Krames StayWell White Paper.indd
Transcription
Krames StayWell White Paper.indd
Beyond the Checkbox: Using Health Information to Continuously Engage Patients and Improve the Patient Experience The U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services announced in February 2012 that nearly 2,000 hospitals received incentive payments under the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ EHR Incentive Programs. In addition, 85 percent of hospitals now report that by 2015 they intend to take advantage of the incentive payments. With the competitive inpatient market moving toward critical mass, many hospitals face the daunting but necessary challenge of meeting Stage 1 Meaningful Use criteria, comprising 14 required core objectives and five menu set objectives from a list of 10. Forward-thinking hospitals and health systems are approaching patient education beyond checking a box on their way to qualifying for incentive payments. Hospitals may choose their five menu set objectives based on the “low hanging fruit” principle. The objective “to use certified electronic health record (EHR) technology to identify patientspecific education resources and provide those resources to the patient if appropriate” appears to be easily attainable. Forward-thinking hospitals and health systems, however, are approaching patient education beyond checking a box on their way to qualifying for incentive payments. They are strategically leveraging the electronic capability of providing patient education materials for greater value – to continuously engage patients after their discharge and improve patient experience, thus forging a stronger, long-lasting patientprovider relationship. Beyond Meeting Meaningful Use Driven largely by the Meaningful Use criteria, New Orleansbased Ochsner Health System wanted to provide consistent patient education materials based on evidence-based medicine to its clinicians across its seven hospitals and 40 clinics. Previously, the health system had a mix of in-house content, vendor-supplied materials and myriad other sources. “There was no quality control or way to enforce consistency,” said Robert Jones, senior systems administrator for Ochsner’s Academic Division. “We knew we needed to do better.” Ochsner addressed the quality and consistency issues by partnering with Krames StayWell, which was chosen because of its deep history and expertise in the market and its reliance on evidence-based medicine for its content. Krames StayWell was also able to meet Ochsner’s implementation goal of delivering patient education materials from within its Epic electronic medical record (EMR) system. Krames StayWell enhanced its export capability so content can be integrated in the EHR environment and be part of the clinical workflow. Clinicians can now seamlessly and easily select, review and print the materials from the EMR at the point of care, which also enriches communication between patient and clinician. In addition, the export capability helps deliver better search results, according to David Trenti, product development manager for Krames StayWell. When a clinician opens a patient record in an EHR system, for example, relevant documents tied to the patient’s diagnoses codes are automatically delivered, providing clinicians with targeted and more granular documents to give to their patients. Indexing content correctly and tagging content based on diagnoses codes rather than general keywords not only deliver higherquality search results but higher-quality content, he said. Ultimately, the provisioning of high-quality patient materials will help deliver better care and enable better outcomes for patients, which Jones said is Ochsner’s “real goal.” Oschner Health System In addition, the integration allows the EMR to document the delivery of patient materials. While the audit trail offers liability protection on the extreme end of the spectrum, it helps clinicians pinpoint why patients aren’t making progress with their treatment plan after they have been discharged, Jones said. Clinicians can see whether patient education materials have been provided or not. If they have been distributed, clinicians can then walk through and help their patients understand the materials. It’s yet another opportunity for building the patient-clinician relationship as well as drive compliance, he pointed out. Enhancing Patient-Centered Communication In addition to Meaningful Use criteria, hospitals across the nation are also working to comply with the Joint Commission’s patient-centered communication standards for hospitals, which become effective July 1, 2012. With more than 300 languages spoken in the U.S., the Joint Commission understands the challenges of communicating with patients and families in their primary tongue. Sara Riegel, manager of patient and family education and community health for Swedish Medical Center, a five-hospital, 30-clinic system in Washington state, reported multi-language capabilities was a requirement when selecting a system. The Joint Commission also documented that more than 90 million Americans have low health literacy, i.e., are unable to adequately understand and use health information. Too much information can intimidate or fatigue patients, which can lead to noncompliance. According to Lane Stiles, who has overseen patient education programs at both Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Tennessee and Fairview Health Services in Minnesota, a common thread across the diverse populations he has worked with in his career is that it is very easy to quickly overwhelm patients. While at Fairview, Stiles worked with Krames StayWell, whose content focused on three to five key messages and provided actionable knowledge to support compliance initiatives for better outcomes. Expanding Patient Reach through Multiple Channels This patient-centered communication approach is also forward thinking, noted Stiles, as it will help health systems meet new requirements of the future in the areas of patient engagement and satisfaction, which are integral parts of emerging valuebased payment systems. In his current position at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Stiles intends to create the definitions and build out metrics for patient communications, relying on existing instruments such as the HCAHPS (Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems) survey, the first national, standardized, publicly reported survey of patients’ perspectives of hospital care. By defining patient communications metrics, health systems can Vanderbilt University Medical Center then tie them to patient satisfaction and outcomes, which in turn can help determine return on investment (ROI) of patient-education solutions, Stiles said. Fairview, which comprises seven hospitals, 40-plus primarycare clinics and numerous specialty services, home care and senior services, was looking for an electronic enterprise-wide solution that could accommodate its expansion. The regional integrated health system also wanted to deliver patient education through its various media – public website, Epic EMR system, patient portal and intranet – which would allow it to reach a greater portion of its patient population and its clinicians through their preferred communication mode. “We were able to develop a true continuum of care with consistent