1 Health IT in LTC: Implementation Focused on Value Health IT in LTC: Implementation Focused on Value Nursing Home HIT: Lessons Learned to Improve Clinical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research Salt Lake City, Utah Cost-Benefit Analysis of Nursing Home Registered Nurse Staffing Times Presented by Susan.
Advertisements

Long Term Care Provider Associations Meeting Sharon White CMS – Region V August 22, 2007 F314 – Pressure Ulcers.
Patient Centered Care Model The model which was drawn from NMH’s Henderson Framework for Nursing Practice proposes to provide a healing environment centered.
Improving Dementia Care and Reducing Unnecessary Use of Antipsychotic Medications in Nursing Homes Alice Bonner, PhD, RN Division of Nursing Homes Center.
The Evercare Model: Using Nurse Practitioners to Achieve Positive Outcomes Pat Kappas-Larson, MPH APRN-BC Professional Relations/Development April 24,
Initiative Update & Data Analysis. Themes for the Day Lessons Learned and Best Practices Staging of Pressure Ulcers Care Coordination.
Right First Time: Update. Overview Making sure Sheffield residents continue to get the best possible health services is the aim of a new partnership between.
Advancing Excellence in America’s Nursing Homes A Review of 2 Clinical Tools: Pressure Ulcer and Restraints.
1 Using HIT to Improve Outcomes for Elderly Nursing Home Residents Wednesday, Sept 26, 2007; 10 – 11:30am Susan D. Horn, PhD Institute for Clinical Outcomes.
Data: It's Not Just Numbers Presenters Katisha Harrison, MBA, BPM, Lean Six Sigma Yellow Belt, Medical Economics Analyst Victoria Richardson, RN-BC, Lean.
[Hospital Name | Presenter name and title | Date of presentation]
Palliative Care in the Nursing Home. Objectives Develop an awareness of how a palliative care environment can be created. Recognize the need for changes.
Clinical Care Pathways (CCCP): Magic or Maze? Norah Bostock Operations Manager: Governance.
Debbie Schmidt RN, MCSE Conference 2009 Nurse 2.0 Engaging the Healthcare Consumer Mobile Wound Care.
Vision of how informatics enables a transformed health system Joyce Sensmeier MS, RN-BC, CPHIMS, FHIMSS, FAAN Vice President, Informatics, HIMSS President,
QIO Program Overview December 6, About VHQC Private, non-profit healthcare consulting and quality improvement organization More than 60 experienced.
2015 BCCPA Annual Conference Panel Presentation: “Revisiting End-of-Life in Canada” Pat Porterfield, RN, MSN Funded by the Michael Smith Foundation for.
1 On-Time Quality Improvement for Long Term Care Thursday, September 27, 2007; 1:30 – 3pm Susan D. Horn, PhD Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research 699.
Promoting Skin Integrity: Pressure Ulcer Prevention December 8, 2009.
1 On-Time Quality Improvement for Long-Term Care Using Nursing Home IT for Optimal Care Delivery Presentation to AHRQ Annual Conference Track 1. HIT Improving.
Indiana Healthcare Leadership Conference: Improving Nutrition.
8th Scope of Work Overview Hospital Workgroup (HoW) May 12, 2005 Suzanne K. Powell, RN, MBA, CCM Director Acute Care.
M Purpose Improvement Tools/Methods Limitations / Lessons Learned Results Process Improvement Improving Hospital-Acquired Pressure Ulcers at Discharge.
Pay for Performance for LTSS November 4, 2013 Lisa Alecxih, Senior Vice President.
Infusion Management Implementation
John M. White, Health Services 1 Building a Healthy Culture Key Elements of a Comprehensive Health Strategy John M. White, Ph.D. Global Health Promotion.
Jan Findlay – Staff Nurse/Informatics Patti Tracey- HOBIC Coordinator Dianne Laroche- Clinical Practice Leader/Risk Manager Integrating.
Wound Treatment in Long Term Care
1 Alternative Study Designs for Evidence-Based Practice Making the Case for the Value of Your Device with Practice-Based Evidence March 29, 2007 Track.
1 On-Time Quality Improvement for Long Term Care Redesigning Workflow Thursday, September 27, 2007; 1:30 – 3pm Siobhan S. Sharkey, MBA Health Management.
Ann OBrien RN MSN CPHIMS National Senior Director of Clinical Informatics Kaiser Permanente Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellow Data Analytics and.
Longitudinal Coordination of Care (LCC) Pilots Proposal CCITI NY 01/27/2014.
John F. Schnelle, PhD Vanderbilt Center for Quality Aging Professor School of Medicine.
2004 National Nursing Home Survey Annual AcademyHealth Research Meeting Robin E. Remsburg, APRN, BC Long-term Care Statistics Branch Division of Health.
Risk Management Preparation - Prevention - Response Janice Sumner, RN VP of Clinical Operations HMRVSI, Inc. July 30, 2015.
