Clinical Communication and Collaboration in the Emergency Department

Similar documents
Active Shooter Preparedness

Duke Life Flight. Systems of Care for Time Dependent Emergencies. Disclosures. Disclosures 9/19/2017

Active Shooter Preparedness Research Report

Better care coordination requires streamlined, efficient, secure clinical communication

Expert Insights: Enhancing Incident Communications featuring Renown Health

Right person. device time

LWOT Reduction Plan Success Story: Advocate Trinity Hospital

AirStrip ONE Cardiology

HOW CONNECTING DISPARATE COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS CAN IMPROVE PATIENT OUTCOMES

Emergency Department Throughput

San Joaquin County Emergency Medical Services Agency

Evaluation of Telestroke Services

IMPROVING EFFICIENCY AND COST SAVINGS. Technology Solutions for NHS Hospitals

Tele Stroke ( Telemedicine in Practice)

Two Hospitals-One Heart: World Class Heart Care through Multi-Disciplinary Collaboration

Critical Care, Critical Choices: The Case for Tele-ICUs in Intensive Care

ONC Direct, CCD. National Consortium of Telehealth Resource Centers and PatientLink. MyLinks, vcarecommand

Chest Pain Accredited. Transplant Program-Heart, Kidney, Liver. Hear Transplant Program serving San Antonio area for 25 years

Improving Hospital Performance Through Clinical Integration

EMS System for Metropolitan Oklahoma City and Tulsa 2017 Medical Control Board Treatment Protocols

PURPOSE: The purpose of this policy is to establish requirements for designation as a STEMI Receiving Center (SRC) in San Joaquin County.

PSC Certification: What really happens

Ambulance Operations Procedure Appropriate Hospital Access for ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction Patients. National Ambulance Service (NAS)

Virtual Care Solutions Moving Care from the Hospital to the Home

Evolution of Telehealth Use Cases and Care Settings

Saving Lives with Best Practices and Improvements in Sepsis Care

Explain how the innovation works and why your organization chose this

Embracing Telehealth: People, Process & Technology

Georgia Regents University: Evolution of One of the Country s Longest-Running Telestroke Programs

Explaining the Value to Payers

Community Hospital Uses Mobile App to Improve Communications, Accelerate Throughput

Assessment and Reassessment of Patients

STEMI SYSTEM RECEIVING CENTER STANDARDS AND DESIGNATION

HealthMatics ED Emergency Department Information System

Using Telemedicine to Enhance Meaningful Use Qualification

SPOK MESSENGER. Improving Staff Efficiency and Patient Care With Timely Communications and Critical Connectivity

SARASOTA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL POLICY

Using Telemedicine to Improve Outcomes and Collaboration Within Hospitals and Health Systems

LHH Acute Care Transfers Update

Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council

Driving Business Value for Healthcare Through Unified Communications

KGH Endovascular Thrombectomy Acute Ischemic Stroke Pilot Study Evaluation Report 2017

Contra Costa County Emergency Medical Services. STEMI System Performance Report

Seven day hospital services: case study. South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust

Acute Care Workflow Solutions

einteract User Guide July 07, 2017

HFAP Stroke Survey. Overview of the Survey Process 8/17/2011

IMPROVING TRANSITIONS OF CARE IN POPULATION HEALTH

In-Patient Medication Order Entry System - contribution of pharmacy informatics

JULY 2012 RE-IMAGINING CARE DELIVERY: PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE HOSPITALIST MODEL IN THE INPATIENT SETTING

Creating A Centralised Operations Centre

STEMI RECEIVING CENTER

Deriving Value from a Health Information Exchange. HIMSS17 DA-CH Community Conference Healthix I New York I February 20, 2017

Consultation Paper. Distributed Medical Imaging in the new Royal Adelaide Hospital Central Adelaide Local Health Network

STEMI Receiving Center Designation Process

Stroke System-of- Care Plan. Mississippi State Department of Health

Core Item: Hospital. Cover Page. Admissions and Readmissions. Executive Summary

An Acute Care Nurse Practitioner Model of Care for Stroke Patients

Publication Year: 2013

Readiness Assessment Document for Acute Telestroke Collaboration (Sample. Checklist from OTN)

Element(s) of Performance for DSPR.1

East Texas Gulf Coast Regional Trauma Advisory Council Regional Advisory Council - R (RAC-R)

