Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project

Similar documents
MBQIP Phase 3: Pharmacist Verification of Medication Orders Within 24 Hours

Hospital Compare Quality Measures: 2008 National and Florida Results for Critical Access Hospitals

MBQIP Quality Measure Trends, Data Summary Report #20 November 2016

WA Flex Program Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Program

Olutoyin Abitoye, MD Attending, Department of Internal Medicine Virtua Medical Group New Jersey,USA

Critical Access Hospital Quality

Rural-Relevant Quality Measures for Critical Access Hospitals

MEDICARE BENEFICIARY QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (MBQIP)

Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project. March 11, Chillicothe, Mo.

NEW JERSEY HOSPITAL PERFORMANCE REPORT 2012 DATA PUBLISHED 2015 TECHNICAL REPORT: METHODOLOGY RECOMMENDED CARE (PROCESS OF CARE) MEASURES

The Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP) Monthly Performance Improvement Call

NEW JERSEY HOSPITAL PERFORMANCE REPORT 2014 DATA PUBLISHED 2016 TECHNICAL REPORT: METHODOLOGY RECOMMENDED CARE (PROCESS OF CARE) MEASURES

An Overview of the. Measures. Reporting Initiative. bwinkle 11/12

State of the State: Hospital Performance in Pennsylvania October 2015

HIT Incentives: Issues of Concern to Hospitals in the CMS Proposed Meaningful Use Stage 2 Rule

Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP) Overview. January 3 rd 2017 Presented By: Shanelle Van Dyke

Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP) Quality Guide

Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP)

Quality Care Amongst Clinical Commotion: Daily Challenges in the Care Environment

Improving Clinical Outcomes

Iowa Critical Access Hospital. Financial Indicators. Performance Improvement Kickoff Webinar

Case Study High-Performing Health Care Organization December 2008

Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting Back to the Basics: Critical Access Hospitals

Implementation of Telepharmacy in Rural Hospitals: Potential for Improving Medication Safety

Goals and Objectives for Fiscal Year 2012

Framing Rural Health Value Webinar Series

Leadership Engagement in Antimicrobial Stewardship

CMS in the 21 st Century

CHAPTER 9 PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT HOSPITAL

MBQIP Measures Fact Sheets December 2017

Working to Improve the Patient Experience

Hospital Compare Quality Measure Results for Oregon CAHs: 2015

Refining and Field Testing a Relevant Set of Quality Measures for Rural Hospitals Final Report June 30, 2005

IMPROVING HCAHPS, PATIENT MORTALITY AND READMISSION: MAXIMIZING REIMBURSEMENTS IN THE AGE OF HEALTHCARE REFORM

Proposed Meaningful Use Incentives, Criteria and Quality Measures Affecting Critical Access Hospitals

Minnesota Statewide Quality Reporting and Measurement System: Appendices to Minnesota Administrative Rules, Chapter 4654

Medicare Value Based Purchasing Overview

Improving Quality of Care for Medicare Patients: Accountable Care Organizations

Objectives. Integrating Performance Improvement with Publicly Reported Quality Metrics, Value-Based Purchasing Incentives and ISO 9001/9004

Minnesota Statewide Quality Reporting and Measurement System: Appendices to Minnesota Administrative Rules, Chapter 4654

Case Study High-Performing Health Care Organization April 2010

Minnesota Statewide Quality Reporting and Measurement System: Appendices to Minnesota Administrative Rules, Chapter 4654

Medicare & Medicaid. William Kassler, MD Chief Medical Officer Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Boston, MA

Disclosures. Learning Objectives 4/26/2017. Impact of a Pilot Ambulatory Care Pharmacist in a Family Practice Clinic

Working Paper Series

2017 LEAPFROG TOP HOSPITALS

Small Rural Hospital Transitions (SRHT) Project. Rural Relevant Measures: Next Steps for the Future

I CSHP 2015 CAROLYN BORNSTEIN

Value Based Purchasing

Quality Health Indicators: Measure List. Clinical Quality: Monthly

Rural Policy Research Institute Health Panel. CMS Value-Based Purchasing Program and Critical Access Hospitals. January 2009

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010

Quality Health Indicators: Measure List. Clinical Quality: Monthly

Dianne Feeney, Associate Director of Quality Initiatives. Measurement

Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program Measures (Calendar Year 2012 Discharges - Revised)

