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1 Chronic Disease Management @ Duke Family Medicine Woody Warburton, MD Professor and Division Chief Conference on Practice Improvement: Health Information and Patient Education November 10, 2006 Denver, CO
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2 Outline 1. The Clinical Practice 2. Chronic Disease Management What are we doing in diabetes? What are we doing in diabetes? Group visits – a 15 month analysis Group visits – a 15 month analysis 3. Diabetes metrics – how are we doing? 4. Obstacles 5. Conclusions & Next Steps
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3 Clinical Practice Profile Family physician faculty (.2→.6 FTE) 14 Physician assistants & nurse practitioner (.2→.8 FTE) 6 Established patients (3 visits in 3 years) 13,400 Diabetic patients 1,400 Hypertension patients 4,200 Medicare 12% Medicaid 15% Managed Care (Duke Select) 42% Other (Aetna, Cigna, BCBS etc) 31% Provider office visits/year 38,000
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4 Learners & Staff 10 - 15 FM Residents 10 - 15 FM Residents 2 - 4 Medical students/month 2 - 4 Medical students/month 2 Pharm D students/mo 2 Pharm D students/mo 1 - 2 PA students/mo 1 - 2 PA students/mo 5 RN/ 3 LPN/ 10 MA 5 RN/ 3 LPN/ 10 MA 1.2 MSW 1.2 MSW 1 Pharm D 1 Pharm D 0.3 Registered Dietician 0.3 Registered Dietician
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5 Informed, Activated Patient Productive Interactions Prepared, Proactive Practice Team Improved Outcomes 4. Delivery System Design 5. Decision Support 6. Clinical Information Systems 3. Self- Management Support 2. Health System Resources and Policies 1. Community Health Care Organization Chronic Care Model Source:
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6 So What Are We Doing? I. Clinical Information System Registry -CDEMS Registry -CDEMS DM Reminder Tab DM Reminder Tab Transcription Template Transcription Template (Poor Man’s Reminder System)(Poor Man’s Reminder System)
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7 Diabetic Template
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10 II. Delivery System Design Multidisciplinary Team - Weekly MD RN Front desk/Call center PA Pharm D MSWCD MSW – Medicaid Case manager – Duke Select (HMO) Work with Community Partners!!!!!
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11 Case Management Conferences MSW / Pharm D/ Clinician (s) Move to continuity teams Use registry to define candidates
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12 Foot Care PA Trained at (Diabetic) Wound Clinic & Podiatrist Office Acquire equipment – nail cutters & dremel Readily available monofilament for testing Internal marketing
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13 Nutrition Popular topic with group visits 1 + year battle to get RD onto staff Billing headaches Still struggle for patient self management
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14 Home Visits Students / Residents 1° with Medicaid population Excellent learning No show problem
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15 Diabetic Group Visits
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16 Attendance (July ’05 → Sept ’06) 50% arrival rate 50% arrival rate 13.5% cancellation rate 13.5% cancellation rate 34.9% no show rate 34.9% no show rate
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17 Participants Clinical Metrics 1 group visit only – 48 participants A1c<7% = 27% (13/48) A1c<7% = 27% (13/48) LDL<100 = 29% (14/48) LDL<100 = 29% (14/48) BP<130/80 = 33% (16/48) BP<130/80 = 33% (16/48) Repeat Group Visits – 25 participants A1c<7% = 48% (12/25) A1c<7% = 48% (12/25) LDL<100 = 56% (14/25) LDL<100 = 56% (14/25) BP<130/80 = 48% (12/25) BP<130/80 = 48% (12/25)
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18 Satisfaction Scores Graph
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19 Time/Energy Analysis Quality coordinator - 5 hrs/mo Quality coordinator - 5 hrs/mo Call Center reminders - 2 hrs/mo Call Center reminders - 2 hrs/mo Physician Assistants (2) – 4 hrs/mo Physician Assistants (2) – 4 hrs/mo Pharm D – 2 hrs/mo Pharm D – 2 hrs/mo
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20 Group Visit: Cost Analysis Cost Per Group Visit Personnel $ 382 Direct cost – Refreshments $ 20 Gift card $ 50 $ 50 TOTAL$452 Revenue Total charges (99213 & 99214) $9,557 Total adjustments (per contracts) <$5,927> Total payments $3,507 $3,507 Average revenue per Group Visit $319
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21 Group Visit: Conclusions 1. Group visits meet patient satisfaction & improve care. 2. Patients feel more comfortable with their disease. 3. May need >1 yr to see clinical benefits. 4. Not cost effective with current model. 5. Unclear if this is a “stepping stone” to new chronic disease care. 6. One of many tools to improve chronic disease management.