Chapter 6 – Data Handling and EPR. Electronic Health Record Systems: Government Initiatives and Public/Private Partnerships EHR is systematic collection.
Track 4.02 Commercial Marketplace and Nursing Home Transformation – Following Consumer Demand June 15, :15 PM 1.
Standardization of Oxygen Monitoring and Suctioning for Inpatient Care of Bronchiolitis in an Academically-Affiliated Community Setting Grant Mussman,
PSYCHOTROPIC / PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS ARE IN THE HEADLINES PRESENTED BY: LIZETH FLORES, RHIT, RAC-CT ANDERSON HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEMS, INC. APRIL 16 TH,
Nurse Practitioner Making a Difference in Personal Care Homes.
CMS Embraces Person Directed Care in Food and Dining Jocelyn Montgomery RN Director of Clinical Affairs California Association of Health Facilities.
Enhanced Patient-Safety Intervention To Optimize Medication Education (EPITOME) Carl Sirio, MD Professor Critical Care Medicine, Medicine and Pharmacy.
AHRQ’s Safety Program for Nursing Homes: On-Time Pressure Ulcer Prevention Facilitator Training Overview of On-Time.
A partnership of the Healthcare Association of New York State and the Greater New York Hospital Association NYSPFP Preventable Readmissions Pilot Project.
1 Clinical Practice Improvement Susan D. Horn, PhD Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research 699 E. South Temple, Suite 100 Salt Lake City, Utah
1 On-Time Pressure Ulcer Healing in Long Term Care Track 4: Patient Safety – Improving Quality of Care in Nursing Homes and Long-Term Care Settings September.
Specialised Geriatric Services Heather Gilley Sharon Straus.
Larry Wolf, chair Marc Probst, co-chair Certification / Adoption Workgroup March 6, 2014.
CHAPTER 28 Translation of Evidence into Nursing Practice: Evidence, Clinical practice guidelines and Automated Implementation Tools.
On-Time Prevention Program for Long Term Care: Clinical Decision Support On-Time Prevention Program for Long Term Care: Clinical Decision Support William.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Advancing Excellence in Health Care Using evidence to inform and improve clinical prevention 2007.
Nicheprogram.org NICHE Nurses Improving Care for Healthsystem Elders An Introduction to NICHE © 2015 NICHE All Rights Reserved.
The Patient-Centered Medical Home: A Work in Progress Alliance for Health Reform Briefing Washington D.C. September 22, 2008 Diane R. Rittenhouse, MD,
This material was developed by Oregon Health & Science University, funded by the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the National Coordinator.
Engaging Residents and Families in CAUTI Prevention
Multidisciplinary Diabetes Team Activities in a 196 Bed Community Hospital Robin Southwood, Pharm.D, CDE and Beth Melvin, RD, MS, CDE.
1 A Tour of AHRQ Prevention Tools for Clinicians On-Time Prevention of Pressure Ulcers in Nursing Homes Thursday, September 27, 2007; 3:30 – 5pm Susan.
Pharmacists’ Patient Care Process
AHRQ Safety Program for Long-Term Care: HAIs/CAUTI Long-Term Care Safety Toolkit: Building a Culture of Safety National Content Webinar April 16, 2015.
 Promote health, prevent illness/injury  Broad knowledge base needed to meet patient needs in different health care settings.
Improvement Associates Ltd. 1 St Joseph’s Hospital & Ridgewood Veterans Wing Preventing Falls Through Staff Empowerment Preventing Falls Through Staff.
PRACTICE TRANSFORMATION NETWORK 2/24/ Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative (TCPI) Practice Transformation Network (PTN)  $18.6 million –
National Partnership to Improve Dementia Care 1 Denise F. O’Donnell, RN, MN, GCMS-BC, MASM, NHA Nurse Consultant/ Division of Nursing Homes/Survey and.
Jayne Schaefer, BA Workforce Programs Manager Mather LifeWays Evanston, Illinois Toward Building a Sustainable Long-Term Care Workforce: LEAP.
ADMINISTRATIVE AND CLINICAL HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEM
1 A Collaborative Approach to Transition Management.
IMPROVING MENTAL HEALTHCARE IN NURSING HOMES Brenda K. Keller, MD,CMD, Cameo Rogers, CTRS, CDP, Jennifer Medlin Hannah Fillman, Thomas M. Magnuson, MD.
Welcome to Learning 2: Care Management October 2011 Connie Sixta, RN, PhD, MBA.
UTI Toolkit Module 1 – The Regulatory Rationale for Improving the Management of UTIs in Nursing Homes.
Development and implementation of a multidisciplinary fall prevention plan within an inpatient behavioral health unit Nicole Van Kampen, BSN, RN Ferris.
Presentation transcript:

