Improving the Continuity of Maternity Care. Mike Polizzotto, MD Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton

Similar documents
Kentucky Sepsis Summit. August 2016

Enlisted Professional Military Education FY 18 Academic Calendar. Table of Contents COLLEGE OF DISTANCE EDUCATION AND TRAINING (CDET):

Improve the Efficiency and Service of the Emergency Room at North Side Hospital

Electronic Surgical Scheduling Improves Patient Safety and Productivity

Leveraging the Accountable Care Unit Model to create a culture of Shared Accountability

BEDSIDE REGISTRATION CAPE CANAVERAL HOSPITAL

Change Management at Orbost Regional Health

Process Redesign to Improve Chemotherapy Appointment Booking at the BC Cancer Agency

Departments to Improve. February Chad Faiella RN, Terri Martin RN. 1 Process Excellence

Clinical Safety & Effectiveness Cohort # 11

Decreasing the Unplanned Readmission Rate of Patients receiving Outpatient Antibiotic Therapy(OPAT)

Using Lean Principles to Decrease Outpatient Registration Wait Times. It s a Journey not a Destination

Leveraging your own health plan to build a Specialty Pharmacy

Clinical Safety & Effectiveness Cohort # 18

Chlorhexidine Gluconate Bath and Reduction of Hospital Associated Infections

Renfrew Victoria Hospital

Moving an Enabled Patient to an Engaged Patient Our Patient Portal Experience

Decreasing Triage to Antibiotic Time for Suspected Sepsis Patients

Lean Six Sigma DMAIC Project (Example)

Quality Measure Indicators +Throughput Metrics + Automated Dashboard = Innovation to Improve Quality Goals

Quality Management Report 2017 Q2

Standardising Acute and Specialised Care Theme 3 Governance and Approach to Hospital Based Services Strategy Overview 28 th July 2017

From Implementation to Optimization: Moving Beyond Operations

Colorado Medical-Dental Integration Project (CO MDI)

Clinical Safety & Effectiveness Cohort # 18 Follow up and tracking of EMR virology and microbiology test results in a Pediatric university-based

Readmission Project 2017 Janice M. Maupin, RN, MSN, CPHQ. A Catholic healthcare ministry serving Ohio and Kentucky

Presentation Outline

Electronic Physician Documentation: Increased Satisfaction

Utilizing FPPE and OPPE Effectively OPPE & FPPE. Joint Commission FAQs. Utilizing FPPE and OPPE Effectively. Susan Mellott PhD, RN.

Driving High-Value Care via Clinical Pathways. Andrew Buchert, MD Gabriella Butler, MSN, RN

2017 HIMSS DAVIES APPLICANT

CHC-A Continuity Dashboard. All Sites Continuity - Asthma. 2nd Qtr-03. 2nd Qtr-04. 2nd Qtr-06. 4th Qtr-03. 4th Qtr-06. 3rd Qtr-04.

PSI-15 Lafayette General Health 2017 Nicholas E. Davies Enterprise Award of Excellence

Improving Clinical Outcomes The Case for Electronic ED Door to EKG Time Monitoring

And the Evidence Shows Using Specialty Certification from The Joint Commission Improves Quality

Columbus Regional Hospital Pressure Ulcer Prevention

Team Care Best Practices in Managing Hypertension Learning Collaborative Sponsored by AMGA and Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.

Tina Nelson, MBA, BSN Lisa Stepp, BSN, RN Rebecca Fyffe, BSN, RN Jessica Coughenour, LPN

9/15/2017 THROUGHPUT. IT S NOT JUST AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT ISSUE LEARNING OBJECTIVES

The Triple Aim. Productivity: Digging Deep Enough 11/4/2013. quality and satisfaction); Improving the health of populations; and

Influence of Patient Flow on Quality Care

Workshop: Nursing Sensitive Indicators. Annelie Meiring and Suseth Goosen

South Carolina Retreat on Telemedicine Friday, November 19, 2010 North Charleston Embassy Suites

Hardwiring Technology into Care Delivery to Increase HCAHPS

Corporate Services Employment Report: January Employment by Staff Group. Jan 2018 (Jan 2017 figure: 1,462) Overall 1,

Maternity and Family Education

Patient Care: Case Study in EHR Implementation. With Help From Monkeys, Mice, and Penguins. Tom Goodwin, MHA MIT Medical Cambridge, MA March 2007

C.O.R.E. MISSION STATEMENT

Northern Health - Acute Services. Evidence Based Practice Venous Thromboembolism Prevention

IHI Open School Chapter. Alisha Fehrenbacher

St Paul s Way Medical Centre. Patient Participation Group Event September 2013

C. difficile Infection and C. difficile Lab ID Reporting in NHSN

Key Steps in Creating & Sustaining Excellence

Patient Satisfaction Survey Results

An academic medical center is practicing wasteology to pare time, expense,

diabetes care and quality improvement in our practice

PSYCHIATRY SERVICES UPDATE

SPSP Medicines. Prepared by: NHS Ayrshire and Arran

Improving Quality in Healthcare

CAMDEN CLARK MEDICAL CENTER:

HPV Vaccination Quality Improvement: Physician Perspective

PATIENT CARE SERVICES REPORT Submitted to the Joint Conference Committee, February 2013 Terry Dentoni, RN, MSN, CNL, Interim Chief Nursing Officer

Brent Treichler, M.D., FACEP Assistant Professor, UT Southwestern Department of Surgery, Division of Emergency Medicine Chief of Emergency Services,

UHF Quality Institute. Patient-Reported Outcomes in Primary Care New York PROPC-NY. Module 2 Webinar

Patient Experience: Good to Great!