Quality Measures for CAH Swing Bed Patients

National Provider Call: Hospital Value-Based Purchasing

Medicare Value-Based Purchasing for Hospitals: A New Era in Payment

Emergency Department Update 2010 Outpatient Payment System

Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Program (MBQIP) Stephen Njenga, Director of Performance Measurement Compliance March 2018

Enhanced Clinical Workflow Adherence Through Real-Time Alerts and Escalations for P4P

CENTERS FOR MEDICARE AND MEDICAID SERVICES (CMS) / PREMIER HOSPITAL QUALITY INCENTIVE DEMONSTRATION PROJECT

Impact of an Innovative ADC System on Medication Administration

UPDATE ON MEANINGFUL USE. HITECH Stimulus Act of 2009: CSC Point of View

Financial Models for Clinical Pharmacy Integration

The 5 W s of the CMS Core Quality Process and Outcome Measures

KANSAS SURGERY & RECOVERY CENTER

Value-based incentive payment percentage 3

Pharmacist Staffing and the Use of Technology in Small Rural Hospitals: Implications for Medication Safety

2011 Measures 2013 Objectives Goal is to guide and support care processes and care coordination

Medicare Value Based Purchasing Overview

National Patient Safety Goals & Quality Measures CY 2017

Michigan Critical Access Hospital Quality Network Orientation Manual

Medication History for Hospital Settings: Better Data, Better Decisions. Tuesday, March 25, 2014 Pharmacy Town Hall Series

Case Study High-Performing Health Care Organization June 2010

PASSPORT ecare NEXT AND THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

Pharmaceutical Services Report to Joint Conference Committee September 2010

CMS Quality Initiatives: Past, Present, and Future

Medicare Value Based Purchasing August 14, 2012

COMPUTERIZED PHYSICIAN ORDER ENTRY (CPOE)

Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program Requirements: CY 2015 OPPS/ASC Final Rule

ACO Information Required to be Published on ACO Website per CMS Regulations

Slide 1. Slide 2 Rural Princeton. Slide 3 Agenda Rural ACO RURAL ACOS CAN WORK AND LEAD THE WAY

Meaningful Use: a Primer

The Potential Impact of Pay-for-Performance on the Financial Health of Critical Access Hospitals

Quality Measures in Healthcare Facilities for Patient Family Advisory Council members

Final Rule Summary. Medicare Skilled Nursing Facility Prospective Payment System Fiscal Year 2017

Hospital Strength INDEX Methodology

SAN FRANCISCO GENERAL HOSPITAL and TRAUMA CENTER

Benchmark Data Sources

Quality and Health Care Reform: How Do We Proceed?

Value based Purchasing Legislation, Methodology, and Challenges

Summary. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Medicare and Medicaid Programs

POLICY BRIEF. Identifying Adverse Drug Events in Rural Hospitals: An Eight-State Study. May rhrc.umn.edu. Background.

Model VBP FY2014 Worksheet Instructions and Reference Guide

ACHIEVING SUCCESS IN QIO AND RURAL HOSPITAL PARTNERSHIPS

Medicare & Medicaid EHR Incentive Program Final Rule. Implementing the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009

Quality Measurement and Reporting Kickoff

United Medical ACO Participation Criteria

Preventable Deaths per 100,000 population

Transcription:

Rural Hospital Performance Improvement Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project Paul Moore, DPh Senior Health Policy Advisor Department of Health and Human Services Health Resources and Services Administration Office of Rural Health Policy

Flex Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project Pilot Project under Quality Improvement Common Metrics Demonstrating Improvements Sharing Best Practices Started: Sept 2011

3 Why does measuring clinical performance matter? We tend to measure what we value We tend to improve what we measure.

Observations 4 High performer characteristics: Quality: Not just a department the highest organizational priority Data: Real time collection, fix problems as they occur, not just for inspection Culture: The norm is 100% success, failures trigger investigation

Observations 5 Low performer characteristics: Quality: Here we go again Data: Batched collection, periodic review Culture: Failures are expected and accepted.

