Archive for QIO Success Stories – Page 3

Qualis Health Expands Diabetes Self-Management Education through Community Partnerships

Diabetes is one of the most serious health concerns today, placing physical, emotional and economic burdens on every aspect of society.  Additionally, there is clear evidence of healthcare inequities among racial groups. For example, individuals from African-American, American Indian / Alaska Native, Hispanic, or Asian backgrounds are significantly more likely to have diabetes than individuals who identify as White Non-Hispanic. Individuals living in rural areas also have a higher likelihood of having diabetes.

Diabetes self-management education (DSME) uses an evidence-based intervention for empowering persons with diabetes to take an active role in controlling their disease by acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to prevent/lessen the severity of complications.

Diabetes self-management education (DSME), specifically Stanford University’s Diabetes Self-Management Program (DSMP), is an evidence-based intervention for empowering persons with diabetes to take an active role in controlling their disease by acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to prevent/lessen the severity of complications. Small-group workshops are held for 2.5 hours once a week for six weeks, facilitated by two leaders, one or both of whom are peer leaders with diabetes themselves who have successfully completed the 24-hour leader training.

With funding from CMS, Qualis Health took action to increase access to DSME and reduce disparities by expanding the workshops across the state in partnership with 25 community organizations. These workshops were particularly targeted to Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes who belong to racial and minority ethnic groups and/or reside in rural areas. Qualis Health built partnerships with a variety of community agencies to increase the number of Medicare beneficiaries in disparate populations completing the DSMP workshop, resulting in a stronger infrastructure to support improved care and reduce health inequities.

Qualis Health trained over 39 lay leaders to expand the reach of DSME into underserved communities. These lay leaders have gone on to provide the diabetes workshop to over 750 individuals. Internal participant-reported data showed that within 6 months of completing the workshop, individuals who participated in DSME workshops felt more empowered to manage their diabetes-related care in comparison to before the workshop.

For this work, Qualis Health earned an honorable mention in the Wellness/Prevention category of the 2017 DecisionHealth Platinum Awards, a program highlighting the innovations and leadership of healthcare organizations that are creating better ways to bring quality care to patients and populations.

Choosing Wisely: Reducing Low-Value Services for Medicare Beneficiaries

The United States spends upwards of $220 billion annually on low-value healthcare services that confer little or no clinical benefit while exposing patients to unnecessary risk, and research indicates that over 40% of Medicare beneficiaries received low value care.

Choosing Wisely® is a national initiative of the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation that promotes informed shared decisions between clinicians and patients regarding many types of low-value healthcare. Under a Special Innovation Project awarded by CMS, Qualis Health designed and implemented a project to bolster the Choosing Wisely initiative in Washington, making innovative use of Medicare claims data in Washington State to promote alternatives to low-value healthcare, including a new set of claims specifications to assess treatment of dementia using antipsychotics. Qualis Health selected four low-value services on which to focus based on the degree of variance in clinical practice, the number of Medicare beneficiaries potentially affected, and alignment with local priorities.

Qualis Health identified clinicians who ordered one or more of the selected low-value services at a rate that was statistically higher than the state average. We mailed confidential feedback to 174 high utilizers. First, a generic letter introduced the Qualis Health Choosing Wisely project to raise awareness and create a non-threatening context for the individualized performance feedback. A week later, a second letter was sent that again framed the feedback in non-threatening terms and compared the recipient’s utilization of a low-value service with the Washington state average for using the same service, measured as a percentage of qualifying patients who received the service.

Using administrative data along with individualized clinician performance feedback to promote Choosing Wisely goals will help reduce utilization of low value healthcare services and provide savings in direct annual treatment costs. If the identified high-utilizing clinicians respond to peer comparison feedback by reducing utilization to the Washington average, there would be 166 fewer instances of advanced imaging for syncope or headache (average of about $300 for a CT or MRI scan), 329 fewer prescriptions for antibiotics for URI (with an average cost of $7), and 709 fewer prescriptions for antipsychotics for behavioral symptoms of dementia (average of about $250 per month, $3,000 per year), for a conservative estimate of almost $2,179,103 in total savings of direct annual treatment costs.

