Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byShana Terry Modified over 9 years ago
1
Julie L. Hopkins, MA, MBA Vice President, Hospital & CME Programs Institute for Medical Quality
2
QICME In the beginning… Relationship: Informal, Not Strategic ©iMQ|2011
3
Professional Accountability ◦ Maintenance of Certification (MOC) ◦ Maintenance of Licensure (MOL) Public Accountability ◦ 2008 Senator Grassley, (US Senate Finance Committee) questions medical societies about corporate support from pharmaceutical and medical device companies ◦ Effective December 4, 2007 under Stark Law II: CME becomes a perk! Intent: To ensure no wrongdoing by nature of the relationship, e.g., enticing physicians to refer more Medicare/ Medicaid patients to a hospital by giving them lots of perks ©iMQ|2011
4
Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) Standards for Commercial Support sm PHARMA & medical device companies ◦ Reduced and restructured CME support ◦ Moved from Marketing to grants/foundations 2011 AMA passes CEJA recommendation further restrict commercial interests and CME ©iMQ|2011
5
ACCME 2006 Elements and Criteria AMA 2010 changes to PRA Category 1 Credits
6
©iMQ|2011
7
Links between quality & reimbursement start to matter more ©iMQ|2011
8
Meaningful Use – $40B HIT and EHR stimulus Value-Based Purchasing – Quality and HCAHPS ◦ Move from pay for data to pay for performance ◦ Processes and outcome transparency ◦ Data to coordinate care ◦ Readmission Reduction Program ◦ Patient-Centered Medical Homes ◦ IHI + AHRQ: Value = Quality/Cost ◦ Data to reduce costs and maintain margin ◦ Bundled Payments ◦ Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)
9
Why? Because you can: 1. Have the most influence on improving patient care at the point it is delivered 2. Focus on what needs improvement 3. Measure impact/results and determine what worked/didn’t work 4. ? 5. ?
10
1. National Quality Statistics & Goals 2. Organizational Quality Goals/Performance 3. Best Practices
11
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates annually: ◦ At least 1.7 million healthcare-associated infections occur leading to 99,000 deaths ◦ 1in every 20 hospitalized patients in US acquires a healthcare-associated infection ◦ Of these, central intravenous line associated blood-stream infections (CLABSIs) are most deadly: mortality rate of 12-25%
12
How do national statistics or goals impact local quality and CME? ©iMQ|2011
13
2006 AHRQ funded Michigan Keystone Intensive Care Unit Project (Keystone Project) Partnership: Johns Hopkins University & Michigan Health and Hospital Association Results: ◦ Reduced rate of CLABSIs by 2/3 in 3 months ◦ In18 months saved more >1,500 lives and nearly $200 million ◦ 2011: improvement Sustained ©iMQ|2011
14
2011: Awards $34 Million To Expand Fight Projects: SPREAD use of Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program (CUSP) modules Since 2008: AHRQ has promoted nationwide adoption of CUSP to reduce CLABSIs New modules target 3 additional infections: ◦ Catheter-associated urinary tract infections ◦ Surgical site infections ◦ Ventilator-associated pneumonia ©iMQ|2011
15
Translate national statistics and goals into local CME and Quality Initiatives Education – a key component but not only component to achieve results Education delivered at local level, where it makes a difference Quality/Patient Safety is measured locally, but compared to national or regional results ©iMQ|2011
16
Does your organization measure National Quality Goals because of public awareness ora desire to improve performance? ©iMQ|2011
17
What are the quality/patient safety goals or targets for your: ◦ Hospital? ◦ Department/Divisions? ◦ Clinics ◦ Medical Groups? ©iMQ|2011
18
What gap must be closed to achieve the goal? Example: Improve percentage of patients evaluated for osteoporosis Target: 85% Current Performance: 50% ©iMQ|2011
19
What causes the gap: e.g., ◦ Systems ◦ Education ◦ Resources Example: What are underlying causes for patients not being evaluated for osteoporosis ©iMQ|2011
20
Are there educational needs (knowledge/competency/skill) that, if met, will close or help to close the gap/achieve the goals? Example: Can any of the underlying causes for patients not being evaluated for osteoporosis be addressed through CME? ©iMQ|2011
21
Guidelines from specialty organizations Changes in techniques, processes or decisions based on evidence emerging from research or studies (e.g., Keystone Project) New technology that reduces risk to patient ©iMQ|2011
22
What relevant best practices are: o Emerging in the services your organization provides? o Known but have not been widely adopted in your organization? ©iMQ|2011
23
Recent studies show lower complication and readmission rates Attributed to wide adoption of best practices How does your organization compare? How can CME help? Example, specialty hospital conducting CME for medical staff at rural referral hospitals
24
How do you gain adoption… SPREAD …those best practices across a specialty/organization? Can CME play a role in expediting adoption of a best practice among your peers in your organization? Are there quality measures or goals related to this best practice that would benefit from its wide-spread adoption? ©iMQ|2011
25
QI measure Best Practice National Statistic ? New / equipment or change in process ©iMQ|2011
26
QI Measure How to close gap? Need for EDU? Design/Deliver CME Desired Results? ©iMQ|2011
27
How do you know what worked ©iMQ|2011
28
QI/PI data source used to identify gaps/learning needs is used to determine effectiveness of CME Take credit, even when achievement was multifaceted Document analysis, decisions, not just data
29
For all you do, everyday, to make life better for so many. ©iMQ|2011
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.