MBQIP (AN OVERVIEW) http://www.hrsa.gov/ruralhealth/about/video/i ndex.html Or www.youtube.com [MBQIP]

Phase 1 (Sept. 2011) Reporting data Finding and using value (best practices / best methods)

8 So what shall we measure? 42% of all 2009 IP CAH claims that were submitted to Medicare were for pneumonia. * * Source: Ted Fraser, MS, Dir. Of Evaluation and Planning CIMRO of Nebraska

Pneumonia and Heart Failure Process of Care Measures Percent Pneumonia Patients: Whose Initial Blood Culture Was Performed Prior to the Administration of the First Hospital Dose of Antibiotics Given the Most Appropriate Initial Antibiotic(s) Percent Heart Failure Patients: Given Discharge Instructions Given an Evaluation of Left Ventricular Systolic Function Given ACE Inhibitor or ARB for Left Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction (LVSD)

10 Why does measuring clinical performance matter? Patient care Data show that priorities result in improvement!

11 Patient care (it makes a difference!) Pneumococcal Vaccination 40% reduction in pneumococcal pneumonia Blood Culture Prior to First Antibiotic 40% of cases of severe pneumonia antibiotic selection are adjusted based on blood culture results

12 Patient care (it makes a difference!) Smoking Cessation Advice 50% reduction in individual s risk of developing pneumonia Influenza Vaccination 50% reduction in pneumonia, hospitalization or death

13 Why else could measuring clinical performance matter? Possible future link to payment? Shared Savings Programs?

PPS Payment Changes 14 CMS is shifting from payment for Volume to payment for Value Value Based Purchasing Readmission Penalties

15 Value Based Purchasing for CAHs? Who knows? But what we do know. CHANGE Survival of the most adaptable Darwin

16 Value Based Purchasing How it works 70% clinical process measures 30% HCAHPS 10 point scales Scored twice Attainment & Improvement Keep higher score Revenue neutral (winners & losers)

Value Based Purchasing 17 10 points available if scores are above the mean of the top 10% (benchmark) 0 points available if scores are below the median (threshold)

Value Based Purchasing 18 The no brainer for CAHs. HCAHPS Accounts for 30%

Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) 34% of CAHs reported HCAHPS patient assessment of care survey data in 2008. On average, CAHs have significantly higher ratings on HCAHPS measures than all US hospitals. Policy Brief #15 March 2010 Critical Access Hospital Year 5 Hospital Compare Participation and Quality Measure Results Michelle Casey, MS, Michele Burlew, MS, Ira Moscovice, PhD University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center

Phase 2 (Sept. 2012) HCAHPS (Benchmarking IP Measures)

HCAHPS Survey Topics Communication with doctors and nurses Responsiveness of hospital staff Cleanliness and quietness of hospital environment Pain management Communication about medications Discharge information Overall rating of the hospital Rating of willingness to recommend hospital

Phase 2 So what are the issues? Any good HCAHPS solutions?

Phase 2 (Sept. 2012) Added Out-Patient Measures

Out-Patient Measures OP-1 Median Time to Fibrinolysis OP-2 Fibrinolytic Therapy Received Within 30 Minutes of ED Arrival OP-3 Median Time to Transfer to Another Facility for Acute Coronary Intervention OP-4 Aspirin at Arrival OP-5 Median Time to ECG OP-6 Timing of Antibiotic Prophylaxis (Prophylactic Antibiotic Initiated Within One Hour Prior to Surgical Incision) OP-7 Prophylactic Antibiotic Selection for Surgical Patients

Phase 3 (Sept. 2013) ED Patient Transfer Communication Measure NQF Endorsed Measure CMS Special QIO Pilot Project (10 States) Data Collection and Reporting Manual Simple Excel Spreadsheet Format Possibly a portal directly to Q-Net???

Phase 3 ED Patient Transfer Communication Measure So how are we rolling this out? CMS QIO Special Pilot Project QIO and Hospital Training Data Gathering and Reporting

ED Patient Transfer Communication* Pre-Transfer Communication Information (0-2) Patient Identification (0-6) Vital Signs (0-6) Medication-Related Information (0-3) Physician or Practitioner Generated Information (0-2) Nurse Generated Information (0-6) Procedures and Tests (0-2) * NFQ Endorsed

Phase 3 (Sept. 2013) Pharmacist Order Entry or Verification of Medication Orders within 24 hours WHY?

a hospital patient can expect on average to be subjected to more than one medication error each day. July 20, 2006

2010 Department of Health and Human Services OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL One of every seven Medicare beneficiaries who is hospitalized is harmed Added at least $4.4 billion a year to costs Contributed to the deaths of about 180,000 patients a year 44 percent preventable.