1. March RN VACANCY RATE: Overall 2320 RN vacancy rate for areas reported is 13.8%

National Trends Winter 2016

Executive Director s Report: Customer Experience Update

REASSESSING THE BED COORDINATOR S ROLE SHADY GROVE ADVENTIST HOSPITAL

DEVELOPING A CULTURE OF NURSE LED PARTNERSHIP ROUNDING

Objective: To practice quality improvement tools by applying them to an improvement effort in an ambulatory care setting.

Complaints, Litigation, Incident & PALS (CLIP) Summary Report Q2 July September 2009

The Digital ICU: Return On Innovation

OhioHealth s Mission: To Improve the Health of Those We Serve

UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS HOSPITAL & HEALTH SCIENCES SYSTEM HOSPITAL DASHBOARD

Improving Pain Center Processes utilizing a Lean Team Approach

PowerChart Maternity COLUMNs and ICONs- OB Beds Tab

Case Study: Cass Regional Medical Center

Financial Disclosure. Learning Objectives. Reducing GI Surgery Re-Admissions, While Increasing Patient Satisfaction

PATIENT CARE SERVICES REPORT Submitted to the Joint Conference Committee, November 2017

Learning from Patient Deaths: Update on Implementation and Reporting of Data: 5 th January 2018

What s Right in Healthcare. Covenant Health Knoxville, Tennessee

Decreasing Reported Potentially Preventable Complications in Obstetrics at UHS

Improving health care Nigel Livesley MD, MPH

4.7 Quality Study. Study Title: Intervention to Improve Safe, Effective And Timely Oral Chemotherapy Administration and Documentation

2016/17 Activity Report April August/September 2016

STATISTICAL PRESS NOTICE MONTHLY CRITICAL CARE BEDS AND CANCELLED URGENT OPERATIONS DATA, ENGLAND March 2018

Ontario Shores Journey to EMRAM Stage 7. October 21, 2015

AGENDA. Introduction and Executive Leadership Year in Review Environment of Care Report and Policy Approvals

Incorporating Clinical Outcomes. Plan. Barbara S. Prosser, RPh V.P. Clinical Services, Critical Care Systems. Kevin L.

UI Health Hospital Dashboard September 7, 2017

HAI Prevention. Beyond the Bundle. March 18, 2016

1. November RN VACANCY RATE: Overall 2320 RN vacancy rate for areas reported is 12.5%

Aldijana Avdić, BSN, RN, PBMS, CPHQ Assistant Director, Patient Safety and Privacy 1

North Carolina Division of Medical Assistance

Influence of Patient Flow on Quality Care

Leading for Patients Short-Term Integration Opportunities for Rouge Valley Health System and The Scarborough Hospital

COMMITTEE REPORTS TO THE BOARD

Order Source Misattribution: The Impact on CPOE Metrics

The Power of Improving Call Light Responsiveness. Rebecca Hitchcock MSN, MBA, RN, NE- BC Amanda Reiboldt BSN, RN, CNML Chas Woolf BSN, RN

Transcription:

Improving the Continuity of Maternity Care Mike Polizzotto, MD Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton

Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton

Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton 82 Beds 5,676 Admissions (1500-1800 deliveries) 542,461 Outpatient Visits 3,215 Surgeries 91,180 X-rays 1,175,815 Prescriptions 698,528 Labs

Project Description The Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton Family Medicine Clinic is the site of maternity care provided to about 300 women by 35 residents and 8 staff on an annual basis. Recently, both patients and physicians indicated dissatisfaction with the continuity of care. The purpose of this project is to assess the continuity and take steps to improve it.