Perhaps more important is the avoidance of adverse outcomes. Research indicates that 709 fewer prescriptions for antipsychotics would result in eight fewer strokes and one less injury fall in this population annually. If 329 fewer prescriptions resulted in even one less instance of clostridium difficile infection, as much as $24,000 in hospital charges would be avoided. The probability that an antibiotic prescription will result in an emergency room visit is four times greater than the probability of gaining clinical benefit for treating URI with antibiotics.

Initial responses from clinicians who received feedback from Qualis Health supported the efficacy of this approach in raising awareness of issues.

This project was recognized as a national honorable mention winner in the 2017 DecisionHealth Platinum Awards in the Physician/Clinician Engagement and Education category.

Qualis Health Emergency Room High-Utilizer Program Achieves Results

Individuals with complex healthcare needs tend to incur disproportionately higher costs than others, and their healthcare needs are often exacerbated by social determinants of health, such as lack of housing or transportation. Qualis Health’s Emergency Room High-Utilizer Program was established to address the challenges of care for high-utilizing Medicaid members in Anchorage, AK. Those high ER utilizers represent 3% of the state’s Medicaid population but 22% of overall hospital ER costs.

Working with the state, Qualis Health designed a program to provide in-person case management to a targeted population of high ER utilizers to reduce frequent ER use for issues better treated in a primary care setting. The program implemented a team-based approach, which included a licensed clinical lead and two community health workers, with further support by a staff psychiatrist, medical director, and RN case manager consultants. Primary interventions in the program included:

  • assisting members to develop a medical home relationship with a primary care provider and accompanying them to appointments
  • teaching self-management skills and medication management
  • coordinating with behavioral health and social service providers, including shelter and permanent housing programs, transportation assistance, and food security resources
  • developing an after-hours plan to reduce avoidable ER visits during nights and weekend hours

Preliminary program results using claims data indicated that ER and inpatient visits and associated costs were significantly reduced post intervention:

  • 39% reduction in ER visits
  • 49% reduction in ER costs
  • 66% reduction in inpatient visits
  • 81% reduction in inpatient costs

This program was recognized as the national winner in the 2017 DecisionHealth Platinum Awards in the Care Coordination category.

QAPI in Action: Pilot Leads to Infection Control and Prevention Success

As one of 20 facilities chosen to participate in the Clostridium difficile (CDiff) Reporting and Reduction Project pilot project beginning in July 2016, Aberdeen Health and Rehab in South Dakota has been successful in implementing effective infection control and prevention practices. What began as an invitation from the Great Plains Quality Innovation Network (QIN) and the South Dakota Department of Health (SD DOH) Health Acquired Infections (HAI) Program to participate in a pilot project led to the best practice of data review to identify high-impact change.

Administrator Megan Kleinsasser commented on the pilot project success, “We incorporated reviewing our infection rate and our CASPER quality measure report in our monthly QAPI meetings.  It is through our QAPI meetings that we prioritize improvement areas for performance improvement projects.  One of the areas of improvement we are working on is reducing CDiff infections in our facility.”

The national CDiff pilot project has five goals:

  1. Increase national CDiff surveillance data from 235 nursing homes currently reporting to 2300 nursing homes consistently reporting into CDC NHSN database
  2. Determine state/national CDiff baselines for nursing homes
  3. Once baselines are determined, identify reduction goals and implement interventions
  4. National and state CDI rates will show reduction rates by December 2018
  5. Nursing homes will receive education and tools on NHSN, CDiff principles and management and antibiotic stewardship

As of November 2016, Aberdeen Health and Rehab has been providing monthly reporting of CDiff infection data to the Centers for the Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) national database, National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN).

“It was a difficult start jumping through all the technical requirements to allow us to report, but reporting has become a very simple routine now. Our director of nursing is well versed in surveillance of our infections and has included the staff in our infection control and prevention systems,” Kleinsasser stated.

The team approach, including staff and residents, resulted in additional benefits, including a site visit by a certified infection preventionist who offered valuable insight on best practices and areas of improvement.

“We have seen a decrease in CDiff infections and feel better prepared and confident in our infection control and prevention program,” shared Kleinsasser, who has engaged staff and is looking to duplicate their success with antibiotic stewardship.

