Implementation Guide: Critical Interventions in the First/Second Visit. VNAA Best Practice for Home Health

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Implementation Guide: Critical Interventions in the First/Second Visit VNAA Best Practice for Home Health

Learning Objectives The participant will be able to: Identify three interventions that should take place in the first 24 hours of discharge from the hospital or referral to home care Discuss the importance of the Confidence Ruler in assessing the patient s risk for hospitalization Discuss three processes that are important in medication reconciliation 2

Critical interventions and actions: First visit in 24 hours Guideline #1 See all patients within in 24 hours of institutional discharge or referral 3

First Visit in 24 Hours Guideline #2 Complete all activities required at admission and those needed to meet safety needs of patient until Visit 2 These may include: Consent form Did patient have a face-to-face with MD? Assessment of patient s physical condition related to patient safety Begin OASIS assessment Risk assessment 4

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #3 Determine if high risk Use IHI Risk Assessment Tool 5

Categories of a patient s risk of acute care hospitalization Source: Sevin C, Evdokimoff M, Sobolewski S, Taylor J, Rutherford P, Coleman EA.(2012) How-to Guide: Improving Transitions from the Hospital to Home Health Care to Reduce Avoidable Rehospitalizations. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare Improvement; p. 19. Available at www.ihi.org. 6

OASIS rehospitalization risk (M1032) Risk for Hospitalization: Which of the following signs or symptoms characterize this patient as at risk for hospitalization? (Mark all that apply.) 1 - Recent decline in mental, emotional, or behavioral status 2 - Multiple hospitalizations (2 or more) in the past 12 months 3 - History of falls (2 or more falls - or any fall with an injury in the past year 4 - Taking five or more medications 5 - Frailty indicators, e.g., weight loss, self-reported exhaustion 6 - Other 7 - None of the above 7

Additional high risk recommendations Does patient have HF or COPD? Are they on high risk medications such as Warfarin or diabetic medications? Determine fall risk 8

Emergency hospitalization for adverse drug reactions: Top four categories of drugs These four categories of drug account for 67% of hospitalizations: Warfarin Hypoglycemic Agents oral Insulin all types Antiplatelet agents Budnitz, D. S.,. Lovegrove, M. C.,Shehab, N., and Richards, C.L. (2011) Emergency Hospitalizations for Adverse Drug Events in Older Americans. New England Journal of Medicine; 365:2002-12. 9

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #4 Initiate frontloading for high risk patients (HF, COPD and high risk meds) visits in first two weeks Frontloading: Revisit within 24 hours Three visits first week Reassess visit frequency for week 2 60% of visits within 2 weeks Source: N Engl J Med 2011;365:2002-12 10

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #5 Perform medication reconciliation Verify, reconcile and clarify 11

Medication reconciliation process: Verify : verify, clarify, reconcile Collect an accurate medication list of ALL medications (One True Source) Prescribed medications OTC Supplements Herbals 12

Patient-friendly medication record 13

Three-step process: verify, clarify, reconcile Clarify: Confirm drug/dose/frequency Identify: Potentially serious drug/drug interactions Duplication within the patient s medication list 14

Three-step process: verify, clarify, reconcile Reconcile: Communicate with physician about any identified medication questions or concerns: Ensure all discrepancies are reported to the physician Obtain clarification or revised orders 15

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #6 Exacerbations or signs and symptoms: change in condition Identify signs and symptoms of exacerbation Determine if patient has understanding of symptoms and appropriate actions to take Use disease-specific Zone/Stop Light Tools 16

Zone Tool-COPD 17

18

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #7: Use of emergency care plan (HHQI) 19

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First visit in 24 hours Guideline #8: Education of: Use of personal health record/log 21

Personal health record 22

Suggested contents of personal health record Calendar for appointments Medication record Vital sign grid Immunization record Anticoagulant log (optional) Goal sheets Medical appointment log with questions noted Red flags Home health aide care plan List of helpful websites Teaching guidelines (patient specific) 23

