Improving the Patient s Perception of Care in the Ambulatory Clinic Setting. Maggie Thompson, BA Service Excellence Manager, MUSC (Charleston, SC)

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CME Disclosure Accreditation Statement Studer Group is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide continuing medical education for physicians. i Designation of Credit Studer Group designates this educational event for a maximum of 12 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits. Physicians should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the educational event. Disclosure Policy Maggie Thompson and David Neff have disclosed that they do not have any relevant financial relationships with any commercial interests related to the content of this educational event. Improving the Patient s Perception of Care in the Ambulatory Clinic Setting Maggie Thompson, BA Service Excellence Manager, MUSC (Charleston, SC) David C. Neff, MHA, FACHE Administrator, MUSC Ambulatory Care, (Charleston, SC) 1 2009 Studer Group

A History of Excellence Founded in 1824, the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) was the first medical college in the South. Today our MUSC campus includes 6 colleges, a 700-bed medical center with a level I trauma center, a nationally recognized Children s Hospital, research facilities, an outpatient tower and more and we continue to grow! Almost half a million patients receive care in MUSC outpatient clinics i each year. We partnered with the Studer group to begin our formal MUSC Excellence journey in 2006. Our Results We have used Press Ganey to measure patient satisfaction for almost 5 years. Over 90 Ambulatory clinics are surveyed. January 2005 overall outpatient clinic rank = 45 th percentile. We ve come a long way since then. 2 2009 Studer Group

In Calendar Quarter One 2009 Cared for 104,000 patients Achieved ed 2.38% insurance denial rate Reached YTD collections of $22 million Received 4,639 patient surveys Achieved overall rank of 84 th percentile Patient Satisfaction Trend 3 2009 Studer Group

Presentation Objectives 1. How to use empowered employees to create a culture of excellence. 2. How to create a patient satisfaction measurement program to drive results. 3. How to use proven tactics to hardwire and sustain high patient satisfaction. Create a Culture of Excellence Standards of Behavior describe the culture AIDET sm is our language A=acknowledge, I=introduce, D=duration, E=explanation, T=thank you Train-the-trainer program for initial rollout Audits and annual competency checks Select talent that fits the culture Full day MUSC Excellence Orientation ti 4 2009 Studer Group

Welcome New Employees I am MUSC Excellence I am Ambulatory Care. I am what people see when they arrive here. My eyes are the eyes they look into when they re frightened and lonely. My smile is the greeting that eases their anxiety. My voice is the voice of hope they ve been wishing for. I am the intelligence, kindness and caring that people hope they ll find here. When I m wonderful so is Ambulatory Care. Our patients will judge us by my performance by the care I give, the attention I pay, the kindness I give, and the courtesies I extend. I am Ambulatory Care. I am MUSC Excellence! 5 2009 Studer Group

Satisfied employees=satisfied patients In 2006 we began measuring employee satisfaction using Press Ganey First survey: Mean Score=67.0 and Rank=56 th One year later: Mean Score=75.5 and Rank=93 rd Sustain Employee Satisfaction Orientee feedback sessions 30/60/90 day manger/employee meetings Rounding for outcomes High/middle/low conversations Preceptor assigned to all new employees Supervisory meeting model High Performer lunches with Administrator 6 2009 Studer Group

Reward Excellence Employee/Physician of the month/year Healthcare e Worker of the Year Applause, caught you caring stickers/cards You Rock award Thank you notes & managing up Database to track with employee addresses Patient Satisfaction banners Service Excellence celebration Presentation Objectives 1. How to use empowered employees to create a culture of excellence. 2. How to create a patient satisfaction measurement program to drive results. 3. How to use proven tactics to hardwire and sustain high patient satisfaction. 7 2009 Studer Group

Measurement Matters Measurement alone did not increase scores. Goal-setting, leader accountability, ty, did. dd In 2006 we established goals under five pillars of excellence: service, people, quality, finance and growth. Leadership Evaluation Team rolled out a new leader evaluation system. Prior to 2006 80.0% 70.0% 60.0% 50.0% 40.0% 0% 30.0% 20.0% 10.0% 0.0% Leader Evaluation Results 10.3% 15.9% 73.8% 1 Meets 2 Exceeds 3 Substantially Exceeds 8 2009 Studer Group