She intends to participate in the SD DOH, HAI Program’s Antibiotic Consumption Pilot Project for nursing homes, which aims to increase understanding of antibiotic usage, identify specific antibiotic stewardship improvement areas and also aligns perfectly with the new CMS regulations regarding antibiotic stewardship.

Kleinsasser reflected, “My advice to nursing home colleagues is to take advantage of pilot projects when the opportunity presents itself.  Pilot projects typically provide extra education, resources and technical assistance that otherwise might not be so readily available.  As an administrator, I feel our facility is better prepared and equipped to meet the infection control and prevention standards in long-term care today.”

Kearny County Hospital’s Innovation Drives Community Health Change

People living in the unhealthiest counties of Kansas are dying too early and at more than twice the rate of those in the healthiest counties. Kearny County Hospital, located in Lakin, Kansas, 50 miles from Colorado, is one of the lead organizations for the Communities of Care work currently underway.

According to the 2017 County Health Rankings, which examines 25 factors that influence health, the efforts of this community to improve health and create meaningful change are paying off. In the past year, Kearny County has skyrocketed up from 83rd to 33rd in health rankings among more than 100 ranked Kansas counties.

Kearny County Hospital is located in a rural area where resources are limited. The impact of reduced resources can be felt across a variety of factors, including access to healthy foods, healthcare and other vital resources that impact community health. As in many communities, the cost of inappropriate healthcare utilization due to resource limitations of community members or access to regular and preventive health services is far reaching. The hospital implemented a new program to gain greater understanding of the issues community members face and to learn more about the utilization of the hospital emergency department.  The program incorporates screening and assistance for citizens with healthcare and financial assistance needs and provides insight into emergency department utilization. Recruiting new medical providers to the community will also reduce unnecessary ER visits by ensuring access to preventive and routine healthcare.

“The Kansas Foundation for Medical Care, Inc. (KFMC) is pleased to be able to partner with the innovative and dedicated team KCH has onboard. Their commitment to improving care delivery and health outcomes for Medicare consumers, and all citizens of their community shines in all they do. Congratulations,” Vanessa Lamoreaux, Project Manager at Kansas Foundation for Medical Care, Inc.

Healthcare can be complicated. It takes more than just the clinicians doing the right thing every time to make a sustainable impact in community health; it takes everyone and every organization working together. Visit our Care Coordination webpage for more details and how to get involved.

To learn more about Kearny County Hospital, visit: www.kearnycountyhospital.com

To learn more about the county health rankings, visit: www.countyhealthrankings.org

Minnesota QIO Recommends Three Actions for Improving Medication Management in Transitions of Care

Stratis Health recommends three actions for improving medication management in transitions of care by improving workflow in health care settings, in its white paper “Understanding and Improving Medication Reconciliation Between Hospitals and Nursing Homes”.

The recommendations are made from a quality improvement perspective, with the intent to give guidance to and support action by hospitals, nursing homes, and pharmacists. These recommendations also can inform policy and regulatory considerations and action.

Recommendations

  1. Implement interventions that assure indications and diagnoses are documented for all prescribed medications.
  2. Increase pharmacy’s role in medication reconciliation in transitions of care.
  3. Implement an interdisciplinary approach to medication reconciliation that occurs before or during the care transition that includes hospital, nursing home, and pharmacy staff.

Waste and Risk Examples
The white paper also highlights the waste and risk in care transitions between hospitals and nursing homes using three real-life examples of common medication issues to illustrate the risk and cost of current practices:

  • Missing indication and/or diagnosis
  • Inappropriate dosing
  • Medication evaluation and follow up

Development of this white paper continued Stratis Health’s collaborative work with partners in pharmacies and skilled nursing facilities that started in the Health Information Technology for Post Acute Care (HITPAC)—a one-year special innovation project funded by CMS through its Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) Program. HITPAC aimed to transform the fragmented medication reconciliation processes and facilitate stronger care transition communication across health care settings through the electronic exchange of health information.

More information
Find the Understanding and Improving Medication Reconciliation Between Hospitals and Nursing Homes white paper (12-page PDF) and the HITPAC project brief online.

Stratis Health partners with MPRO and MetaStar to serve as the Lake Superior Quality Innovation Network to support health care quality improvement in Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin through the Medicare QIO Program.