1 Health IT in LTC: Implementation Focused on Value Health IT in LTC: Implementation Focused on Value Nursing Home HIT: Lessons Learned to Improve Clinical Decision Making Susan D. Horn, PhD Institute for Clinical Outcomes Research 699 E. South Temple, Suite 100 Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City, Utah (T) (F)

2 Discussion Objectives  Describe links between translating best practices into daily work and HIT implementation in LTC.  Present updates and lessons learned to date on Transforming Healthcare Quality through Information Technology (THQIT) grant: Nursing Home IT

3 Background AHRQ-funded: “Real-Time Optimal Care Plans” Translate evidence-based best practices into daily work AHRQ-funded: “Transforming Healthcare Quality through IT” Support HIT adoption in LTC Integrate ‘Real-Time’ knowledge in IT Research Integrate with HIT National Pressure Ulcer Long Term Care Study Implement

4 Research Based Best Practices Nursing Home Study (NPULS) long-term care provider organizations6 long-term care provider organizations 109 facilities109 facilities 2,490 residents studied2,490 residents studied 1,343 residents with pressure ulcer; 1,147 at risk1,343 residents with pressure ulcer; 1,147 at risk 70% female, 30% male70% female, 30% male Average age = 79.8 yearsAverage age = 79.8 years Funded by Ross Products Division, Abbott Laboratories

5 Background: NPULS The project builds on 10 years of research starting with findings from the National Pressure Ulcer Long-term Care Study and successes over the past 5 years implementing these findings in nursing homes. General Assessment AssessmentIncontinenceInterventions Pressure Relief Pressure ReliefInterventionsStaffingInterventions + Age  85 + Male + Severity of Illness + History of PU + Dependency in >= 7 ADLs >= 7 ADLs + Diabetes + History of tobacco use + Mechanical devices for the containment of urine (catheters) - Disposable briefs - Toileting Program +Static pressure reduction: protective device +Positioning: protective device - RN hours per resident day >= CNA hours per resident day >= 2 -LPN hours per resident day >=0.75 Medications - SSRI + Antipsychotic

6 Nutritional Assessment AssessmentNutritional Interventions Interventions + Dehydration signs and symptoms: low systolic blood pressure, high temperature, dysphagia, high BUN, diarrhea, dehydration + Weight Loss: >=5% in last 30 days or >=10% in last 180 days - Fluid Order - Nutritional Supplements standard medical standard medical - Enteral Supplements disease-specific disease-specific high calorie/high high calorie/high protein protein Nutritional Care Horn et al, J. Amer Geriatr Soc March 2004 Background: NPULS

7 Effects of Nutritional Support in Long Term Care

8 Bladder Incontinence Management in Long Term Care

9 Long-Term Care Residents with Agitation in Dementia Recommended Practice  Use fewest number of medications possible (OBRA 1987)  Minimize use of benzodiazepines  Use atypical over typical antipsychotics  Use SSRIs over tertiary amine antidepressants  Avoid combination therapy

10 Medication Use and Outcomes for Elderly with Dementia with Agitation 12.6** 12.6** 12.3* 12.3* 9.9** 9.9** SSRI + Antipsychotic 24.0** 24.0** Monotherapy No Psych Medications % Pressure Ulcers % Restraints % Hospital + ER Medication Monotherapy includes antipsychotic only, antidepressant only, or antianxiety only SSRI + antipsychotic medications concurrently. *p<.05 **p<.01 *p<.05 **p<.01 Horn, Drug Benefit Trends 2003; 15 (Supplement 1, December): 12-18

11 Implementation In Daily Work  Establish an implementation team at each facility  Define core data elements & standardize documentation for CNA, care team communication, and Wound RN  Redesign clinical workflow  Integrate feedback reports into care planning  Assess impact: workflow efficiencies & clinical outcomes  Develop plans to sustain through IT “Real-Time”

12 Comprehensive Standardized Documentation CNA Daily flow sheetDaily flow sheet Single form replaced multiple logs, clipboards, bedside chartsSingle form replaced multiple logs, clipboards, bedside charts Reduced redundant documentation “document one time, in one place”Reduced redundant documentation “document one time, in one place” PU Tracking Sheet Wound RN standardized documentation: tracks resident risk and pressure ulcer status Information used to compile summary reports

