44
Reducing Patient Readmissions Keys to Improving Patient Care

Reducing Patient Readmissions

  • Upload
    kellan

  • View
    91

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Reducing Patient Readmissions. Keys to Improving Patient Care. Overview. Impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) on your facility Critical strategies to reduce readmissions. Objectives . Review the impact of PPACA - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions

Keys to Improving Patient Care

Page 2: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 2

Overview

• Impact of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) on your facility

• Critical strategies to reduce readmissions

Page 3: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Objectives

• Review the impact of PPACA• Identify key strategies and tactics for

reducing readmissions that can be applied in their organizations

• Describe actionable strategies for engaging community organizations across the continuum of care

• Strengthen patient involvement in their care

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 3

Page 4: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Health Care Reform Legislation

• March 23, 2010=PPACA Paying for quality instead of quantity Financial penalties Community based care transitions program

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 4

Page 5: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Affordable Care Act and Reducing Readmissions

• §3026 http://www.innovations.cms.gov/initiatives/Partnership-

for-Patients/CCTP/index.html?itemID=CMS1239313• §3501

http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/patientsafetyix.htm• §399KK

http://www.pso.ahrq.gov/• §3025

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 5

Page 6: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Patient Safety Organization (PSO) Role

• §399KK implementation• ACA designates PSOs to help hospitals

Department of Health and Human Services supports the PSOs

• To find a PSO http://www.pso.ahrq.gov/listing/psolist.htm

• Eligible hospitals http://www.cms.gov/DemoProjectsEvalRpts/

downloads/CCTP_FourthQuartileHospsbyState.pdf

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 6

Page 7: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Readmission Reduction Program

• NQF endorsed measures • Report all-payer readmission rates publicly• Excess vs. expected

For more information: www.QualityNet.org

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 7

Page 8: Reducing Patient Readmissions

2012 Hospital-Specific Report Example

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 8

Page 9: Reducing Patient Readmissions

The Reason Behind Readmissions

• Hospitals have responsibilities, but they are not alone

• Readmissions occur when: Patients don’t understand or can’t comply

with discharge instructions Patients in some communities lack access to

primary care, post-acute care, pharmacies Patients have multiple diagnoses that make

them more vulnerable to complications

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 9

Page 10: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Published Evidence

• Four broad categories Enhanced care and support during transitions Improved patient education and self-management Multidisciplinary team management Patient-centered care planning at the end of life

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 10

Page 11: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Key Strategies and Tactics (continued)

• Assess your risks Patient Hospital Financial

http://rarereadmissions.org/

• Understand your readmission history Evaluate potential cause and appropriateness of

recent readmissions http://www.ihi.org/knowledge/Pages/Tools/

HowtoGuideImprovingTransitionstoReduceAvoidableRehospitalizations.aspx

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 11

Page 12: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Key Strategies and Tactics (continued)

• Timely discharge summaries• Lengthen the handoff process• Provide medication on discharge• Make a follow-up plan before disharge • Telehealth• Identify frequent flyers

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 12

Page 13: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Key Strategies and Tactics (continued)

• Understand what’s happening post-discharge • Provide home care on wheels• Consider physician medication reconciliation• Ensure patients understand • Focus on highest-risk patient • Listen to the patient

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 13

Page 14: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Where the Gaps Are: Other Factors

• No longer does one practitioner typically take responsibility for the discharge and follow-up

• Discharging practitioners may be unfamiliar with the capacity to provide care in settings to which they send patients

• Lack of a universal electronic health information system

• The revolving door of skilled nursing facilities

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 14

Page 15: Reducing Patient Readmissions

The Best Transition…

Is only as good as the reception into the next setting of care.

Boutwell A and Johnson MB: STAAR Issue Brief: Reducing Barriers to Care Across the Continuum–Working Together in a Cross-Continuum Team.

STAAR Issue Brief Series 2010 Number 3. Available at http://www.ihi.org/offerings/Initiatives/STAAR/Documents/

STAAR%20Issue%20Brief%20-%20Cross%20Continuum%20Teams.pdf

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 15

Page 16: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Cross-Continuum Teams (CCTs)

• Key component of the State Action on Avoidable Rehospitalizations (STAAR) initiative

• Team composition • Infrastructure

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 16

Page 17: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Cross-Continuum Teams

• Multi-stakeholder team • Provides oversight and guidance • Known as the “STAAR Effect” • New competencies developed

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 17

Page 18: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Key Changes

• Enhance assessment of post-hospital needs • Effective teaching and learning • Ensure follow-up • Real-time handovers

Rutherford P, Nielsen GA, Taylor J, Bradke P, Coleman E. How-to Guide: Improving Transitions from the Hospital to Community Settings to Avoid Rehospitalization.

Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; June 2012. Available at ww.IHI.org

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 18

Page 19: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Transitions Home Collaborative Getting Started

• Executive leader selected • Sponsor convenes the team • Opportunities for improvement identified • Aim statement developed • Kick-off meeting

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 19

Page 20: Reducing Patient Readmissions

CCT Recommendations

• Meet regularly • Visit each other’s sites • Complete periodic diagnostic interviews• Add patients and family members

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 20

Page 21: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Questions to Ask

• How can we get timely and relevant information from community providers?

• Do we have universal patient-friendly education materials for common conditions in all settings?

• Are staff members competent in effective teaching and facilitating learning?

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 21

Page 22: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Questions to Ask (continued)

• Have we co-designed real-time handover communications

• Do we utilize universal format for patient care plans?

• Who is the best clinical provider to complete follow-up phone calls?

• How do we collaborate with payers and post-acute providers to determine eligibility for certain populations?