TELLIGENCE. Workflow Solutions. Integrated Workflow Intelligence. Ascom

Aneurin Bevan University Health Board Stroke Services Redesign Programme

Transforming Rural Emergency Care with Telehealth #207, February 22, 2017 Brian Skow, MD, FACEP, Chief Medical Officer, Avera ecare Jason Wickersham,

NEW INNOVATIONS TO IMPROVE PATIENT FLOW IN THE ED AND HOSPITAL OCTOBER 12, Mike Williams, MPH/HSA The Abaris Group

TIME CRITICAL DIAGNOSIS SYSTEM

Region III STEMI Plan

DASH Direct Admissions as Easy as 1-2-3

New Stroke Treatments and Inter-facility Transport

USING JOBVITE TO OVERCOME THE STEM SKILLS SHORTAGE

Urgent and Emergency Care Kings Fund

Healthcare Finance Management Association: Continuous Improvement Foundations

ADVANCING PRIMARY CARE DELIVERY. An Update

SC Telehealth All 2017

Making the Stars Align When Time Matters: Leveraging Actionable Data to Combat Sepsis

Wired to Save Lives: A Virtual Hospital Experience

Acute Stroke Ready Hospital Certification Program

PLANNING DRILLS FOR HEALTHCARE EMERGENCY AND INCIDENT PREPAREDNESS AND TRAINING

DUFFERIN COUNTY PARAMEDIC SERVICE

ABOUT TIGR PATIENT BENEFITS HOSPITAL BENEFITS. Patient-Specific Education. Engaged Patient Population. Improved Nursing Efficiency

Creating the New Care Design L2. George Kerwin, CEO Patient of Bellin Health Bellin Health Team. Objectives

Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council Regional Percutaneous Coronary Intervention Facility & EMS Heart Alert Agencies

Super Track. The Evolution of the Split Flow Emergency Department. John D Angelo, MD, FACEP Northwell Health

Same day emergency care: clinical definition, patient selection and metrics

How can oncology practices deliver better care? It starts with staying connected.

Support (Level III) Stroke Facility Criteria Guidance

Pre-Hospital. 8 Minutes stops the clock but doesn t burst the clot. Gerry Egan

Nurse Call System. A Voice over IP Based Solution for Streamlined Communication, Alerting and Workflow

Direct Messaging is live! Enroll for your mailbox today! Are you attesting for Meaningful Use 2 for Transitions of Care?

The Israeli Experience

A powerful medication management tool for the new healthcare environment

Telemedicine: Solving the Root Causes for Preventable 30-day Readmissions in SNF Settings

Stroke: The New Frontier

Essentia Health. A View on Information Technology. ND HIMS Conference April 12, Tim Sayler, COO Essentia Health - West

Inpatient Rehabilitation Program Information

Trauma Service Area - B (BRAC) Regional Stroke Plan

Payer s Perspective on Clinical Pathways and Value-based Care

YOUR HEALTH INFORMATION EXCHANGE

Tele-urgent Services

Transcription:

Clinical Communication and Collaboration in the Emergency Department Improving Patient Throughput By Eric Chetwynd, Healthcare General Manager

Clinical Communication and Collaboration in the Emergency Department With over 735,000 heart attacks every year, rapid clinical intervention can save thousands of lives annually. Existing workflow processes fast tracking bedside registration electronic dashboards alternate treatment areas full capacity protocol Increasing Use of the ED Emergency departments (ED) and emergency care teams play an increasingly important role in our healthcare system. Overall, U.S. emergency department visits rise annually by about 4.5%; some areas, such as urban EDs have seen a 22% increase. 1 With increasing use, comes an increasing focus on challenges facing emergency care teams. These specialty teams focus on quick, efficient diagnosis and stabilization of the most emergent clinical issues including strokes, heart 2, 3, 4 attacks, and injuries (trauma). In each of these cases, every minute of delayed patient care can have a significant impact on patient outcome and recovery. For example, patients suffering an ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI), studies show that a delay in stabilization (door-to-balloon) can more than double a patient s likelihood of dying (a mortality rate of 3.0% to 7.4% 5 ). With over 735,000 heart attacks 6 every year, rapid clinical intervention can save thousands of lives annually. In addition to emergent healthcare issues, emergency departments are also often called upon too often to handle non-emergent cases. According to Becker s Hospital Review, 71% of ED visits are unnecessary. 7 These are typically cases which could be managed in a lower acuity setting or where treatment could be delayed. The rising demand leaves over half of all EDs regularly over capacity. EDs, on average, divert emergent cases at 242 hours per hospital per year. In addition, patients who leave without being seen by a clinician is 2% nationally, primarily due to long wait times. Streamlining Clinical Workflows EDs seek to improve clinical response time and efficiency by managing patients through triage, diagnosis, and stabilization. Many workflow processes already exist, including fast tracking, bedside registration, electronic dashboards, alternate treatment areas, and full capacity protocol. While many of these techniques help emergency care teams better manage the increasing volume of cases, a number of additional challenges continue to impact their ability to manage patients. 1 Emergency Departments saw a 22% increase 2 Trauma statistics 3 Brain injuries 4 Coma statistics 5 Door-to-balloon study (download the study) 6 6735,000 heart attacks per year 3 EVERBRIDGE.COM 7 Non-urgent cases

