Title: Quality in Health Care: Building Systemic Capacity
1Quality in Health CareBuilding Systemic Capacity
- Sheila Leatherman
- Adjunct Professor, University of North Carolina
- Sr. Associate, University of Cambridge, England
2Seminar Outline
- What is the state of quality?
- Building Systemic Capacity A Model
- Change Strategy and Methods
- Accountability and Public Reporting
- The Way Forward
3Ireland Health Strategy
- PRINCIPLES
- Equity
- People-centeredness
- Quality
- Accountability
4Ireland Health Strategy
- NATIONAL GOALS
- Better health for everyone
- Fair access
- Responsive and appropriate care
- High performance
5Quality
-
- the degree to which health services for
individuals and populations increase the
likelihood of desired health outcomes and are
consistent with current professional knowledge
IOM Definition 1999
6Concerns Regarding Quality
- Physician Perceptions (1999-2000)
- 5 country survey (Australia, NZ, UK, Canada, and
USA)
- saying ability to provide quality care
- worsened over 5 years
- Australia 38
- Canada 50
- New Zealand 53
- United Kingdom 46
- United States 57
7Concerns Regarding Quality
- Nurses Perceptions (1998-1999)
- 5 country survey (Canada, Germany, Scotland,
England and USA) - 17-44 reported quality had deteriorated in last
year
8Concerns Regarding Quality
- Public Perception (1998)
- 5 country survey ( Australia, Canada, NZ, UK, and
USA) - Overwhelmingly stated that health care system
needed fundamental change or complete overhaul
91998 American Consumer Satisfaction Index
- Hospitals ranked between the U.S. Post Office
and the Internal Revenue Service (tax agency)
10Performance Domains
- Effectiveness
- Efficiency
- Equity/Access
- Safety
- Responsiveness/Patient-Centered
- Applicable at individual and population level
11Concerns Regarding Quality Hard Facts
- Inappropriate use of resources
- US data indicates overuse and underuse
- Unexplained variation/postcode lottery
- Safety/Adverse events
- Adverse event rate 10 of hospitals (UK and USA)
- Serious errors 2.3
- 16.6 of hospital admissions in Australia (1995)
12 Poor resource use Financial risk
Suboptimal Quality
- Adverse events cost USA 4 of total health
expenditures 1996 - Outstanding claims for alleged clinical
negligence in UK was 3.9 billion
13What is needed?
- Will to address problems
- Articulated national policy
- Priority setting
- Performance monitoring capability
- Essential infrastructure
- new organizations
- legal framework
- IT
- Knowledge aids (protocols, DSS)
14Building Systemic Capacity A Model
15Organizing and Integrating Performance
16Organizing and Integrating Quality
17Organizing and Integrating Performance
18Ireland
19Effecting Change Strategy and Methods
20Methods for Improving QualityApplications and
Uses of Performance Data
- External Oversight
- External review/inspection
- Accreditation, licensing and certification
- Setting performance targets
- Knowledge/Skill enhancement
- of providers
- Peer review and data feedback
- Use of guidelines and protocols
- Incentives
- Financial (pay-for-performance)
- Non-financial
- Patient engagement/empowering
- consumers
- Providing performance information
- Enacting patient charters/patient
- rights legislation
- Regulations
- Government regulations
- Professional/self regulation
21External Oversight
- External review/inspection
- Accreditation, licensing and certification
- Setting performance targets
22Patient Engagement/ Empowering Consumers
- Providing performance information
- Enacting patient charters/patient rights
legislation
23Regulations
- Government regulations
- Professional/self regulation
24Incentives
- Financial (pay-for-performance)
- Non-financial
25Knowledge/Skill Enhancement
- Peer review and data feedback
- Use of guidelines and protocols
26Knowledge/Skill Enhancement
- Problem
- Both WILL and SKILL problems
- Impossibility to assimilate new knowledge
- Numbers of articles published from RCTs
- 1960 1000 annually
- 1990 10,000 annually
- Use of Performance Data
- Scant evidence that physicians can/will use for
behavior change - Evidence that multiple interventions are needed
- Published protocols/guidelines
- Computer assisted decision support
- Peer review/practice comparisons
27Strategy for Improving Performance
28Drivers of Performance
29Accountability and Public Reporting
30What?
- The systematic standardized measurement of
performance and public disclosure of data
- Performance Domains (individual and/or population
level) - Effectiveness
- Efficiency
- Responsiveness
- Equity
- Safety
31Performance Reporting Why?
- Unjustified variation/ postcode lottery
- Accountability a growing movement
- Performance monitoring needed for regulation
- The Information Age
- Public confidence eroding
32Principle Purposes for Public Disclosure
- Regulation (include public accountability)
- Purchasing or commissioning decisions
- Facilitation of consumer selection/choice
- Provider/systems behavior change
33Performance Reporting
- National Quality Reports
- Report Cards
- League Tables
- Provider profiling
34Current Status
- Measurement and public reporting inevitable
- Inadequate evaluation research - what works?
- Challenge How to move ahead responsibly
35Evidence of Effectiveness of Performance
Reporting USA
- Public
- Provider
- Purchaser/payers
- Policymakers
36The PublicEvidence from the USA
- Performance data used minimally
- Not meaningful to the public
- Most data designed for other purposes
- Not easily comprehended or actionable
- Not salient (example CABG mortality rates)
- Not motivated - individuals believe their
care/provider is good
37The ProvidersEvidence from the USA
- Institutions (hospitals, systems) do pay
attention and use - To improve appropriateness of care
- To identify poor performers
- To alter processes responsive to complaints
- Individual providers less responsive to data
38Major Question Public or Confidential
Reporting of Performance DataCase Study
Reporting System in New York
- Publicly reported risk-adjusted mortality past
CABG - New York had the lowest risk-adjusted mortality
rate in the USA after 4 years. - First 3 years mortality rate fell 41
- Rate of decline in New York was twice the average
national rate of decline in first 5 years
39Major Question Public or Confidential Reporting
of Performance DataCase Study Reporting
System in New York
- New York CRS What drove the improvement?
- Improvement driven through actions taken by
hospital staff - Changes in leadership
- curtailment of operating privileges
- Intensive peer review
- Consumer or market force minimal action
- BUT .WAS PUBLIC DISCLOSURE THE DRIVER?
40Purchasers/Payers/CommissionersEvidence from the
USA
- Little evidence of performance to exercise
market clout - Two large studies (15,000 employers nation wide)
- Data used minimally
- Price still main selection factor
- Data suffers as not designed for buyer
decision-makers. - Reliance on purchasers and payers to use
performance data not a reliable strategy
41Policymakers
- Some evidence that policymakers do use
comparative performance indicators - New national initiatives in Australia, United
Kingdom and United States for national
performance reporting
42Risks and Challenges
- Methodologic issues
- Manipulation of data
- Tunnel vision
- Unintended effects on access
- Erode patient trust
- Jeopardize QI environment
43Accountability Models
44The Way Forward Common Pitfalls
45Common Pitfalls
- Confusion
- Role of government regulation and self-regulation
- Too Ambitious
- Too many new initiatives
- Too many goals/targets
- Lack of coherence
- Inadequate resources
- Will
- Skill
- Infrastructure
- IT
- Workforce
- Infrastructure/capacity
- Rhetoric exceeds reality
- Cynicism,
- Failure to deliver
46 Knowing is not enough, we must apply Willing is
not enough, we must do.
Goethe
47Accountability Models
48(No Transcript)
49Key Strategies
50Drivers of Performance
51Strategy for Improving Performance