2010 Department of Health and Human Services OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL The most frequent problems. were those related to medication the study highlighted the importance of improving procedures to prevent medication errors

Partnership for Patients

The Rural Challenge Recent studies on rural hospitals have begun to identify the clinical, financial, and demographic constraints that may predispose rural facilities to higher incidences of medication errors. Rural Inpatient Telepharmacy Consultation Demonstration for After-Hours Medication Review Stacey L. Cole, M.B.A., John H. Grubbs, M.S., M.B.A., R.Ph., Cathy Din, Pharm.D., and Thomas S. Nesbitt, M.D.., M.P.H

One solution. Processing a prescription drug order through a CPOE system decreases the likelihood of error on that order by 48%. Current policies to increase CPOE adoption and use will likely prevent millions of additional medication errors each year. JAMA - Feb. 20, 2013

Advantages of CPOE averting problems with handwriting, similar drug names, drug interactions, and specification errors; decision support systems, and adverse drug event reporting systems; faster transmission to the pharmacy; integration with electronic medical records.

Beyond the technology The increasing rate of introduction of so many new pharmaceutical products has increased the difficulty of pharmaceutical management of patients and has amplified the importance of expert pharmaceutical consultations, with resulting increased reliance upon pharmacists. Rural Inpatient Telepharmacy Consultation Demonstration for After-Hours Medication Review Stacey L. Cole, M.B.A., John H. Grubbs, M.S., M.B.A., R.Ph., Cathy Din, Pharm.D., and Thomas S. Nesbitt, M.D.., M.P.H

Alert Fatigue Prescribers override more than half of CPOE-generated alerts of critical drug-drug interactions without providing a clinical justification. Source: Grizzle AJ, Mahmood MH, Ko Y, et al. Reasons provided by prescribers when overriding drug-drug interaction alerts. Am J Manag Care. 2007;13:573-578.

The Standard of Care Medication order review is one aspect of pharmacist patient care. All hospitals have an obligation to provide a review of medication orders that ensures safe medication use. - The Joint Commission. Elements of performance for medication management standard 4.10-2007 Comprehensive accreditation manual for hospitals.

The Rural Challenge Approximately one in five of the nation s smallest hospitals have (1) a pharmacist review of orders within 24 hours - Prevalence of Evidenced-Based Safe Medication Practices in Small Rural Hospitals RUPRI Brief No. 2008-1 April 2008

One solution When onsite pharmacist review is not available, hospitals may determine that remote pharmacist review of medication orders is a suitable alternative. - ASHP Guidelines on Remote Medication Order Processing

One solution Leveraging Health Information Technology (CPOE) to access remote pharmacists and improve safe and effective medication administration.

Phase 3 It s not just about a double-check Pharmacist Order Entry or Verification of Medication Orders within 24 hours it s about patient safety and medication management by the medication experts!

Phase 3 (Sept. 2013) Pharmacist Order Entry or Verification of Medication Orders within 24 hours So how do we get ready? Computerized medication order entry Coordination w software vendors for reports Cost efficient access to pharmacists Utilization of technology

Phase 3 (Sept. 2013) Pharmacist Order Entry or Verification of Medication Orders within 24 hours Measurement and Reporting Inclusion and Exclusion criteria Computerized generated report data (n/d) Submission to Q-Net warehouse.

MBQIP Across Multiple States Involving significant number of CAHs Aggregating the data national benchmarking. Rural Appropriate Measures & Processes - Heart Failure, Pneumonia, (30 Day Re-admissions) - OP Measures, HCAHPS - Ed OP Transfer Measure, Med Orders Reviewed within 24 hours http://www.hrsa.gov/ruralhealth/about/video/index.html

MBQIP is about. Leveraging Resources and Relationships. Measuring and Reporting data Finding and using value (best practices / best methods)

MBQIP is about making a difference!

Contact Information Paul Moore, DPh Office of Rural Health Policy 5600 Fishers Lane, Rm 5A-05 Rockville, MD 20857 Tel: 301-443-1271 Fax: 301-443-2803 pmoore2@hrsa.gov http://ruralhealth.hrsa.gov