94% of Fast Track Workflow participants reported ED throughput issues after implementing. 72% reported 30+ minute patient wait times. 22% saw no improvements. Current Challenges Locating on-call physicians quickly This is one of the key areas impacting emergency departments. For example, over 30% of ED s report difficulty consulting on-call neurologists critical to assessing stroke patients. This impacts the emergency department s ability to manage both emergent and non-emergent cases. Early triage and routing of patients to the best facility If a patient on an ambulance is assessed for possible stroke, it might be better for that patient to route them directly to the regional stroke center. Coordinating to rapidly respond to acute patient needs For Emergency Departments, this is always a challenge. This can include coordinating with radiology, cath lab, off-site physicians, EMT, etc. Specialty consult assessment Waiting for specialty physicians to conduct face-to-face patient assessments impacts many hospitals leading to increased wait time and patient throughput challenges. Technology-Driven Workflow 30 mins 35 mins Onset to Treatment Time Average time 3 hours STROKE CODE RESPONDING CONSULT REQUESTED Today 11:49 PM RESPONDING Today 11:50 PM Medic1, let s do a stroke assessment VIDEO CONSULT EMS Today 11:55 PM Let s fast track Mr. Thomas for CT scan ED MD Triage Nurse On-Call Neurologist Tasks Inbound Patient Alert Stroke Alert & Neuro Consult Steps + EMS notifies ED of potential stroke patient + Triage Nurse coordinates with on-duty ED MD + ED MD asks Nurse to call for Neuro consult + CareConverge locates on-call Neurologist + If Neurologist does not respond CareConverge escalates + Face-to-face Video & Audio Stroke Assessment 4 EVERBRIDGE.COM

Opportunities to Improve the Process Watch a video demonstration of the patient throughput. Emergency Departments can improve the management of these challenges with a combination of workflow and technology. In the following example, a modified triage and workflow process leverages technologies to improve the team s ability to manage a stroke patient. If you prefer, you can watch a video demonstration of the patient throughput. In this scenario, a patient is on his way to the hospital via ambulance for possible stroke at 11:30 PM. Our paramedic Mark contacts the Triage nurse at Memorial Medical with a single click on his mobile device. Gina, the triage nurse responds to Mark s alert by calling for a Stroke code. This code can then automatically assess who the Neurologist on-call is tonight. Dr. Adams, working out of his home, responds to the code and immediately joins the electronic conversation with both Mark and Gina. He asks Mark to conduct a stroke assessment with him of the patient using the NIH Stoke Scale. This requires Dr. Adams to be able to visually see the patient which Mark enables via a video chat. After completing the assessment, Dr. Adams confirms the suspected stroke and calls to fast track the patient directly to radiology for a CT Scan. A fast track notification is sent directly to both the scheduled radiologist and the scheduled ED nurse working that night. They both confirm their readiness for the patient. As the ambulance arrives, the ED nurse Technology-Driven Workflow (cont d) 91 mins DTN 35 91 mins DTN 35 Intensivist Admin Supervisor On-Duty Tech Tasks Close the Loop Stroke Code Steps + Hand-off to Intensivist + Admin Supervisor closes loop with final report and outcomes + Based on Stroke Assessment Neuro calls for Stroke Code + Nurse activates Stroke code Activate Lab, Radiology, Pharmacy Notify HUC, Minister, + Radiology shares CT Scan with Neuro + Neuro calls for tpa 5 EVERBRIDGE.COM

