Collaboration Key to Making Outcome Based Pathways
Transcription
Collaboration Key to Making Outcome Based Pathways
Collaboration Key to Making Outcome Based Pathways and Reimbursement a Reality Yvonne Ashford (Central CCAC) Valerie Armstrong (North Simcoe Muskoka CCAC) Tina Hamilton(Saint Elizabeth Health Care) OACCAC Knowledge and Inspiration Conference June 20th, 2013 Supporting Structural and Cultural Change Kotter’s 8-Stage Process 1. Establish a sense of urgency 2. Create the guiding coalition 3. Develop a vision and strategy 4. Communicate the change vision 5. Empower employees for broad based action 6. Generate short term wins 7. Consolidate gains and producing more change 8. Anchor new approaches in the culture 2 Improving Care Experiences • Patient outcomes drive care delivery • Care decisions made by patient and care professional closest to patient • Care based on evidenceinformed best practice • Payment for quality (outcomes) Establishing a Sense of Urgency 3 Planning Service Provider and CCAC Joint Team Cross-functional teams NSM and Central CCAC Consolidated project plans developed with SPOs & CCACs Local Service Provider Internal Project Team Cross-functional team from CCAC including frontline staff Local CCAC Internal Project Team Cross-functional team from CCAC including frontline staff Joint CCAC Project Team Central CCAC Champlain CCAC North Simcoe Muskoka CCAC Creating a guiding coalition 4 Planned Activity Central CCAC NSM CCAC Pathways Wound Wound / Orthopaedic Description All new wounds All populations All new wounds/joint replacements Short Stay population Wound: 1. Bayshore 2. Closing the Gap 3. Saint Elizabeth Provider Partners 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Start Date CHRIS changes – Oct. 25 Business change – Nov. 26 Bayshore Closing the Gap Paramed Revera Saint Elizabeth Spectrum SRT Med-Staff VHA Home Calea Orthopaedic: 1. Revera 2. Closing the Gap CHRIS changes - Oct. 25 Business change - Nov. 26 5 Developing a vision and strategy 6 Planning WORK BREAKDOWN STRUCURE OA &CCAC Project Planning CCAC Business Process Program Design CCAC Client Service Governance CCAC Engagement and Communication CCAC Education and Training CCAC Deployment and Testing (IT/IS) CCAC Contracts SPO Communication CCAC Evaluation Measurement Reporting SPO Evaluation & reporting SPO Training SPO Billing Process SPO Business Process CCAC Finance Detailed schedule outlining activities for all parties involved Communicating the change vision 7 CCAC/SPOs Joint Planning VSM/Process Mapping Session • Reviewed current state • Identified “What will change” and “What remains the same” • Mapped future state • Completed gap analysis • Demonstrated CHRIS and HPG interaction Outcome: • Joint action plan • Business rules • Revised process maps 8 Educational Tool Kit 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Business process scenarios Business rules document Process maps Q&As Presentations Change management material User Guides – HPG / CHP Guidelines for completing reports Pathways Video for HPG / CHP use 9 Educational Tool Kit Change Management Resources • Model for change analysis • Change management exercises • Train the trainer 10 Educational Tool Kit Business process scenarios • All known scenarios • Communication • SPO & CCAC actions Scenario and technology testing • Testing scenarios with CHP & CHRIS • SPO & CCAC 11 Educational Tool Kit Video for HPG / CHP use Recorded instruction video Accessible to all stakeholders Easy to understand Standardized instruction 12 Lessons Learned Planning • Define Scope Early • Risk analysis key • Set the Stage Consolidated contracts, IT readiness, aligning caseloads • • Scenario Development and Testing Define workarounds, identify improvement opportunities • • Collaborative Approach Involve frontline early and often, involve cross-functional • • Resource Intensive • Identify consistent lead, local and SPO steering committees • Process Redesign • • Core standard processes, decisions impact local and SPOs Communication • Internally and often, key messages across stakeholders 13 Implementation Strategies & Challenges Empowering employees for broad based action 14 Implementation Strategies CCAC Management support for initial OBPs – confirmation of processes prior to sending out initial offers Regular team huddles to review and provide real-time information All managers were knowledgeable of model and available to support staff Manager most involved to be on call initially Ensure staff on all shifts are knowledgeable of processes Empowering employees for broad based action 15 Implementation Strategies Service Providers Initial interval reports reviewed and submitted with support Ensure IT and support staff knowledgeable and be available Resource experts available to support a Coordination staff – real time Internal steering committee to guide decision making Ensure all staff on all shifts are knowledgeable of processes Empowering employees for broad based action 16 Implementation Strategies CCAC and SPOs 1. Regular check-ins with CCAC and SPOs (first two weeks) • Real-time problem-solving and decision-making 2. Identification of one contact person at CCAC and SPO • For communication and escalation 3. Continue with internal committees – the “new norm” • CCAC and SPO internal committee • Joint CCAC/SPO committee • CCAC and OACCAC • Weekly provincial meetings 17 Post-Implementation Lessons Learned and Impacts Consolidating gains & producing more change Anchoring new approaches in the culture 18 Impact on Clinical Processes Focus on