TRANSITIONS: Improving Care for High-Risk Medicaid Beneficiaries in Tompkins County

Similar documents
Improving Transitions of Care

Care Transitions: Don t Lose Your Patients

CareTrek : Nebraska s Journey to Safe Care Transitions

CareTrek : Nebraska s Journey to Safe Care Transitions

Care Transitions. Objectives. An Overview of Care Transitions Efforts in Arkansas

The BOOST California Collaborative

M7: Reducing Avoidable Rehospitalizations. Overview of the Problem and Promising Approaches

The Metro Care Transitions Program (CCTP)

1/11/2016. The Metro Care Transitions Program (CCTP) OUR GOAL OUR HISTORY

REDUCING READMISSIONS through TRANSITIONS IN CARE

Using Facets of Midas+ Hospital Case Management to Support Transitions of Care. Barbara Craig, Midas+ SaaS Advisor

Care Transitions: From Hospital to Home

Reducing Readmissions One-caseat-a-time Using Midas+ Community Case Management

The Stepping Stones Project Care Transitions and the Coaching Model

The Care Transitions Intervention

Providing and Billing Medicare for Transitional Care Management

Person-Centered Models for Assuring Quality and Safety During Transitions Across Care Settings.

Patient Interview/Readmission Chart Review. Hospital Review:

VNAA BLUEPRINT FOR EXCELLENCE BEST PRACTICES TO REDUCE HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS FROM HOME CARE. Training Slides

Care Transition Coach

Pharmacy s Role in Decreasing Hospital Readmissions

The Changing Landscape: A Confluence of National Attention. Eric A. Coleman, MD, MPH

READMISSION ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS REPORT

Care Transitions in Behavioral Health

Safe Transitions: From Patient Centered Care to Patient Directed Care

Improving Patient Safety Across Michigan and Illinois

Thinking Differently about Hospital Readmissions

Advanced Illness Management Leveraging Person Centered Care and Reengineering the Care Team Across the Continuum

Exacerbation of Condition. VNAA Best Practice for Home Health

A Regional Payer/Provider Partnership to Reduce Readmissions The Bronx Collaborative Care Transitions Program: Outcomes and Lessons Learned

Improving Care Transitions for Rhode Island Patients

Partner with Health Services Advisory Group

University of Rochester Medical Center Community Advisory Council

Institutional Handbook of Operating Procedures Policy

Coordinated Care Initiative DRAFT Assessment and Care Coordination Standards November 20, 2012

2.b.iv Care Transitions Intervention Model to Reduce 30-day Readmissions for Chronic Health Conditions

TRANSITIONS OF CARE: INCREASING PATIENT ENGAGEMENT AND COMMUNICATION ACROSS HEALTH CARE SETTINGS

MHS Care Management Program 1017.PR.P.PP.1 10/17

Deborah Perian, RN MHA CPHQ. Reduce Unplanned Hospital Admissions: Focus on Patient Safety

Transitioning Care to Reduce Admissions and Readmissions. Sven T. Berg, MD, MPH Julie Mobayed RN, BSN, MPH

Improving Patient Safety Across Michigan and Illinois

Webinar. Reducing Readmissions with BI and Analytics. 23 March 2018 Copyright 2016 AAJ Technologies All rights reserved.

Medicare, Managed Care & Emerging Trends

Presenter Disclosure Information

Medicare Spending and Rehospitalization for Chronically Ill Medicare Beneficiaries: Home Health Use Compared to Other Post-Acute Care Settings

Evidence Summary for the Care Transitions Program

Mission Health Care Network. April 2017

The Stepping Stones Project Community Engagement to Reduce Unnecessary Rehospitalizations

Improving Patient Safety Across Michigan and Illinois

Re-Hospitalizations and the Bottom Line: What SNFs Can Do to Get Ready. Maureen McCarthy, RN, BS, RAC-CT, CPRA President & CEO Celtic Consulting

Model of Care Heritage Provider Network & Arizona Priority Care Model of Care 2018

TRANSITIONS of CARE. Francis A. Komara, D.O. Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine

Effective Care Transitions to Reduce Hospital Readmissions

Transitions of Care. ACOI Clinical Challenges in Inpatient Care. March 31, 2016 John B. Bulger, DO, MBA

A Bridge Back Home: Care Transition Coaching for the Post-Acute Heart Failure Patient. February 8, 2018

Transition of Care Model for Inpatient & Observation Units

Special Needs Plans (SNP) Model of Care (MOC) Initial and Annual Training

Recommendations for Transitions of Care in North Carolina

Improving Patient Outcomes through Quality Transitions

Care Transitions Partnerships that Work for Patients

Medicare: 2017 Model of Care Training 12/14/201 7

Care Continuum or Unconnected Silos

Assessment. SMP Foundations Training Kit. Table of Contents

Improving the Quality of Care Coordination Across Settings

August 25, Dear Acting Administrator Slavitt:

Home Health and Care Transitions. Objectives. The Care Transitions Theme: 9/28/2010

Project BOOST Be'er Outcomes by Op2mizing Safe Transi2ons

Rebekah Gardner, MD Senior Medical Scientist, Healthcentric Advisors Assistant Professor of Medicine, Brown University

Low-Cost, Low-Administrative Burden Ways to Better Integrate Care for Medicare-Medicaid Enrollees

Transitions in Care. Why They Are Important and How to Improve Them. U. Ohuabunwa MD

4/9/2016. The changing health care market THE CHANGING HEALTH CARE MARKET. CPAs & ADVISORS

Improving Transitions to Home & Community- Based Care Settings

Hospice Discharges. Legacy Hospice

The Long and Winding Road-map: From Waiver Services to VBP and Other Stops Along the Way

Solution Title: Population Health: A Paradigm Shift in how we care for Behavioral Health Patients

Care Transitions (CT) Special Innovation Project (SIP) Improving care transitions among Medicare-Medicaid enrollees

Use of Health Information Technology to Reduce Health Risk

Admissions, Readmissions & Transitions Core Functions & Recommended Actions

THE UTILIZATION OF MODELS OF CARE TRANSITION TO REDUCE MEDICARE BENEFICIARIES HOSPITAL READMISSION RATES IN KENTUCKY: A CASE STUDY

CMHC Healthcare Homes. The Natural Next Step

Medical Management. G.2 At a Glance. G.3 Procedures Requiring Prior Authorization. G.5 How to Contact or Notify Medical Management

2016 Experian Information Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved. Experian and the marks used herein are service marks or registered trademarks of

Collaborative Care- Bridging the Gap in Healthcare

L8: Care Management for Complex Patients: Strategies, Tools and Outcomes

Chronic Care Management INFORMATION RESOURCE

Innovating Predictive Analytics Strengthening Data and Transfer Information at Point of Care to Improve Care Coordination

Outline. I. Overview of QIO Care Transitions. II. Analyses: patient trajectory III. Palliative and end-of-life care

Hot Spotter Report User Guide

PARAMEDIC-NURSE READMISSION PROJECT VALLEY AMBULANCE- REGIONAL WEST MEDICAL CENTER

None of the faculty, planners, speakers, providers nor CME committee has any relevant financial relationships with commercial interest There is no

2015 Congestive Heart Failure. Program Evaluation. Our mission is to improve the health and quality of life of our members

COMPASS Workflow & Core Elements

Reducing Avoidable Readmissions Within 30 Days of Discharge

NGA and Center for Health Care Strategies Summit: High Utilizers

Transitions of Care from a Community Perspective

kaiser medicaid and the uninsured commission on O L I C Y

MEDICAID ACCELERATED EXCHANGE (MAX) SERIES ACCELERATE TRANSFORMATION AND LASTING CHANGE

Community Health Needs Assessment Three Year Summary

Breaking Down Silos of Care: Integration of Social Support Services with Health Care Delivery

Healthy Aging Recommendations 2015 White House Conference on Aging

Transcription:

TRANSITIONS: Improving Care for High-Risk Medicaid Beneficiaries in Tompkins County Aging Concerns Unite Us Conference June 7, 2016 Lisa Holmes, Tompkins County Office for the Aging Sue Ellen Stuart, Visiting Nurse Services of Ithaca and Tompkins County 1

Why Care Transitions? 2

National Data on Hospital Readmissions New England Journal of Medicine (2009): Nationally, 1 in 5 Medicare beneficiaries are readmitted within 30 days following hospitalization Medicare cost of over $17 billion annually Heart failure, pneumonia, COPD were among most frequent medical diagnoses of patients readmitted Half of patients readmitted had no physician contact within 30 days post- discharge 3

National Data on Hospital Readmissions Medicaid patients have readmission rates as high or higher than Medicare patients 25% of Medicare patients with CHF returned to hospital in 30 days; 33% Medicaid patients. Medicaid readmission patterns: more behavioral health conditions, socio-economic factors affecting access, substance abuse. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality 4

Tompkins County s Previous Care Transitions Experience CMS Community Based Care Transitions Program (CCTP) 2012-2014 Goal: To reduce hospital readmissions among Medicare FFS beneficiaries by 20% Strategy: Collaboration of multiple community agencies facilitated and led by Tompkins County Office for the Aging: including VNS, Hospice, Cayuga Medical Center 5

CCTP Partners Tompkins County Office for the Aging: lead agency, coordination, reporting, billing Cayuga Medical Center community hospital Visiting Nurse Services coaching Hospicare coaching 6

