with measure
LDL Cholesterol lt100mg/dl - The number of CVD patients with CAD, or DM whose
last fasting LDL value (documented within the
last 24 months) is less than 100 mg/dlavg
stagnant at about 33 for 1 years.
20Known relationship between statins and LDL
- From the PECS Data Dictionary
- Statins are medications used to treat
Dyslipidemia. They lower LDL and triglycerides
and raise HDL. They have been extensively
studied and shown to prevent cardiovascular
events.
21In the spirit of the HDC.
- A PDSA was initiated!
- The prediction If the CVD patients not on
statins can be identified, contacted or
recalled, and prescribed the medication, then
LDL Cholesterol levels in these patients -along
with the population average- will decrease
(improve).
22Changes to PECS
- A statin reminder was added to the PECS Encounter
Note which would activate when a patient had DM
or CAD, was gt40yrs, was not already on a statin,
and had no contraindications for this particular
med
23Step 2--
- Use the RSR Drill-down to identify patients with
LDLgt100 - Find out if those patients are on statins (choose
a methodie. Run the drill-down for the statins
item and compare lists) - If already prescribed statinsschedule
appointment to take a fasting LDL - If notschedule visit and/or prescribe med
(unless contraindicated)
24The RSR Drill-down
25Results of the Case Study
- After only 6 months, the percentage of patients
who had an LDLlt100 had increased 12 (from 33) - After 10 months, the percentage increased 39.6
(to a current 72.6) - Prescription rate of statins went from lt40 to
gt75 in 6 months - After 10 months, the prescription rate for
statins increased to 96
26This is just one example!
- There are many ways you can use PECS to improve
the quality of care youre providing to your
patients.