Outcomes • Communication more focused on outcomes and less about visits • Focus on “Clinical Management” by SPOs well received • Shift from teach, reduce and discharge to ensuring wound is healed prior to discharge • SPOs have more autonomy with clinical judgement – with some controls internally SPOs monitoring patients/frequencies and best practice • Consistency being seen 19 Impact on Clinical Processes Shift in SPO thinking • Holistic and consideration of other services to meet gaps • e.g. ET Nurse consults - earlier escalation to prevent delays Some SPOs – additional work • • Lack of system integration and duplicate effort Increased time for orientation Physician Practices Challenges with physician practices 20 Impact on Internal Operations Scalability • Model and business rules must be scalable to other populations (i.e.. Palliative, etc.) = sustainable • Consideration of multi-disciplinary pathways Works well with Short Stay population • More complex, more challenging • FFS and OBP processes complex Shift in care coordinator thinking • Focus on patient and patient outcomes versus frequencies OBP reporting • More succinct and clinically based • Method of reporting remains a challenge - Paper 21 Impact on Technology Lack of integration between SPO systems & CHRIS • Duplicate entry and effort for CCAC and SPO Workarounds until enhancements made • Increased time and effort for staff Tracking of enhancements and bugs • Ongoing tracking informs improvements Early scenario testing using CHP / HPG • Completed early to confirm processes and limitations • Reduces re-work • Ensure billing codes are accurate 22 Impact on Financial Processes Revenue Reconciliation Challenges • Not well understood or possible • Organizational risks for CCACs and SPOs • More intensive financial auditing processes - CCAC and SPO – new auditing processes defined Financial risk during POC • Best practices reports shared with SPO Reimbursement Model • Impact not fully understood • Organizational risks for CCACs and SPOs 23 Impact on Financial Processes Central CCAC 24 Impact on Patients Standard approach to wound care and hips/knees • Promotes best practice • Focus on outcomes Simplified referrals • Less patient time required for completion Reduced variation among care coordinators and SPOs • Consistency in provider / agency • Consistency in care coordinator 25 Active Short Stay Clients with an Authorized OBP (as of May 28, 2013) On May 28, 2013: • 1674 active Short Stay clients • 19.77% (n=331) had an OB pathway currently authorized Of the 331 clients: • 74.3% (n=246) OB-W pathway • 25.7% (n=85) OB-O pathway NSM CCAC 25.68% 74.32% OB-O OB-W Wound Pathway Types Authorized (November 26, 2012 – May 28, 2013) 1130 Wound pathways authorized during this 6 month period: • 325 assessment pathways Remaining 805 wound pathways: • 43.9 % Surgical Wound • 17.9% Traumatic Wound • 32.7% All Other - Healing • 5.6 % Non Healing NSM CCAC Data Note: “Non Healing” accounts for: Maintenance Wound Initial, Maintenance Wound Recurring, Non-Healing Wound Initial and Non-Healing Wound Recurring authorized pathway types. “All Other – Healing” accounts for: Arterial Leg Ulcer, Diabetic Foot Ulcer, Malignant Wound Initial, Pilonidal Sinus, Pressure Ulcer and Venous Leg Ulcer authorized pathway types. Healable Wound Pathways Discharged – Goal Met vs. Goal Not Met (November 26, 2012 – May 28, 2013) 478 healable wound pathways have been discharged during this six month period 100% 25% 32% 75% 68% 20% 25% 80% 75% 80% • 75% (n=359) discharged: pathway completed - goal met (all outcomes have been met) • 25% (119) discharged: pathway completed - goal not met •NSM CCAC 60% 40% 20% 0% All Other Surgical Traumatic Wound Wound Discharge: Pathway completed - goal not met Discharge: Pathway completed - goal met Data Note: Excludes all discharged assessment and non-healing/ maintenance pathways. Healable Wound Pathways Discharged - Goal not Met • 119 Wound pathways were discharged: pathway completed – goal not met. 19.3% • 19.3% (n=23) were due to supervening events (death, hospitalization, transfer) 56.3% 24.4% • 56.3% (n=67) were classified as “other” Supervening Events • 24.4% (n=29) service is still active • 7 transferred to maintenance/ non- healing pathway •NSM CCAC Service is still Active Other Average LOS (in days) per Wound Pathway Discharged: Goal Met (November 26, 2012 – May 28, 2013) Expected Length of Pathway = 60 days Expected Length of Pathway = 60 days 45.0 40.0 35.0 38.6 30.0 25.0 20.0 Expected Length of Pathway = 7 days 41.0 15.0 10.0 7.8 5.0 0.0 CCAC (n= 182) CCAC (n= 171) CCAC (n=78) Surgical Assessment Traumatic Wound NSM CCAC Wound (OB-W) Clients with Fee for Service (November 26, 2012 – May 28, 2013) • 670 clients have been authorized or previously authorized for a Wound Pathway during this six month period • 89% (595) have a outcome based wound service authorized only • 11% (n=75) had fee for service assigned at the same time (defined as service unrelated to wound – nursing, therapy, personal support) NSM CCAC Top 5 Lessons Learned 1. Collaborate early and often – between and among CCACs, providers and the OACCAC 2. Investment in resources for planning will result in effective implementation 3. Adapt your business processes to new CHRIS and HPG-CHP functionalities including some workarounds. 4. Don’t underestimate change management required – fundamental shift! 5. OBP is the “right concept” – focusing on the outcomes and shared accountability 32 Outstanding care – every person, every day Outstanding care – every person, every day