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22 III. Decision Support DM tab – long time coming!!! Endocrinologist on DM team – key buy-in
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23 IV. Self-Management Patient Self Management Support Residents teach faculty about Self Management Staff (RN, MSW, & Pharm D) provide follow-up support
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25 V. Organization of Health Care Mission to” improve health of the community” Focus - 1° on chronic disease – less on preventive & acute care Department chair & division chief leadership QI program metrics
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26 Quality Measurement Without an EMR Random sample ~ 100 charts – every 3 - 6 months Resident & student (MS, PA, Pharm D) work force QI masters trained analyst HEDIS/State/ACCC/CMS - standard audit
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27 Results So Far HEDIS Metrics State Metrics ACCC Metrics Healthy People (2010)
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28 Diabetes A1c Monitoring(I) % Diabetic pts (18-75) w A1c in past yr Family Medicine Division n = 93 Repeat measure: 12/06 2005 HEDIS 90th%tile = 92% 3/15/2006
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29 Diabetes A1c Monitoring (II) % Diabetic pts (18-75) w 2 A1c in past yr Family Medicine Division 10/1/2016 N = 80 Repeat Measure: 12/06
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30 Diabetes A1c Control* % Diabetic pts (18-75) w A1c >9.0 Family Medicine Division *Lower rates are better for this measureRepeat Measure: 12/06 n = 932004 HEDIS 90th%tile = 21%
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31 Diabetes A1c Control (II) % Diabetic pts (18-75) w A1c< 7.0 Department of Community and Family Medicine 6/06 n = 80 Repeat Measure: 12/07
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32 Diabetes Lipid Monitor (I) % Diabetic pts (18-75) w LDL in past 2 years Family Medicine Division 2005 HEDIS 90 th %tile = 95% 10/1/2016 Repeat: 1/2007
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33 Diabetes Lipid Monitor (II) % Diabetic pts (18-75) w LDL in the last 12 months Family Medicine Division 10/1/2016 Repeat: 1/2007
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34 Diabetes Lipid Control % Diabetic pts (18-75) w LDL < 100 Family Medicine Division n = 93 (random sample) Repeat measure due: 7/2006 2005 HEDIS 90 th %tile = 48%
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35 Diabetes Lipid Control % Diabetic Pts (18-75) w LDL < 130 Family Medicine Division 2005 HEDIS Goal (LDL-C 130) = 76.3% n = 66 (random sample) Repeat measure due:1/07 10/1/2016
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36 n = 66 Repeat measure: 1/07 2005 HEDIS 90 th %tile = 66% 10/1/20166 Diabetes Eye Exam % Diabetic pts (18-75) w eye exam in past yr Family Medicine Division
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37 Diabetes Foot Exam % Diabetic pts w foot exam in past yr Family Medicine Division n = 66 *2010 Healthy People Goal = 75% Repeat Measure: 1/200710/1/2016
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38 Diabetes Monofilament Exam % Diabetic pts w exam in past yr Family Medicine Division n = 66 *2010 Healthy People Goal = 75% Repeat Measure: 1/200710/1/2016
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39 n = 80 Repeat Measure: 1/07 10/1/2016 Diabetes Aspirin Therapy % Diabetic pts ≥ 40 w daily aspirin prescribed Family Medicine Division
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40 Learners Integrated Into Model Clinical Practice Guidelines Clinical Practice Guidelines QI Audit QI Audit Initial meaningful changes in practice to improve care Initial meaningful changes in practice to improve care Attend monthly QI meeting Attend monthly QI meeting Resident taught faculty about self-management Resident taught faculty about self-management
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41 Obstacles No extra $ but department priority E-browser/data repository is specialty driven & not CDM focused No true EMR Faculty -agree on CPG for the practice -group not solo practice faculty believe in & model different behavior -older MD have problems No shared residency clinical practice data Nursing – old / new school
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42 Obstacles (con’t) Resident issues CDM not sexy CDM not easy -- takes time & energy Not recognize importance of team function & QI work Rotation schedule – difficult to be part of the development
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43 Conclusions & Next Steps Diabetes is great model to learn elements of CDM QI metrics feed improvements in Diabetes care Behavior change is hard – staff & faculty – patients Focus & spotlight improves care Hypertension & COPD are next!!!
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