13 Timely Feedback Reports  Access to summarized information for clinical decision-making  Improve response time between identification of resident need and intervention » Identify residents at risk for pressure ulcer development  Transform from paper to data culture » Link reports to documentation elements

14 Nutrition SummaryNutrition Summary » Meal intake for 4 weeks » Fluid intake for 4 weeks » Diet order » Supplement product » Weight change since last week » Psychiatric medications received Weight Summary » Weight 180 days prior » Weight 30 days prior » Weight for each of past 4 weeks » Weight change since last week » 5-10% weight loss past 30 days » >10% weight loss past 180 days » Psychiatric medications received Nutrition Report Stratified by Risk Provide ‘BIG picture’ over time, not just snapshot of one shift or one day

15 Nutrition Report How use the Nutrition Report? Identify which meals are not being eatenIdentify which meals are not being eaten Promote use of nutritional supplementsPromote use of nutritional supplements Identify need for consistent weightsIdentify need for consistent weights

16 Results  Decrease Pressure Ulcer Development  Increase Adherence to Best Practices  Increase Staff Accountability and Satisfaction –Inclusion of front-line workers in QI efforts –Comprehensive documentation at point of care –Communication among care team improved  Reduce Inefficiencies –# documentation forms for CNAs –CNA time looking for documentation book –Time to compile reports for State Regulators and MDS –Time for Wound RN to summarize and report data  Improve State Survey Process  Establish a foundation for EHR

17 Background: Impact On Pressure Ulcer QMs Source: CMS Nursing Home Compare; Facility QM data reports The combined facilities’ average shows an overall reduction of 33% in the QM % of high risk residents with pressure ulcer from pre-implementation to initial post-implementation time periods Combined Facilities National Norm Q4 03 – Q3 05% Change = - 33%

18 Preventing Pressure Ulcers is a Good Business Decision Average savings by pressure ulcer event in FY 05 $, not including hospitalization  Stage 1 - $1,932  Stage 2 - $7,170  Stage 3 - $11,534  Stage 4 - $14,077

19 1.Implement HIT solutions in long term care to support redesigned processes and improved outcomes  CNA documentation  Wound RN documentation  Timely reports in clinical decision-making  Medication Administration Record 2.Integrate evidence-based research on pressure ulcer prevention into long term care daily practice 3.Identify HIT implementation best practices Objectives HIT Implementation Grant

20 LTC Facilities in HIT Project Sioux Falls, SDSioux Falls, SD Mott, NDMott, ND Wood River, NEWood River, NE Pelican Rapids, MNPelican Rapids, MN Hastings, NEHastings, NE Phoenix, ArizonaPhoenix, Arizona Cincinnati, Ohio (4)Cincinnati, Ohio (4) Washington, DCWashington, DC Dover, OhioDover, Ohio Gahanna, OhioGahanna, Ohio Chillicothe, OhioChillicothe, Ohio Waupun, WIWaupun, WI Total of 15 LTC facilities located in 12 cities and 8 states

21 HIT Implementation Scope Year 1 Clinical documentation (CNA and Wound RN ) Clinical decision-making reports Year 2 Clinical documentation (RN assessments ) eMAR – medication administration (RN) Increased number and use of clinical decision-making reports Year 3 Care plan documentation (Multi-disciplinary team ) Expanded implementation of EMR system functionality: to include other disciplines, e.g., restorative, dietary, MDs Increased number and use of clinical decision-making reports

22 Noteworthy Results to Date: HIT Implementation  CNA documentation standardized to include best practice elements  Workflow inefficiencies reduced  Communication among care team improved: RN, CNA, Dietary, MDS, Social Services  Front-line satisfaction improved  Time to compile reports for State regulators and MDS reduced  Use of data improved

23 Lessons Learned: Key Success Factors for Implementation   Focus use of HIT as a tool to sustain quality and operational improvement   Redesign workflow PRIOR to HIT implementation   Standardize data elements and use of redesigned forms facilitate CNA adoption of HIT   Demonstrate value of data culture   Establish partnerships and local champions   Dedicate project management resources

24 Lessons Learned HIT Products for LTC  Current HIT products for LTC require modification to incorporate best practice data elements  Reports often lack clinical decision-making capabilities  Modification to existing products can be costly and time consuming  Few products have mature eMAR application  Facility system selection processes often lack rigorous and systematic approach

25 Areas for Ongoing Collaboration: HIT Implementation and QI in LTC 1.Integrate research-based specifications, e.g., pressure ulcer healing, falls prevention, pain mgt 2.Facilitate partnerships across organizations 3.Standardize data elements documented 4.Design timely feedback reports 5.Integrate reports into daily workflow and care planning 6.Assess impact and identify ‘best practices for IT implementation’