Team members Mike Polizzotto, MD (Family Physician) Diane Snook (Pregnancy Registration Coordinator) Bea Smith, RN (Family Medicine Clinic) Carolyn Story, RN (Family Medicine Clinic)

Target population Maternity patients assigned to receive care in the FP clinic Expectation To always see assigned provider (expectations determined by informal survey and consensus)

Patient suspects pregnancy Patient contacts clinic for pregnancy test Old Test positive? no END Process yes (part 1) Patient makes appopintment with Pregnancy Registration Patient seen in Pregnancy Registration, assigned to Family Medicine maternity provider A

A Pregancy Registration schedules first OB appointment Old Process Appointment with assigned provider available within reasonable time? no Appointment made with any available provder (part 2) yes Appointment made with assigned provider Patient sees alternate provider Patient sees assigned provider B

B Patient needs follow-up? yes no END Patient calls Central Appointments Old Process (part 3) Appointment with assigned provider available within alloted timeframe? no Appointment made with any available provder yes Appointment made with assigned provider Patient sees alternate provider Patient sees assigned provider B

Initial Findings Apr 2004 70% 66% 60% 50% 44% 42% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Ever saw assigned Saw assigned 1st visit Saw assigned >75% of visits

Fishbone diagram Continuity doesn't matter Patient Unaware how to "work system" to get desired appointments Frustrated with appointing system, gives up Central Appointments Doesn't offer appointment with assigned provider Doesn't know who is assigned No available appointment with assigned provider Patient does not see assigned maternity provider. No available appointment with assigned provider Can't vie w Family Medicine schedule Can't make a ppointme nts in Family Me dicine Clinic FP RN Pregnancy Registration

Change ideas 1. Have FPC RN make the first appointment. 2. For follow-up appointments, have patient make follow-up appointment in clinic before she leaves.

Patient suspects pregnancy Patient contacts clinic for pregnancy test Test positive? no END New Process (part 1) yes Patient makes appopintment with Pregnancy Registration Patient seen in Pregnancy Registration Assigned to Family Medicine? no go to "OB Process" yes A

A Pregnancy Registration sends chart to Family Medicine RN to assign provider and to schedule "New OB" appointment New Process Appointment with assigned provider available within reasonable time? no Appointment made with any available provder (part 2) yes Appointment made with assigned provider Patient sees alternate provider Patient sees assigned provider B

B yes Patient needs follow-up? no END Patient stops at Front Desk to make appointment New Process Appointment with assigned provider available within alloted timeframe? no Assigned provider notified (part 3) yes Appointment made with assigned provider yes Provider can "walk-in" patient? no Patient sees assigned provider Appointment made with any available provder B Patient sees alternate provider

Stretch goals 100% of patients will see their assigned provider for their first visit (service quality) At least 75% of patients will see their assigned provider for at least 75% of their visits (service quality)

Metrics % of patients seeing assigned provider for 1st visit Numerator # of patients enrolled to FP Clinic for maternity care this month who saw assigned provider for their 1st appointment Denominator total # of patients enrolled to FP Clinic for maternity care this month

Metrics % of patients seeing assigned provider for at least 75% of their visits Numerator # of patients enrolled to FP clinic for maternity care this month who saw assigned provider for > or = 75% of their appointments Denominator total # of patients enrolled to FP Clinic for maternity care this month

RESULTS

1 st Appointment with Assigned Provider 0.8 0.7 75% 74% 0.6 0.5 44% 0.4 Intervention 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Apr-04 May-04 Jun-04 Jul-04 Aug-04 Sep-04 Apr 04 May 04 Jun 04 Jul 04 Aug 04 Sep 04 Saw assigned 112 88 103 Total # pts 255 118 140 Percent 44% 75% 74%

>75% Appointments with Assigned Provider 0.7 65% 65% 0.6 0.5 42% 0.4 0.3 Intervention 0.2 0.1 0 Apr-04 May-04 Jun-04 Jul-04 Aug-04 Sep-04 Apr 04 May 04 Jun 04 Jul 04 Aug 04 Sep 04 >75% assign d 106 77 91 Total # pts 255 118 140 Percent 42% 65% 65%

Lessons Learned Performance improvement isn t always complicated! LEVERAGE small process changes can have significant effects

Future Directions Why aren t we at 100% for first visits? What role do patient preferences play in achieving the goals? What about patient and provider satisfaction?

miniatp Project: Improving the Continuity of Maternity Care The Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton Family Medicine Clinic is the site of maternity care provided to approximately 300 women annually. Recently, both patients and physicians indicated dissatisfaction with the continuity of care. The purpose of this project was to assess the continuity and take steps to improve it. Mission Statement Because we believe that both patient satisfaction and the best clinical outcomes are associated with continuity of care, 100% of Family Medicine maternity care patients will see their assigned provider for their first visit and at least 75% of patients will see their assigned provider for at least 75% of their followup visits. Team members Mike Polizzotto, MD (Staff Family Physician) Diane Snook, LVN (Pregnancy Registration Coordinator) Bea Smith, RN (Family Medicine Clinic Nurse) Carolyn Story, RN (Family Medicine Clinic Nurse) Change ideas We produced flowcharts and a fishbone diagram to review the appointing process. Based on our findings, the following change ideas were implemented. 1. For the first appointment, have FP RN make the appointment. 2. For follow-up appointments, have the patient make the follow-up appointment in clinic before she leaves. Results Saw assigned provider for 1 st appointment Saw assigned provider for 75% of appointments Pre-intervention 1 month post -intervention 3 months post -intervention 112 / 255 (44%) 88 / 118 (75%) 103 / 140 (74%) 106 / 255 (42%) 77 / 118 (65%) 91 / 140 (65%)