HHQI PHR (sample portion) 24

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #9: Review the admission day one documentation, specifically OASIS 25

Initial OASIS questions recommended for completion on first visit 1000-1024 Diagnosis Risk for Rehospitalization 1100 Living Arrangements 1200-1230 Sensory 1240-1242 Pain 1300-1350 Skin 1400-1410 Respiratory Urinary Catheter or Incontinence 1700-1730 Cognitive* 1800-1870 Functional Status 1910 Fall Risk 2000-2040 Meds 2110 Need for Assistance 2200 Therapy Need* * May need reevaluation on Visit 2 26

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #10 Determine if patient has follow-up MD appointment in 7-10 days 27

MD follow-up appointment Coach patient on need for follow-up May not understand need for MD appointment so soon after hospital discharge Coach patient to make appointment or role model for patient by calling for appointment while in home Assure transportation arrangements have been made 28

First visit in 24 hours Guideline #11 Is patient safe until next visit? 29

Second visit If the patient is high risk: Perform second visit in 48 hours from hospital discharge 30

Second visit Guideline 1: Complete OASIS assessment and develop care plan based on findings Guideline 2: Follow up on uncompleted items from admission day one 31

Guideline 3: Second visit Assess clinical status and all clinical indicators previously assessed Reinforce education in disease-specific change in condition (exacerbations/red flags) Continue education in disease process, s/s, emergency measures using zone/stoplight tools Remember principles of patient engagement: Use of teach back method Adult learning Motivational interviewing Coaching Health literacy Medication self-completion log 32

Patient self-management goals Date Goal: Steps to goal: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 33

Coaching: Goal setting Use of SMART goals: Specific Measureable Attainable Relevant Time based Source: CDC 34

Getting started Use of Importance and Confidence Ruler 35

Health literacy Ask patient to read medication bottle Checks vision, reading ability Use of Newest Vital Sign literacy test 36

The Newest Vital Sign: Health literacy Use the above nutrition label from an ice cream package to answer six questions: If you eat the entire container, how many calories will you eat? 1. If you are allowed to eat 60 g of carbohydrates as a snack, how much ice cream could you have? 2. Your doctor advises you to reduce the amount of saturated fat in your diet. You usually have 42 g of saturated fat each day, which includes 1 serving of ice cream. 3. If you stop eating ice cream, how many grams of saturated fat would you be consuming each day? 4. If you usually eat 2500 calories in a day, what percentage of your daily value of calories will you be eating if you eat one serving? 5. Pretend that you are allergic to the following substances: Penicillin, peanuts, latex gloves, and bee stings. Is it safe to eat this ice cream? Why or why not? 37

Second visit Assess pt./caregiver s ability and understanding of medications and use the Patient Medication Log Identify best method for patient/family to track Introduce use of daily pill box if appropriate 38

Second visit Guideline 4: Assess safety with falls assessment tools and implement program if appropriate 39

Fall risk tool 40

Second visit Guideline 5: Determine presence of unresolved issues with physician and follow up for resolution 41

If not high risk May replace 2nd visit with phone call: Ask patient what they were doing prior to answering telephoneguide to activity level Discuss clinical findings from first visit and ask patient about these Review medications regarding patient/caregiver understanding of medications, how and when to take as well as purpose. Discuss whether patient has all medications in the home (See MATCH document for additional guidelines) Ask patient about follow-up appointment with physician Review emergency plan with patient Review how to reach office and schedule next visit to patient in home Ask open ended questions of patient about how they are feeling and whether there is anything else they need or would like to know 42

Measurement Utilization of data on a visit made in the first 24 hours and second visit made within 48 hours for high risk patients and those with HF, COPD or high risk medications Did first visit occur in 24 hours and did second visit for identified high risk patients occur in 48 hours? Measure the percentage of time these visits occurs Measure whether same clinician is used on first and second visit 43