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QIOs Set to Support Nursing Home Improvement

Quality Improvement Organizations to Play Key Role In New Federal Nursing Home Initiative

Health Care Quality Improvement Leaders Honored

MedPAC Calls for Peer Review Organizations to Improve the Quality of Rural Health Care

Successful Pilot Projects Spur National Effort to Improve Care for Older Americans

QIOs Seen as Solution to Reducing Medical Errors

Partnerships Seen As Key To Success Of Federal Nursing Home Quality Drive

Federal Nursing Home Quality Initiative:Success in Six-State Test Sets Stage For Nov. 12 National Launch

JAMA Study Shows Gains Closing Quality Gap For Seniors

QIOs Offer Home Health Agencies Fast Track To Better Care

AHQA Supports House on Medical Errors; Urges Senate Action

QIOs Begin Training Home Health Service Providers Nationwide

Dr. Dale Bratzler Elected AHQA President

QIOs Expand Services to Address Quality of Care Complaints

Supporting The National Voluntary Hospital Reporting Initiative

Home Health Quality Improvement Effort Off To Fast Start QIOs Train Most Home Health Agencies Nationwide

Medicare Bill To Expand Quality Improvement Efforts

Taking the Lead: More Than 50 Institutions Show How To Improve Quality Of Care

IT Adoption Can Improve Health Care—AHQA Tells Congress—But Effective Implementation Is Critical

QIO Initiative To Promote Electronic Health Records In Primary Care

New Direction For Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs)
Statement by AHQA Executive Vice President David Schulke


Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) Support Hospital Efforts to Report Quality Data and Improve Care


APhA Policy Veteran Joins The American Health Quality Association

Reducing Pain For Nursing Home Residents:Facilities Working Closely With QIOs Show Largest Gains

Many Hospitals Show Gains Fighting Surgical Infections

Study Documents Progress in QIO Hospital Work

New Hospital Performance Data Can Save Lives

New Hospital Performance Data Can Save Lives

QIOs to Help Physicians Adopt and Use IT for Better Care

QIOs to Help Reduce Staff Turnover in Nursing Homes
National Commission Calls For Action On Staff Shortages


JAMA Study: Additional Assessment of QIO Work Needed

56 Hospitals Collaborate To Prevent Surgical Infections

QIOs To Help Hospitals Train For Safer Surgery

Hopkins Researchers Admit Flaws in Study of Medicare Efforts to Improve Quality of Health Care

National Healthcare Quality Report Shows Faster Improvement Where QIOs Target Efforts

AHQA Formalizes High Standards for QIO Accountability

AHQA Proposes Reform Of Medicare Beneficiary Complaint Program

AHQA Supports IOM Call for Strengthening Medicare Quality Improvement Program

Health Information Exchange Initiatives Advance with Support from Quality Improvement Organizations

3000 Physician Practices Sign Up To Improve Care Using Health Information Technology

AHQA Calls On CMS to Modernize QIO Program

Report Shows QIOs Reducing Disparities in Quality of Care

Statement Supporting Recent House Action on Health IT Legislation

QIOs are Key Leaders In 100K Lives Campaign

Independent Survey: Stakeholders Agree QIOs Improve Care

AHQA Supports Aggressive Goals of New Heart Care Alliance

Legislation to Modernize QIO Program

AHQA Endorses Legislation To Modernize QIO Program

New Study Assesses QIO Efforts in Improving Health Care for Millions of Older Americans

Report to Congress Released on QIO Program

New Dementia Care Guidelines for Use in Disaster Situations

AHQA Applauds IOM Recommendations to Reward and Assist Providers to Improve Health Care Quality

AHQA President Dr. Sallie Cook Testifies at Congressional Hearing on Physician Payment and Quality

Statement by David Schulke, AHQA Executive Vice President on Remaking American Medicine

American Health Quality Association Names Two New Board Members

The American Health Care Quality Association and Bridges To Excellence Team-up To Recognize Physician Practice Excellence

Legislation Modernizes QIO Program

National Organization for Health Care Quality Improvement

Legislation Modernizes QIO Program

Johnson and Tibbits Join American Health Quality Association

OIG Report on QIO Case Review Activities

Online Tool Pinpoints Target Areas for Health Care Improvement in Each State

National Data Points to Improved Nursing Home Quality

QIOs to Help Hospitals with Highest Mortality Rates

GAO Recommends Adding Low Performing Nursing Homes to QIO Work and Strengthening Quality Measurement