escorts the patient to radiology where the CT Scan is performed. The technician then posts the scan back to the conversation which Dr. Adams is still on. Dr. Adams reads the scan, diagnoses an ischemic stroke and calls for tpa to be administered. This example highlights the many challenges in coordinating rapid response to care needed in the emergency department including: + How can we assess patients earlier? + How do I quickly identify and confirm participation of on-call specialists? + How do I coordinate with distributed, remote teams? In a recent study with the Mayo Clinic, a workflow very similar to this was employed for assessing stroke patients during transit and an average of nearly 8 minutes was saved per stroke patient. Since stroke patients lose 1.9 M neurons per minute while in stroke, the average impact was.42 brain years (the amount of neurons which would normally have dies in 1/3 of year). This patient throughput also led to observed lessoning of necessary recovery time in acuity settings. One patient was observed with a reduction of 13 inpatient days. With each inpatient day over the GLOS costing the hospital $2,300, even a couple of days saved can have a big impact (over $4,500 per patient). There are also likely impacts on post-acute care service needs which are of increasing importance in value-based care. Workflow for Non-Emergent Cases Many of the same challenges observed in managing an emergent case also exist for non-emergent cases. For example, in diagnosing a patient complaining of bladder pain, the emergency care team might have to coordinate and communicate with the lab, radiology, and even pull in a tele-consult from an on-call urologist. While the challenges are similar in coordinating the team, the impact is a bit different. A delay in care for these patients may not have a significant impact on their prognosis, but it can have a significant impact on the throughput of the ED. With wait times regularly advertised as a competitive advantage and longer lengths of stay meaning few patients coming the hospital, this impact can be significant. For an ED with 60,000 visits per year and a left without being seen percentage of 2%, a 5-minute savings on ALOS in the ED could mean nearly as many as an additional 1,200 patients per year for about $1.7 M in revenue. In addition, to the clinical and financial impacts of these processes, patient satisfaction can be highly impacted by better communication throughout the process 8. 6 EVERBRIDGE.COM 8 Hospitals, communication, and patient satisfaction Everbridge.com/CareConverge

What can you do? 1. Review your current ED metrics for critical patients. Are your door-to-needle and door-to-balloon times within current clinical practice? If you transfer most of those cases to a specialized center, what is your average time to transfer? Mid-sized hospital with 60,000 ED visits per year + $2,691 revenue per ED visit + 2% LBS = 1,200 patients + 50% reduction in LBS is $1.7 million increased revenue *LBS is left without being seen 2. Review your current ED metrics for non-urgent patients. What are your annual diversion hours? What is your left-without-being seen rate? What is your door-tophysician time? 3. Review potential workflow improvements, could fast tracking non-urgent cases improve throughput? Would bedside registration help? 4. Review opportunities for communication and collaboration solutions to play a role. Could you leverage video capabilities to assess critical patients before they arrive in the ED? Could you use communication solutions to better collaborate with specialists for consults? CareConverge We know how important patient throughput is and that is why we created CareConverge to address every issue a hospital might face as they seek to improve patient outcomes and patient satisfaction. If you d like to learn more, please request a demo and we ll speak to you soon. Visit Everbridge.com/healthcare to learn more. 7 EVERBRIDGE.COM

About Everbridge Everbridge, Inc. (NASDAQ: EVBG) is a global software company that provides enterprise software applications that automate and accelerate organizations operational response to critical events in order to keep people safe and businesses running faster. Every day, over 3,500 global clients rely on the company s SaaSbased Critical Event Management delivery platform to quickly and reliably assess the severity of critical events, locate the first responders, the impacted people and assets, automate the communications, collaboration and orchestration for faster incident resolution. The company s platform sent over 2 billion messages in 2017, and offers the ability to reach more than 200 countries and territories with secure delivery via over 100 different communication channels. The company s applications include Mass Notification, Safety Connection, IT Alerting, Visual Command Center, Crisis Commander, Community Engagement and Secure Messaging. Everbridge serves 9 of the 10 largest U.S. cities, 8 of the 10 largest U.S.-based investment banks, all four of the largest global accounting firms, all 25 of the 25 busiest North American airports, six of the 10 largest global consulting firms, six of the 10 largest global auto makers, four of the 10 largest U.S.-based health care providers and four of the 10 largest U.S.-based health insurers. Everbridge is based in Boston and Los Angeles with additional offices in San Francisco, Lansing, Orlando, Beijing, London and Stockholm. For more information, visit www.everbridge.com, read the company blog, and follow on Twitter and Facebook. VISIT WWW.EVERBRIDGE.COM CALL +1-818-230-9700