Care Transitions Intervention Developed by Dr. Eric Coleman of the University of Colorado Designed to encourage older patients and their caregivers to assert a more active role during care transitions Low cost Low intensity Easily adaptable Short 30 days with 1 home visit and 3 phone calls 7

The Four Pillars of CTI 1. Medication self-management 2. Follow-up with PCP/Specialist 3. Knowledge of red flags or warning signs/symptoms and how to respond 4. Patient-centered medical record Transitions Coach is used to build skills, confidence and to provide tools to support self-management Model behavior for common problems Practice or role play for health care encounters Create an accurate medication list 8

Tompkins CCTP: Challenges and Lessons Learned Challenge: Low patient volume Smallest CCTP site in nation, small rural hospital Could only bill for Medicare FFS inservice patients (no Medicare Advantage or observation stays) Restrictive eligibility based on patient diagnosis: originally CHF, COPD, Pneumonia; later CMS granted permission to broaden criteria to include additional diagnoses, age, polypharmacy and social factors Lesson Learned: Cast a wide net Broaden targeting criteria to be all-inclusive 9

Tompkins CCTP: Challenges and Lessons Learned Challenge: Patient identification and referral Few referrals among hospital discharge planners Turnover among key hospital staff and leadership No direct access to charts/ medical records Communication of protected health information between partners a challenge Lesson Learned: Embed transitions staff in hospital system Staff credentialing at hospital (this took a champion ) Daily rounds Access to electronic medical records 10

Tompkins CCTP: Challenges and Lessons Learned Challenge: Too many cooks Two agencies involved in hospital case finding and inhome coaching Complex communication, information dropped Paid per coaching session: agencies losing money on staff time in rounds Lessons Learned: Streamline Right-size program to one agency 11

Tompkins CCTP: Challenges and Lessons Learned Challenge: Patient acceptance of intervention Patients declining intervention in hospital Patients accepting in hospital, declining when home Lesson Learned: Present program as standard part of discharge Schedule home visit while in hospital if possible Utilize same person to introduce program to patient to conduct home visit when possible 12

Tompkins CCTP Results Goal: reduce hospital readmissions of Medicare patients by 20% in 2 years Program served 85 patients total Though good results for individual patients, not enough volume to create impact CCTP contract period ended 5/31/14 13

14

From CCTP to BIP BIP Innovations Fund: NYSDOH Target: Medicaid beneficiaries Goal: To increase access to community-based care options over institutional settings Tompkins submitted application: May, 2014 Notification of grant award: July, 2014 Start of service: Sept. 2014 15

Structure of BIP Transitions Program Tompkins County Office for the Aging: lead organization, coordination, reporting. Cayuga Medical Center community hospital Visiting Nurse Service coaching CAP CONNECT clinical integration organization, marketing, outreach, data analytics 16

Structure of BIP Transitions Program Studied hospital data on Medicaid readmission patterns In addition to chronic diseases, behavioral health issues, substance abuse, health literacy issues, barriers in accessing community supports Modified model to suit needs of Medicaid patients 17

Structure of BIP Transitions Program Modified Coleman approach: 1 or more home visits by an RN with physician s order Importance of medication reconciliation by RN Medicaid-reimbursable service: sustainable after grant period ends Available to ALL Medicaid patients who could benefit Including behavioral health patients Including patients discharged home from 2 large skilled nursing facilities Referrals accepted from community physicians 18

Goals of BIP Transitions Program 1) Raise awareness of Transitions Program among clinical partners/referral sources Outreach through CAP Connect 2) Foster case finding and patient introduction to Transitions Program Active involvement at daily rounds by VNS 19

Goals of BIP Transitions Program 3) Improve health outcomes and reduce avoidable 30 and 90 day ED visits and inpatient admissions Serve Medicaid beneficiaries with 1+ home visits by Transitions nurse, using modified Coleman approach 4) Ensure program stability beyond grant period Establish referral patterns to ensure program is regularly utilized beyond grant period 20

BIP Transitions Program Marketing 21

BIP Transitions Program Marketing 22

BIP Transitions Program Marketing 23

Patient Testimonials Vaness Joanne Andrew Martha 24

BIP Transitions Program Implementation 25

BIP Transitions Program Results ED Utilization: Number of ED Visits Per Enrollee Through December 2015 3 2 1 0 90 Days Prior 30 Days Prior 30 Days Post 90 Days Post 2.31 1.42 0.45 1.28 26

BIP Transitions Program Results Inpatient Utilization: Number of Inpatient 2 1 0 Stays Per Enrollee Through December 90 Days Prior 30 Days Prior 30 Days Post 90 Days Post 1.24 1.08 0.18 0.45 27

BIP Transitions Program Results Estimated program savings through December 31st, 2015 ED visits per patient 90 days prior to enrollment = 2.31 ED visits per patient 90 days post enrollment = 1.28 Estimated ED visits prevented = 1.03 visits Number of patients enrolled = 137 Average charges for a Medicaid ED visit* = $350.00 Estimated program savings related to preventable ED visits = $49,388.50 *This number based on the average charges for a Medicaid ED visit based on the 2013 Medicaid fee schedule 28

