Doctors, Data and Decisions

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Transcription:

Doctors, Data and Decisions COACH Clinician Forum May 31,2015 Sarah Hutchison Chief Executive Officer, OntarioMD

EMR Implementation Accomplished in Ontario for Primary Care Significant uptake in Specialist market Moving from basic to enhanced use EMR as tool for improved care and opportunity to contribute to system improvements

OntarioMD s EMR Maturity Model

Supporting Physician Participation QIPs ECF AA Health Links QBP Innovations in Care / Showing Value

OMA Leadership in ehealth Bringing Data analytics to the Community Physician

Better Information. Improved Care.

Better Information. Improved Care. Vision: The vision for the i4c program lies in facilitating optimal use of EMR data by physicians and the broader health care system for improving direct patient care. This vision will be enabled through a suite of technology-based services designed in the best interest of patients, physicians and other health care providers and will inspire meaningful use of EMRs.

8 i4c Six Objectives 1. Leverage the OMA s unique role to represent and serve physicians and advocate for the health of all Ontarians 2. Provide physicians with important clinical and individual patient insights from their EMR data 3. Design a one-stop technical solution 4. Facilitate sharing of de-identified data into a larger aggregated data set 5. Deliver direct value to physicians 6. Articulate specific roles for OntarioMD and the OMA

Why OMA? 9 Clear policy, governance and guidelines are critical to any future use of health care data. The OMA is bringing the physician voice to the table.

OMA SGFP OMA Medical Assembly 10 60 St. Clair Avenue East, Suite 800, Toronto ON M4T 1N5 December 18, 2014 Stakeholders who have provided Letters of Support and Endorsement Dr. Darren Larsen Chief Medical Information Officer Quality, Innovation and Leadership Ontario Medical Association / OntarioMD Dear Darren: We are so pleased to hear of the progress of the Insights4Care (i4c) project. As we have discussed before, AFHTO sees i4c as a critically important enabler for manageable meaningful measurement in primary care. AFHTO released Data to Decisions 1.0 (D2D 1.0) early this fall to get started in membership-wide measurement of performance. This early work has highlighted the gap in being able to access data from EMRs for use in quality measurement and improvement. We appreciate OMA and OMD s leadership in taking steps to close this critical gap through the services of i4c. As AFHTO continues its work to develop consensus on indicators that are meaningful measures of the value of primary care, we are grateful that we can confidently assure reluctant participants that the very real barriers related to EMR data access are being addressed in a holistic sustainable way through the i4c project. So even before the project is implemented, it is helping advance manageable meaningful measurement by creating hope for the dissolution of what are currently substantial barriers to interest and participation. Evidence is abundant that physician leadership is critical to the success of measurement and improvement in primary care. Engagement of physicians is a challenge the i4c project is taking seriously and it is a challenge that OMA is uniquely positioned to address, given its relationship physicians. AFHTO espouses a team-based model of primary care and also acknowledges the key role physicians play in these teams. The efforts of the i4c team in building momentum for measurement among physicians are and will continue to be valuable complements and extenders to the work of AFHTO and other advocates for measurement and improvement of primary care. We are confident that i4c will be relevant and useful for AFHTO s members. This is for two reasons: the quality of the design and principles to date and OMD s collaborative approach as the project unfolds. We continue to be grateful for OMD s participation in AFHTO s quality improvement journey through the participation of Darren Larsen, Dennis Ferenc and Elizabeth Keller in the steering committee and associated sub-committees for the Quality Improvement and Decision Support program. The concrete assistance provided by Plumaletta Berry of OMD to produce AFHTO s inaugural Data to Decisions 1.0 report was an example of the value of our continuing partnership with OMD.

11 Timing is everything

Physician Leadership roles Governance space and policy creation Sustainability and health system spend conversations Patient advocacy and privacy Putting evidence to practice All of the above incorporate use of EMR data by clinicians and the rules of engagement to ensure it is done well.

Physicians views on data use 13 http://youtu.be/yotvh01hmzc

Clinical decision support tools Computerized Provider Order Entry (CPOE) Smart forms in the EMR Rules based decision trees (i.e.: drug interactions checkers) EMR reminders and alerts

Current CDS pros/cons TOOL BENEFITS LIMITATIONS CPOE Guide informed testing and Rx Many exist (COTS) Commercial so network for changes and dissemination Proven to change behavior if consistently used Well studied SMART FORMS Work well with defined actions (as CPOE) Popups to embed evidence Can be created locally Malleable Can be written by regular users Poorly integrated Do not use patient data Drive action not knowledge No predictive capacity Easily over ridden Usually not commercial Specific to each EMR Hard to disseminate No responsibility for upkeep

Current CDS pros/cons TOOL BENEFITS LIMITATIONS RULES BASED ALERTS / REMINDERS use data in real time Data not re-entered Can guide more complex decision making Can be mixed and overlapped Predictive capability Built into many EMRs Flexible Part of current workflow Used for individuals and populations Immature Medico legal considerations if used or avoided Clinician trust Little reliability /validity testing For individuals, must be in record at the time For populations not run routinely No predictive capability

A new paradigm Data use outside of the EMR structure Use of both structured and unstructured data Natural Language Processing understands Predictive analytics Ability to centralize Ability to personalize Adaptive learning systems now possible

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i4c Prequalified Vendors IBM Intersystems Deloitte/SAP/PHEMI Alere Analytics/Dapasoft/Microsoft Thoughtwire HQIC Informatica Advanced Software Concepts McKesson TimeAccount Privacy Analytics Inc

Thank you! Questions? sarah.hutchison@oma.org @sthutchison darren.larsen@oma.org @larsendarren