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PROMISE Performance Reporting and Outcomes Measurement to Improve the Standard of care at End-of-life The PROMISE team HPC meeting, St Louis May 12, 2009
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Objectives: To introduce the PROMISE center To explain PROMISE: »Methods »Reports To describe where PROMISE is going; and To identify ways in which we’ll need your help
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PROMISE goals: To identify and reduce unwanted variation in the quality of end-of-life care for veterans. To define and disseminate processes of care that contribute to improved outcomes for veterans near the end of life and their families.
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What is PROMISE? The quality measurement center for the CELC Initiative Based at the Philadelphia VAMC Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion Funded through the CELC to provide: »A voice for veterans/families »Actionable data that can guide facility- VISN- and national-level planning and strategy.
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What does PROMISE deliver? Data for facilities about the quality of end-of- life care they provide »Timely feedback »Understandable reports »Meaningful benchmarks Practical guidance for HPC programs Useful evaluations for CELC Initiative leadership
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Framework for PROMISE data: Domains of care (from NCP guidelines) Physical aspects of care Social aspects of care Spiritual, religious, and existential aspects of care Cultural aspects of care Care of the imminently dying patient Psychological and psychiatric aspects of care (including bereavement)
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Framework for PROMISE data: Aspects of care Processes of care (from chart reviews) Outcomes (Families’ perceptions of care) Currently (Q1 FY09) 43 facilities: »~800 interviews/quarter »~1600 chart reviews/quarter
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Processes of care: Chart review Sample: »Inpatient deaths »Excluding “unexpected” deaths (e.g. ER, suicide, homicide, OR for outpatient procedure) Deaths identified using VISN data (multiple overlapping samples) Remote chart reviews via Global CPRS
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Processes of care: (examples) Pain assessment within 24 hours of last admission Palliative care consultation note Documentation of a surrogate or that a surrogate could not be found Chaplain contact with veteran/family Social work note Documentation of a bereavement contact
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Processes of care: Documentation of a surrogate decision-maker
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Outcomes of care: The Bereaved Family Survey BFS: OMB-approved survey derived from the Family Assessment of Treatment at End-of-life (FATE) 14-item telephone survey administered to the veteran’s NOK 6-10 weeks after death Procedure: »Predefined algorithm for contacts (NOK first choice) »Initial letter with opt-out provision »Telephone contact »Opportunity for family members to refer to alternate
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Outcomes of care: 12 multiple-choice BFS items Pain management (1) Communication (Providers gave enough information in an understandable way and took time to listen) (3) Veteran didn’t receive unwanted treatment (1) Providers were kind, caring, and respectful (1) Family was told what to expect in the veteran’s last hours of life (1) Veteran’s personal care needs were met (1) Spiritual support, emotional support (pre/post) (3) Enough help with funeral arrangements (1)
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Outcomes of care: BFS scoring All items are either dichotomous or frequency-based »Did you receive as much help as you needed with… »How often did the health care providers who took care of [veteran]… Responses dichotomized (Best possible response vs. all others). BFS and item scores reflect a proportion of the time that the veteran/family received the best possible care.
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BFS scores: 43 facilities
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Families’ perceptions of bereavement support: 43 facilities
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Quarterly VISN-level reports Categories match NCP domains Reports broken down by facility (Process and outcome measures) Compared to sample benchmark (pooled mean of top facilities) Hypertext links to: »Best Practices on PROMISE website »SharePoint tools (Luhrs)
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Additional data…responses to 2 open-ended questions “The hospice unit was the best part of the care that [veteran] got in the whole 14 years that he was going to the VA.” “We really depended on the palliative team— they were wonderful.” “Everyone was very helpful, but especially [NP on PCCT]. She was always there, always available. We wouldn’t have made it without her.”
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Additional data…referrals for unmet needs Unmet needs identified in interviews: »Bereavement »Questions about care »Questions about benefits Referred to VISN coordinator and/or facility patient advocate (with family permission). Gives us: »An opportunity to meet needs and to leave families with a good impression of the VA »Valuable data about needs for improvement
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Can you give us even more data?
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Additional data… Aggregate (broken down) data available to each VISN “Raw” data available on request Menu-driven custom reports online (at PROMISE website) »“Mean BFS score in our ICU, with and without palliative care” »“Mean bereavement score in our VISN, with and without a bereavement contact”
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Using the PROMISE report: 6 rules 1.Don’t panic 2.Focus! (Look at individual items) 3.Ask: Do you have enough data? (Two quarters’ worth) 4.Use common sense (does this score make sense?) 5.Select one item to improve that has: 1.A low score 2.An obvious action plan 6.Be skeptical about changes
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Interpreting changes: What happened in these facilities? A facility improves its BFS score from 45 to 60 in 3 months Answer: Nothing A facility improves its bereavement score from 49 to 65 in 3 months Answer: A social worker dedicated to bereavement calls; educational materials for family; a condolence letter for all deaths. Lesson: Be critical about scores and changes
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Closing the loop: Bringing the veteran’s and family’s voice back to the bedside
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Help us close the loop (1-2) 1. “Success stories” solicited from field »Structured description via web-based form (Through PROMISE website) »Submit descriptions of: Good scores Improvements How you’re using PROMISE data 2. “QI Registry” tracking single-facility interventions »Structured description of goal, intervention, and expected outcome submitted via web-based form (Through PROMISE website)
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Help us close the loop (3) 3. “QI Collaboratives” that track multiple-facility interventions »Best Practices reviewed/selected by advisory panels (Carol Luhrs and Therese Cortez) »Designated leader »Organized schedule »Technical assistance »Measurement/analysis by PROMISE »Tailored feedback
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PROMISE Implementation Recommendations (PCLC/PROMISE) Dissemination (PROMISE newsletter, etc) Implementation (Sharepoint, technical assistance, etc) QI registry QI Collaboratives Evaluation: BFS Chart review Guidelines/ Expert opinion
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PROMISE goals: To identify and reduce unwanted variation in the quality of end-of-life care for veterans. To define and disseminate processes of care (“Best Practices”) that contribute to improved outcomes for veterans near the end of life and their families.
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Progress and next steps Rollout: »7 VISNs on board FY08 »Goal: 12 in FY09; 21 in FY10 Dissemination: PROMISE website coming online Measurement: »Refine process measures »Implement Success Stories; QI registry; Collaboratives
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PROMISE website: www.cherp.research.va.gov/PROMISE (Non-VA site: www.caringforveterans.org)www.caringforveterans.org Find out more about PROMISE Register a QI initiative Brag about a success story Join a QI collaborative Learn about best practices (coming soon)
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