Study: QIO Program Is ‘Good Value for Health Care Dollars’

Senate Bill Aims to Modernize QIO Program

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Partnerships Seen As Key To Success Of Federal Nursing Home Quality Drive



Press Release

Embargoed for release until:
Noon, Eastern Time, August 1, 2002

Contact: Richard Deutsch
202-261-7573

Partnerships Seen As Key To Success Of Federal Nursing Home
Quality Drive

Washington, D.C.— Cooperation among nursing homes, quality experts, consumer advocates, and government regulators is emerging as critical for success of the federal nursing home quality initiative scheduled for national launch in October.

The federal initiative, sponsored by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), begins with the publishing of information on the quality of care in individual nursing homes in leading newspapers around the country. A central ongoing component of the initiative involves providing technical assistance to nursing homes through independent Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs).

Leaders of provider associations, QIOs, consumer groups, and government health care agencies met in Baltimore last week to evaluate the pilot stage of the initiative—which began in April in six states (OH, MD, FL, WA, CO, RI). The meeting presented a rare opportunity for all nursing home stakeholders to come together at a national forum focused on improving the quality of care. Many of the speakers agreed with Mary Ousley, head of the American Health Care Association (AHCA), who said it should be a common goal "to build a platform of trust" needed to design a better health care system.

QIOs are playing a catalytic role in the development of key state-level partnerships among providers, quality experts, regulators, and consumers. These partnerships focus on the development of communication and technical assistance to facilitate broader adoption of best clinical practices in nursing home care.

From 1999-2002, QIOs partnered with nursing homes in more than 30 states to implement projects directed at prevention of pressure sores, falls prevention, pain management, development of quality measures for rehabilitation services, improved diabetes outcomes, improved anticoagulant use, reduction in the use of restraints, immunization campaigns, and treatment for depression.

Results show many of these projects are making a difference. A few examples:

    • Rhode Island Quality Partners improved pain assessment procedures in all 18 nursing that participated in a statewide project.
    • The Indiana QIO, Health Care Excel, conducted a project with nursing homes to improve the rate of blood glucose testing to prevent complications of diabetes. Testing rates in participating facilities improved from 57% at baseline in May 2001 to 87% in February 2002.
    • The Pennsylvania QIO worked with 12 nursing homes to test interventions designed to reduce incidence of pressure ulcers. The percentage of residents with appropriate ulcer care plans rose from 57% to 90%.
    • Health Services Advisory Group conducted a project in 127 Arizona nursing homes that increased resident vaccination for pneumonia from 52% to 72%. The Virginia Health Quality Center conducted a project that increased immunization rates for pneumonia from 26% to 52% in 15 participating nursing homes.
    • Alabama Quality Assurance Foundation reduced resident fall rates in 13 of 14 facilities participating in a highly structured falls reduction project. Falls declined at a rate equivalent to 3 fewer falls per month at a 100-bed facility.

"QIOs have years of experience improving health care in hospitals and have demonstrated skill at boosting the quality of care in hundreds of nursing homes. Now, QIOs are linking with the appropriate partners to expand on that mission," said AHQA Executive Vice President David Schulke. "While there have been a few bumps in the road, all parties continue to support the quality initiative and they are keeping their eyes on the prize—helping nursing home residents receive higher quality care."

Surveys conducted by QIOs in more than a dozen states in recent months show far stronger demand for assistance from nursing homes than anticipated by CMS when it designed the initiative. Original plans called for QIOs to provide information on quality improvement to all nursing homes and to provide intensive, on-site training to 10% of the facilities in each state.

However, reports from the six pilot states so far show 25-40% of all nursing homes participating in statewide workshops and 10-20% of all facilities seeking intensive training.

CMS responded positively at last week’s meeting, announcing a substantial increase in funding for QIO nursing home training programs. The initiative’s architect, CMS Administrator Thomas Scully, praised conference attendees for having the courage to work together to tackle a difficult task.

Copyright © 2003, American Health Quality Association. All Rights Reserved.