Patient and Family Engagement. Valerie Cronin, LCSW Director, Utilization Management Lodi Health Lodi, California

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Patient and Family Engagement Valerie Cronin, LCSW Director, Utilization Management Lodi Health Lodi, California

Lodi Health Lodi Health: a non-profit health system which includes an inpatient hospital, emergency department, and several medical practices. Average daily census is 86 patients. Lodi Health operates primary-care, multi-specialty, OB, pediatric, wound care and occupational health practices.

2010 Lodi Health Strategic Plan Assigned management level task forces: Readmission Prevention Patient Satisfaction Leadership education re: changes in health care Culture change: Not an automatic process! Shift: Getting the patient out vs. successful transition Do we have to do everything for these patients? Walking through the process with patients One step at a time Structure Commitment Communication Flexibility Patience: Each change brings culture change along 5/2/2014

2011 Strong customer service focus AIDET: Acknowledge, Introduce, Duration, Explain, Thank Managing up Words that work Leadership rounding Gradual changes: attitudes, personalities, approaches, habits Readmission Prevention Planning: Project BOOST High-risk assessment Passport to Care Teach back Follow-up phone calls Gradual changes: Revisions, Trial and assess, creativity

Patient Family Engagement 5/2/2014

Patient Family Engagement Transition Social Work: Frequent admissions/ed visits/self-pay Emergency Department Case Management: Patient Engagement on the front end: Readmissions Level of care 5/2/2014

2012 Readmission prevention: hospital wide Initiated the Patient Discharge Advocate Position Not nurses or social workers Coordinate discharge planning Strong patient/family contact component Requires the right person: Fast paced People oriented Customer service Revised case management floor model One RN case manager per floor (ratio 1:30) Two patient discharge advocates (ratio 1:15) Social worker assigned Patient engagement requires strong team work

Patient Family Engagement: Community Cross Setting Work Group: Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) meetings Communication improvement: Both sides Standardize communication to patients/families between settings Transition flows better for patients/families Handoff SNF staff training to respond to patients/families: Change in condition Advanced Health Care Directives: Social Work Community Outreach POLST Process (Physician Order for Life Sustaining Treatment) More conversations re: this on the acute care and SNF sides

Patient Discharge Advocates: follow-up phone calls Ensure patients/families understand their plan and importance of follow-up Determine barriers to a positive transition Coordinate intervention from RN case management or social work Case Manager Readmission Assessment Conversation with the patient/family Lodi Health Medical Practices: Planning for transition patient follow-up Transition billing criteria: Follow-up phone call completion Medication reconciliation Physician office visit Pharmacy involvement Medical practices Hospital: high-risk inpatient/families Home Health/LH Community Partnership Group

Readmission Picture 2010- Medicare Readmissions 2010 - October 2010 2011 2012 (through October) 14.39% 13.17% 12.84% 12.86% 15.0% Medicare Readmissions 2010 - October 14.5% 14.0% 13.5% 13.0% 12.5% 12.0% 2010 2011 2012 (through October)