messaging across all media,” said Stiles. According to Drew Diskin, independent digital engagement strategist, being transparent and capable of providing relevant, timely and valuable information is critical to delivering on the ease, speed and convenience that consumers want. “When you look at how people understand information that is given to them, meaningful use is better served with supporting information, support and an ongoing approach of checking in with the patient or the patient’s loved ones,” he said. Diskin noted studies have shown that ongoing support, human contact and provisioning that are timely and relevant increase compliance exponentially, alter behavior, and help create a bond between patients and their healthcare providers in a relational way as continuity of care is shaped by their changing needs. Continuously engaging patients once they leave the inpatient setting requires reaching out to them through various communication channels. Communications providers such as Krames StayWell often allow content to be distributed in multiple formats such as HTML and PDF and through multiple channels such as mobile devices, e-mail, and patient portals. Krames On-Demand (KOD) enables innovators and designers to customize content to their needs and export and deploy it into their application or workflow. “We’re always looking for new channels for content to be consumed based on our relationship with EMR vendors and customers,” Trenti said. By defining patient communications m e t rics, health systems can then tie them to patient satisfaction and outcomes, which in turn can help determine return on investment (ROI) of patient-education solutions. Lane Stiles Director of Patient Education Vanderbilt University Medical Center In similar fashion, Ochsner wants to engage its patients outside of the healthcare setting via an easily accessible electronic forum. Through its MyChart, patients can retrieve education materials, lab tests, general wellness information and other materials that will help them be better informed and therefore help them better manage their health long after their inpatient stay. “We will always continue to build the cohort of patients who use that resource and continually enrich that resource so there’s always something good for them to use when they return to the website,” Jones said. “All things being equal, the most informed patient is most likely to have the best outcomes. ” Robert Jones Senior Systems Administrator, Academic Division Ochsner Health System Correlating Patient Education with Quality of Care, Better Outcomes Ochsner believes that providing its patients more information at every opportunity – to help them understand their medical condition, alternatives, the choices made by the health system in terms of treatment algorithms – improves patient satisfaction and empowerment. Patient knowledge about their medical condition is “extremely important” in helping them manage their condition at home, which can help reduce such events as hospital readmissions, Jones pointed out. “All things being equal, the most informed patient is most likely to have the best outcomes,” he said. While such results are emerging, studies have shown a correlation between patient education and patient satisfaction and improved outcomes. The May/June 1998 issue of the Congestive Heart Failure Journal published a study measuring the impact of patient-education interventions on readmissions. In the Our Heart Failure Outcome Study, over a 12-week period Columbia San Jose Medical Center in California sent out four mailings comprising a video and booklets. The test group that received the patient education intervention materials had a 51 percent reduction in readmissions compared to the control group, which resulted in a net savings of approximately $173,000 to the medical center – an eight-to-one ROI. From 2005 to 2008, Del Sol Medical Center in Texas participated in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Expecting Success: Excellence and Cardiac Care program. A Heart Failure Center was established and staffed by a nurse practitioner who monitored patient progress from admission through follow-up visits after discharge. The program, whose patient-education component included implementation of KOD to deliver information to patients in both English and Spanish, saw readmission rates for study participants drop from 16 percent to 7 percent. In terms of the impact of patient education on satisfaction scores, The Journal of PeriAnesthesiology Nursing published in 2009 a study that examined the impact of providing diagnostic-specific discharge instructions on patient satisfaction. Using KOD to deliver the content, the Regional Medical Center of San Jose in California realized an improvement in eight of nine measures of patient satisfaction in the test population. Transforming Healthcare through Patient Education As more hospitals and health systems tie patient education to improved patient satisfaction and outcomes, they should be emboldened by the results of the National eHealth Collaborative’s 2012 Stakeholder Survey, which was released in February 2012. Of the 185 respondents who participated in the online survey, 77 percent said patient and consumer engagement is “very important” to transforming healthcare and 18 percent said it is “important.” Furthermore, when respondents were asked to define patient engagement, 64 percent said it is “best reflected” as online resources and education materials to inform patients about health and health conditions, and 59 percent said it was patients using tools and online resources for managing their health records and other data. “The big opportunity here is for organizations to be relational versus transactional in care provision,” Diskin emphasized. “If the information is easier to work with and has common threads based on attributes and not a hierarchy of information, correlations could be made, diagnoses can be revealed and proactive care can be administered – and then all of this to say: Meaningful use can be achieved when it has meaning.” Diskin calls on all stakeholders in the healthcare ecosystem to approach health information not as a checklist but as a transformative way of doing business. About Krames StayWell Krames StayWell is the largest provider of patient education, consumer health information, and population health management communications in the country. Combining extensive technology and content assets with vast consumer insights and a strategic approach, Krames StayWell is uniquely qualified to engage consumers across the entire spectrum of their health care experience. Our best-in-class health communication solutions integrate print, interactive, and mobile formats at multiple touch points to attract and retain consumers, improve health outcomes, and lower costs. We deliver measurable results for hospitals, health care professionals, health plans, employers, retail pharmacies, government agencies, and association clients with world-class design, commitment to health literacy principles, and a focus on custom development. For more information, please visit www.kramesstaywell.com. Produced by MedTech Media Custom Group. ©2012 71 Pineland Drive, Suite 203, New Gloucester, ME 04260 207.688.6270 • www.medtechmedia.com
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