BIP Transitions Program Results Estimated program savings through December 31st, 2015 Inpatient admissions per patient 90 days prior to enrollment = 1.24 Inpatient admissions per patient 90 days post enrollment = 0.45 Estimated Inpatient admissions prevented per patient = 0.79 Number of patients enrolled = 137 Average charges for a Medicaid inpatient visit* = $3,000.00 Estimated program savings related to preventable inpatient admissions = $324,690.00 *This number based on the average charges for a Medicaid inpatient visit based on the 2013 Medicaid fee schedule 29

BIP Transitions Program Results Estimated total cost savings from September 2014 through December 31st, 2015: $374,078.50 30

The Future of the Transitions Program Program infrastructure and procedures remain in place Transitions will be the model used for DSRIP Care Transitions project in Tompkins County Program details shared with Care Compass Network for consideration throughout DSRIP PPS. 31

VNS Role 1. Pt. Identification & Hospital Visit 2. Home Visits 3. Follow up Phone Calls 4. Referrals to other agencies 5. Integrating techniques to enhance results such as motivational interviewing 32

Identification of Medicaid Recipients Access & Review Hospital Census each morning Identify all newly admitted Medicaid patients Review identified patients at hospital rounds and discuss with discharge planning team to identify patients appropriate for the program. 33

Approach Medicaid Patient in the hospital about the program It has been determined through the Coleman project that the program is more successful if the same person making the home visits also approaches the patient in the hospital. This begins to develop trust in the relationship and more success in ensuring the home visit. There is usually a 50% acceptance rate. 34

Transitions Nurse called discharged patient and set up visit within 3 days of discharge This has been a challenge for the program! Medicaid recipients tend to be more mobile and not as likely to answer their phones or to be reached (or found) after discharge. Early in the program, Transitions RN would visit even if not reached on the phone first usually without success and this practice was stopped. Saw on average, 39% of patients that accepted the program in the hospital. 35

Home Visit Based on Four Pillars of CTI 1. Medication self-management 2. Follow-up with PCP/Specialist 3. Knowledge of red flags or warning signs/symptoms and how to respond 4. Patient-centered medical record 36

MEDICATION RECONCILIATION The key for our project was medication reconciliation by an RN which differed from the Coleman Model which did not require an RN for the coach. 37

38

39

40

41

42

used. It is the responsibility of the nurse to Call the physician to reconcile any discrepancies 43

44

45

46

47

48

Medication Tools for the Patient 49

50

Steps to assure MD appointment Ascertain whether patient has a follow-up appointment with MD Confirm appropriate MD responsible managing patients Work with patient to schedule the appointment Discuss barriers to appointment including transportation and scheduling with family member, caregiver or friend Confirm/assist with transportation arrangements Provide appointment reminders and work with patient to put appointment information in a convenient place Confirm patient s use of personal health record Use coaching to encourage patient/caregiver to understand importance of scheduling the appointment Confirm that patient understands to take medication list 51

Physician Visit 52

Knowledge of red flags or warning signs/symptoms and how to respond Red Flags worksheets are disease specific Many free resources to find Red Flags including : 53

Red Flags-COPD 54

Red Flags Heart Disease 55

Red Flags- High Blood Pressure 56

Personal Health Record Booklet given to Patient to take to MD visits. Coach Provides Assistant to complete 57

Personal Health Record 58

Personal Health Record 59

Personal Health Record 60

Personal Health Record 61

Personal Health Record 62

Patient Activation 63

Follow Up Phone Calls 64

Important Components incorporated into the Program Teach Back Motivational Interviewing Health Literacy 65

Teach Back 66

Motivational Interviewing Designed to enhance client motivation to change Especially effective for patients that are stuck not making recommended health related behavior changes MI is a directive, client-centered counseling style for eliciting behavior change by helping clients to explore and resolve ambivalence MI helps activate the patient s own motivations to change 6 Source: Rollnick, Miller, and ButlerInterview: Motivational ing in Healthcare. 2008 67

Motivational Interviewing Collaboration through COACHING: An approach of partnering with patients to enhance self-management strategies for the purpose of preventing exacerbations of chronic illness and supporting lifestyle change (Huffman, 2007, p. 271). 68

Motivational Interviewing 69

Motivational Interviewing 70

Motivational Interviewing 71

Health Literacy 72

Health Literacy 73

Health Literacy 74

Resources List of websites to access resources : http://vnaablueprint.org/main-menu.html http://www.ihi.org/resources/pages/tools/alwaysuseteachback!.aspx https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ikxjmpd7vfy http://caretransitions.org/ 75

Questions? 76