All-Cause Readmissions Follow-up Phone Call Decision Project Case Manager Position Initiated UM Advisor CDI Program Initiated Multi-disciplinary Patient Rounds Initiated Timeline Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec SNF/Palliative Care Task Force UM/LH Clinic Transition Planning ARC Pharmacy Engagement Team - UM Team attends ARC Indicator Benchmark (BM) Jan Feb Mar Q1 Q1 BM Apr MS-DRG Acute Care Case Mix Index (CMI) 1.41 1.35 1.32 1.24 1.30 1.40 1.31 1.26 1.32 1.30 1.42 1.27 1.28 1.28 1.28 1.44 1.31 1.33 1.29 1.31 1.40 1.30 MS-DRG Acute Care Case Mix Index Medicare 1.46 1.41 1.34 1.27 1.34 1.45 1.21 1.29 1.29 1.26 1.44 1.30 1.38 1.29 1.32 1.50 1.38 1.35 1.36 1.36 1.47 1.32 Acute Care Discharge Volume 5096 510 467 501 1478 1468 407 463 433 1303 1300 454 489 425 1368 1125 430 402 461 1293 1203 5442 Indicator Benchmark (BM) Jan Feb Mar Q1 Q1 BM Apr Acute Care Arithmetic Mean LOS 5.05 5.26 5.38 4.65 5.10 5.26 5.03 4.97 5.08 5.03 5.16 6.2 5.17 5.04 5.47 4.86 5.17 5.34 5.18 5.23 4.88 5.21 Acute Care Geometric Mean LOS 3.80 3.95 4 3.55 3.83 3.9 3.78 3.79 3.84 3.80 3.91 4 3.77 3.7 3.82 3.63 3.78 3.93 3.89 3.87 3.78 3.83 Acute Care % Readmit within 30 Days 11.22 12.3 15.74 12.17 13.40 12.6 11.77 12.17 13.27 12.40 10.6 12 14.1 12.4 12.8 9.44 11.68 15.05 13.6 13.46 11.9 13.02 Acute Care % Readmit within 14 Days 6.10 6.15 8.43 7.01 7.20 6.79 7.42 7.08 7.58 7.36 5.6 7.24 7.58 7.04 7.29 5.62 6.43 8.42 7.5 7.45 6.25 7.32 Acute Care % Readmit within 7 Days 3.48 3.69 5.54 3.71 4.31 4.08 4.35 2.88 4.27 3.83 2.96 4.3 5.26 4.13 4.56 3.21 3.81 5.1 4.55 4.49 3.58 4.30 Acute Care Medicare % Readmit within 30 Days 12.64 12.2 18.07 12.82 14.35 15.3 12.74 12.80 13.50 13.01 12.4 11.5 14.34 9.21 11.7 10.5 12.19 15.1 13.7 13.65 11.7 13.18 Acute Care Medicare % Readmit within 14 Days 6.79 4.18 9.24 7.33 6.92 8.58 7.84 6.00 7.17 7.00 6.47 7.41 8.61 3.95 6.66 6.26 7.14 8.89 7.63 7.89 5.39 7.12 Acute Care Medicare % Readmit within 7 Days 3.74 1.52 6.02 4.03 3.86 5.12 5.39 2.80 4.64 4.28 3.09 4.94 5.74 3.51 4.73 3.6 3.78 5.33 4.02 4.38 2.85 4.31 MS-DRG Acute Care Case Mix Index 1.41 1.40 1.42 1.44 1.40 MS-DRG Acute CMI Medicare 1.46 1.45 1.44 1.50 1.47 *Benchmarks: Acute Care Discharge Volume 5096 1468 1300 1125 1203 LMH Data for 2012 Reduced 3% (CMI and Discharge Volume are Not Reduced) Exclusion criteria Indicator Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 SERVICES (#2), LOCATIONS (#5), or ENCOUNTER TYPE (#505) Dictionary entry equivalent to rehabilitation, Acute Care Arithmetic Mean LOS 5.21 5.42 5.32 5.01 5.03 behavioral health, skilled nursing, or hospice Acute Care Geometric Mean LOS 3.92 4.02 4.03 3.74 3.9 Inpatient delivery encounters with ICD-9 V codes V27.0 V27.9 Inpatient newborn encounters with ICD-9 V codes V30.00 V39.01 Acute Care % Readmit w ithin 30 Days 11.57 13 10.9 9.73 12.29 Length of stay longer than 365 days or not specified Acute Care % Readmit w ithin 14 Days 6.29 7 5.77 5.79 6.44 Acute Care % Readmit w ithin 7 Days 3.59 4.21 3.05 3.31 3.69 Readmissions are 'all cause' and exclude elective readmits - expired patients are excluded from the index population Acute Care Medicare % Readmit - 30 Days 13.03 15.7 12.8 10.8 12.06 Acute Care Medicare % Readmit - 14 Days 7.00 8.85 6.67 6.45 5.56 Acute Care Medicare % Readmit - 7 Days 3.86 5.28 3.19 3.71 2.94 May May Jun Jun Q2 Q2 Q2 BM Q2 BM Indicator Jul Jul Aug Aug Sept Sept Q3 Q3 Q3 BM Q3 BM Oct Oct Nov Nov 2012 Dec Dec Q1 2012 Q4 Q4 Q2 2012 Q4 BM Q4 BM Q3 2012 To Date To Date Q4 2012

No Easy Task Determining readmission cause: no easy task! medical conditions more complicated social situations more difficult fewer resources in the community Effective transitions are impossible without patient engagement! What more can we do? What can we control?