Leader Goal Alignment Step One: Administrators, Directors, Managers Coordinators, Supervisors Step Two: Administrators, Directors, Managers ag Coordinators, Supervisors Leader pillar goals = 100% of annual evaluation score. Leader pillar goals = 75% of annual evaluation score. 50% of merit increase = Org. Goal Results 25% of merit increase = Org. Goal Results Results After Goal Alignment MUSC Organizational Goals Service People Quality Finance Growth Increase Patient Satisfaction (Inpatient) Reduce Annualized Turnover Decrease Mortality Index Operating Margin Increase Inpatient Admissions Increase Patient Satisfaction (Ambulatory) Increase Employee Satisfaction Reduce FTE per Adjusted Discharge Increase Outpatient Visits 9 2009 Studer Group

Goal Examples Outpatient clinic goals are not all clinical Business operations o goals: Registration, scheduling survey questions Reduce insurance denial rate Reduce no-show rate Increase point of service collections Road is Rocky It is a journey often times a rocky road. Physician comments about patient satisfaction data: Make this go away. This has the relevance of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Staff/leader comments: Only dissatisfied patients return surveys. I can t control the physicians so I shouldn t be held accountable for this goal. Acknowledge the myths dispel them with data. Hold strong on accountability force collaboration. 10 2009 Studer Group

Dispel Myths with Data Data Transparency Measurement Team structured patient satisfaction program: Patient satisfaction trainings Comments distributed weekly Trended priority index/top box reviewed Super users Physician and staff leader custom reports Physician and staff leader custom reports Organizational scorecards 11 2009 Studer Group

Red/green/yellow scorecard Highlight/Spotlight Reports 12 2009 Studer Group

Leader Reports / Hot Comments Super Users Super users identified and trained Expectations provide regular, a, meaningful data to your leaders Data filtered by physician name Data grouped by service line Super User Groups meet monthly 13 2009 Studer Group

Communicating the Data Leader and staff excellence websites Communications boards Purpose newsletter Quarterly town halls Leadership Development Institutes Standing agenda item for service results Connect to Purpose stories Don t forget wins! Presentation Objectives 1. How to use empowered employees to create a culture of excellence. 2. How to create a patient satisfaction measurement program to drive results. 3. How to use proven tactics to hardwire and sustain high patient satisfaction. 14 2009 Studer Group

Service Teams Outpatient Clinic Satisfaction Team Multi-disciplinary, front-line staff Implemented wait room standards: Activities for children and play areas Standard TV s, water coolers, trash cans Changing tables in multi-use bathrooms Patient radiology education tools Patient welcome tool Reminder calls enhanced Secret-shopper AIDET audits Signage/wayfinding improvements 15 2009 Studer Group

Patient Welcome Tool Clinic Ambassadors First-year MHA students Assigned to high-volume volume, multi-clinic floors Armed with resources binder Empowered to walk in the back to investigate cause of delays for patients Win for physicians and staff 16 2009 Studer Group

Operations Meetings Include access data Bumps, cancellations Physician schedules/templates review Align these data with patient satisfaction scores to paint a complete picture. Example: Team Huddles 5 minutes before clinic starts Identify challenges for day and plan Share wins Refuel commitment to excellence and each other 17 2009 Studer Group

Patient Voices 2006: Please be more considerate of patient s wait time. What other business makes its customers wait 2-3 hours? The doctor is the best A+, but at what price. Let him hang out in his waiting room. 2007: MUSC has obviously worked very hard on its connections with patients and families. It is noticeable and very much appreciated. 2008: Each member of the staff, through each process, from registration through clinic, made me feel valued and important. 2009: From my RN helping me via email and returning calls, to the scheduler helping change appointments, everyone put customer care and my health first. Lessons Learned Standards of behavior have had a dramatic impact. Tough to move some people from data obsession to action. Designated resource necessary for Measurement. Connect to purpose regularly to fuel flywheel. Everyone loves recognition, even physicians. You cannot over-communicate! 18 2009 Studer Group

In Summary 5 Key Tactics Create measurement scorecards that are highlighted by goal achievement. Align leader evaluations tightly with patient satisfaction goals. Create a multi-disciplinary clinic patient satisfaction team. Engage high-performers in selecting talent, service team, lunch with senior leaders. Communicate strengths & opportunities consistently and regularly. Thank You! Maggie Thompson, BA Service Excellence Manager, MUSC (Charleston, SC) David C. Neff, MHA, FACHE Administrator, MUSC Ambulatory Care, (Charleston, SC) 19 2009 Studer Group