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 22

Page 23: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Where the Gaps Are: Health Literacy

• “Health (il)literacy”: Nearly half of adults have trouble understanding simple health information (procedure consent, prescriptions, oral instructions)

• Less than half of patients discharged from academic general medicine know their diagnoses, treatment plans, or side effects of prescribed medications

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 23

Page 24: Reducing Patient Readmissions

The High-Risk Patient

• History of readmission • Failed teach-back • Longer stay than expected • High-risk conditions • Poor, disabled, or on dialysis• Late follow-up after discharge

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 24

Page 25: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Engaging the Patient: Health Literacy

• Red flags: Elderly Low income Unemployed Minority Did not finish high school Immigrant Born in U.S. but English second language Noncompliance Can’t name meds “Forgot my glasses…will read later”

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 25

Page 26: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Engaging the Patient: Communication

• Eight steps for oral communication: 1. Slow down2. Plain language3. Pictures4. Limited information5. Repeat6. Teach-back7. Provide oral and written information 8. Shame-free environment

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 26

Page 27: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 27

High-Level Opportunities for Action

• Execute an effective transition from the hospital to post-acute care settings Early assessment of discharge needs More intensive management of chronic medical

conditions during hospitalization Evidence:

Transition coaching Nursing phone call follow-up Hospital-generated phone call and coaching Collaboration between sending and receiving facilities

on what data is needed during transfers

Page 28: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 28

High-Level Opportunities (continued)

• Facilitate timely follow-up care in the post-discharge setting Work with outpatient providers to schedule

appointments prior to discharge Consider early follow up for “high-risk” patients,

which may be hospital-generated call Increase referral to home health when indicated Consider enhanced outpatient support

Page 29: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 29

High-Level Opportunities (continued)

• Engage patients and caregivers as active participants and managers of their care Include medications How to monitor for and act on clinical deterioration Use of hospital-based enhanced assessment Early and repeated teaching opportunities

during hospitalization Assess patient’s understanding

Condition, diet/medications, and symptoms

Page 30: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Readmission Is an Opportunity

• Fragmentation of care lies behind many failed transitions

• Improving transitions will necessarily reduce fragmentation

• If we succeed, we have established a precedent for fixing other broken parts of the health care system

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 30

Page 31: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Real World Success Stories

• Improved transitions out of the hospital Project RED BOOST IHI’s Transforming Care at the Bedside Hospital to Home “H2H” (ACC/IHI)

• Supplemental transitional care between settings Care Transitions Intervention (Coleman) Transitional Care Intervention (Naylor) Missouri Department of Health and Human Services

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 31

Page 32: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Patient and Family Engagement

• Patient-Centered Care http://www.ipfcc.org/tools/Patient-Safety-Toolkit-04.pdf

• Promotion http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/engagingptfam.htm

• Principles http://www.gwumc.edu/healthsci/departments/nursing/

naqc/documents/Patient_Engagement_Guiding.pdf

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 32

Page 33: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Community Engagement

• Know where your patients are coming from• Know where your patients are going to

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 33

Page 34: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Boston University Experience

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 34

Testing the Re-Engineered Discharge

Brian Jack, MD, Principal InvestigatorAssociate Professor and Vice ChairDepartment of Family MedicineBoston Medical CenterBoston University School of Medicine

Page 35: Reducing Patient Readmissions

BOOST Toolkit: Primary Components

• Tool for identification of high-risk patients• Patient and family/caregiver preparation• Enhanced communications

Discharge summary Provider to provider Patient contact Patient resource

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 35

Page 36: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 36

Page 37: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Hospital to Home (H2H)

• H2H is a national quality improvement initiative • Goal is to reduce all-cause readmission rates in

heart failure and acute myocardial infarction• Uses a three-question framework

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 37

Available at: http://h2hquality.org

Page 38: Reducing Patient Readmissions

The Care Transitions Intervention

• 750 community-dwelling adults 65 years or older admitted to the study hospital with one of 11 selected conditions

• Intervention: Tools to promote cross-site communication Encouragement to take a more active role in

their care Guidance from a “transition coach”

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 38

Coleman EA, Parry C, Chalmers S, Min SJ. The care transitions intervention: results of a randomized controlled trial. Arch Int Med. 2006;166(17):1822-8.

Page 39: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Transitional Care Model

• Nurse practitioners provide inpatient assessment• NPs review medications and goals• Design and coordinate care with patients

and providers• Attend first post-discharge MD office visit• Direct home care for one to three months• Conduct home interviews

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 39

Naylor MD, Brooten DA, Campbell RL, Maislin G, McCauley KM, Schwartz JS. Transitional care of older adults hospitalized with heart failure:

a randomized, controlled trial. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2004;52(5):675-84.

Page 40: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 40

Available at: http://web.mhanet.com/aspx/articles.aspx?navid=111&pnavid=4&articleid=143

Page 41: Reducing Patient Readmissions

AHRQ Web Resource

• Implementing Re-Engineered Hospital Discharges (Project RED) Training manual After-hospital care plan samples Tool kit

Various forms How-to ideas Evaluation Cost and implementation

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 41

www.ahrq.gov/news/kt/red/redfaq.htm

Page 42: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Some Practical Tools

• Ideal discharge checklist: Society of Hospital Medicine–Quality Improvement Tools:

www.hospitalmedicine.org• Care Transitions Program

www.caretransitions.org• “Getting Ready to Go Home”–simple checklist for

patients and families at admission to help think about discharge issues:

www.hospitalmedicine.org

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 42

Page 43: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 43

Questions?

“It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.”

–Eugene Ionesco

Page 44: Reducing Patient Readmissions

Reducing Patient Readmissions / 44

Mission Statement

Our Mission Is to Advance, Protect, and Reward the Practice of Good Medicine

[email protected](800) 421-2368, ext. 1134

For additional information, go to www.thedoctors.com and click on Patient Safety.