Patient Family Engagement Various uncontrollable factors Readmissions from Skilled Nursing Facilities Community physicians lacking coverage when they re gone Covering physicians lack of knowledge of the patient Medical management of increasingly difficult conditions Adherence to the POLST or comfort care wishes Families pushing for readmission Patient Engagement strategies: House call program: Physician assistant /physician program Patient/family contact and frequency of oversight Patients and families listen to the PA or physician More complicated medical conditions are addressed Increased and more in-depth conversations re: patient wishes

Patient Family Engagement Social workers try to make sure a POLST is completed for all patients d/c to a SNF To ensure that they communicate the same information to the patient/family that we did To ensure that patient/family wishes can be respected and followed Communication with SNF staff To prepare them for communication to patients/families Continuity of care and communication Educating patients/families re: the pertinent issues How to navigate the system Choices What to expect from the SNF compared to the acute hospital

Patient Family Engagement Readmissions from Home Health Agencies Uncontrollable factors Community physicians lacking coverage when they re gone Covering physicians lack of knowledge of the patient Medical management of increasingly difficult conditions Home Health agency staffing unable to open a case Patient/family refusal Unexpected staffing issues Referral process complications Patient/family refusing a recommended higher level of care Skilled nursing facilities Hospice Caregiver issues

Patient Family Engagement Patient Engagement Strategies House Call Program Communication : the importance of Home Health involvement Home Health RN family meeting prior to discharge on complicated cases Social work involvement prior to discharge Family conference: understand the recommended level of care Psycho-social factors affecting patient/family decisions Handoff Home Health social worker/nursing staff Develop Plan B for discharge plans Home Health/hospital staff cooperation to implement plan B when the home plan fails Continue the Home Health/Hospital Community Partnership Group To adequately address patient/family transition needs To work toward consistent communication with the patient/family

Patient Family Engagement Readmissions from Home Uncontrollable factors Medical management Patient/family choices Lack of follow-up with physician appointments Not following medication, dietary, or lifestyle recommendations Psycho-social issues» Inadequate help at home» Substance abuse» Homeless patients

Patient Family Engagement Patient Engagement Strategies Coordination with the community physician/staff Pharmacy involvement: Medical practices Coordination of care with payor case managers Strong social work involvement in the hospital Family communication education family conferences Transition Social Work Extensive involvement: Referrals, coordination, and follow-up Extensive communication with patient/family Help with navigating the medical system

Patient Family Engagement Bundled Payment Process Patient Engagement: Coordination across settings Prior to surgery Physician s office Patient Discharge Advocate Patient/family joint education class (Physical Therapy) RN Pre-op appointment Very structured case management: Patient engagement involves a stronger relationship with patients Patient Discharge Advocate calls 24 hours after discharge Case management monitors pathways Skilled Nursing Facilities Home Health Agencies Outpatient Therapy

The Future Palliative Care Issues Comfort care issues: Emergency Department or ICU? Bio-ethics Committee: Physician education/support SNF/Home Health Community Partnership Group Poly-pharmacy Many very elderly people on 20+ medications Level of care refusals Standardizing an approach 5/2/2014

The Future Bundled Payment Growth More diagnoses/conditions Post discharge structured case management Extend patient/family engagement Medical Practice case management Patient Portal: Another way to engage patients Access to medical information Potential to e-mail medical practice physicians Potential to make medical practice appointments Strengthen teach back with nursing staff: The second wave

The Future Patient Perception of Care Survey (HCAHPS) Nursing communication: top 25 th percentile Courtesy Respect Listening Explaining Hospital overall rating: top 25 th percentile Continue commitment to community coordination Continue efforts to reduce readmissions 5/2/2014

Patient Family Engagement Thank you! 5/2/2014