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Home Health Care

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Home Health Care


Home Health Care

HHQITraining For Better Care:

Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) are playing a central role in a new federal initiative to help home health agencies improve the quality of their care. The agencies deliver skilled nursing care, physical and occupational therapy, patient and caregiver education, and other medical services to patients at home.

Working under contract to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) at HHS, QIOs are training agency caregivers to select treatment processes for improvement; to create and implement step-by-step plans designed to improve care; and to integrate continuous quality improvement into ongoing staff training. CMS expects QIOs will help at least 30 percent of the agencies in each state improve care. QIO training— which is voluntary—is offered at no cost to home health agencies.

Increasing Public Awareness:

The new HHS initiative to improve home health quality combines QIO quality improvement training with a new CMS initiative to publicly report on eleven measures of quality of care provided by every participating Medicare home health agency. For each agency, CMS will report to the public on the percentage of patients who have needed emergency care or who had to be admitted to the hospital, as well as the percentage of patients with less pain and confusion. The data will also show how well the agencies helped patients improve in walking, bathing, toileting, and taking medication.

QIOs will help the public understand and use these quality measures as part of the process of selecting home health agency service. CMS is scheduled to launch the home health public reporting initiative nationally in the fall of 2003, using lessons learned in the first phase of the effort to begin May 1, 2003 in Florida, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Mexico, Oregon, South Carolina, West Virginia, and Wisconsin.

Sharing Effective Methods:

QIOs are training home health agencies in a process—known as Outcome-Based Quality Improvement (OBQI)—that depends on collection, analysis, and feedback of information on quality of care and patient progress that is of practical value to clinicians. To participate in Medicare, home health agencies are required to collect and submit to CMS data on whether home care has helped patients improve in a range of critical areas such as cognitive functioning, speech, mobility, and dealing with anxiety and pain. The data also documents how well each agency is helping patients improve grooming, bathing, dressing, meal preparation, and other daily activities.

OBQI provides home health agencies with methods for interpreting patient data, targeting care processes for improvement, restructuring care, and monitoring how change in care affects patient recovery and quality of life. A recent test in 27 states showed home health agencies using OBQI significantly reduced hospitalization of patients. The lead QIO on the home health initiative—Delmarva Foundation of Maryland—has also created and launched a website (www.obqi.org) where home health agencies can share experiences and information.

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