Missouri QIO Drives Decline in Use of Restraints in Nursing Home

Working with Primaris, Missouri’s Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) through July 2014*, a 60-bed nursing home in Southwest Missouri reduced the use of restraints among its residents from 28.9 percent to 2.3 percent in just over a year (2012-2013).

Once seen as tools to help prevent nursing home residents from injuring themselves, restraints are now recognized as presenting serious health risks to residents, contributing to circulation problems and pressure ulcers. Primaris collaborated with nursing homes to reduce restraint use, leading to improved quality of life and health among residents.

Using Primaris data reports compared to data collected from clinical assessments of patients, restraint count inconsistencies were identified. For example, some residents were being counted as restrained when fastening their wheelchair seatbelts as the resident’s own security measure.

Primaris helped Cassville Health Care & Rehab in Cassville, Mo. develop alternatives to restraint use, starting with using the Primaris’ Restraint Reduction toolkit and conducting staff education.

Cassville Health Care & Rehab used different equipment and expanded care planning to include therapy, activities staff and other nursing staff to devise ways to reduce restraints. Nursing home staff also reached out to residents’ families to discuss any reservations about removing restraints utilizing the Primaris patient and family brochure that provides education about the hazards of restraint use.

When Primaris began working with Cassville Health Care & Rehab, the nursing home had the highest restraint use in the state. Since working with Primaris, the home has maintained a restraint rate at near or below the Missouri state average of 2 percent.

The positive impact on residents’ quality of life has, in turn, improved employee morale. Nursing home leadership to certified nursing assistants, and families and community members are all pleased with these changes. The staff at the facility remains committed to sustaining their low average while striving for zero restraints.

*In spring of 2014, CMS determined to separate the consumer type protection activities – case review, beneficiary complaint and appeals – from the quality improvement work for the QIO program going forward.  As of August 1, Missouri is represented by two Quality Improvement Organizations. Beneficiary and family centered care services are now provided by KEPRO. Primaris in Missouri has joined TMF Health Quality Institute to form the TMF Quality Innovation Network Quality Improvement Organization (QIN-QIO) to provide quality improvement work in Missouri.

California QIO Redesigns Practices’ Workflow to Improve Tobacco Screening Documentation

In its work assisting physician practices to leverage electronic health records (EHRs) for quality measures reporting, Health Services Advisory Group of California, Inc. (HSAG of California), the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for the state, observed that reported tobacco screening rates for Medicare beneficiaries among some practices were far lower than other similar practices.

Specifically, some 88 physician providers using a particular certified EHR reported an average 6 percent of Medicare beneficiaries were being screened for tobacco use, but  given the providers’ attention to smoking cessation best practices  in Q1 2013, the QIO knew right away that something was amiss.

HSAG of California determined that physician practices that initiated screening activities at or near the front office reported higher screening and counseling activity than did practices that initiated such activities in exam rooms. As a result, the QIO designed a workflow model to empower mid-level providers at doctors’ offices—specifically, health care professionals with some supervisory responsibilities—to conduct screening activities at the front office. A screenshot of this workflow can be accessed here. The QIO also prescribed which front desk staff could initiate tobacco screening among visiting Medicare patients and conducted comprehensive onsite training on screening and EHR documentation for physicians and staff.

After implementing the new workflow, 80 percent of patients were reported as having been screened for tobacco use by Q2 2013. That is, the providers’ prior screening efforts, which had previously been undocumented, were captured, fully reflecting their dedicated efforts to help beneficiaries quit smoking. This rate of successful documentation has held through early 2014, proving that the efforts of the practice staff have made the workflow changes sustainable over the long term.

QIO Aids in Improving Heart Health for Oklahoma’s Native Americans

The Oklahoma Foundation for Medical Quality (OFMQ), Oklahoma’s QIO through July 2014*, worked with partners to reduce key heart disease risk factors among the state’s more than 300,000 Native Americans.  Heart disease is a leading cause of death for most ethnic groups in the U.S., and is second only to cancer for Asian Americans or Pacific Islanders and American Indians or Alaska Natives, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Through its Cardiac Learning and Action Network (LAN) initiative ─ a Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) project ─ and other outreach events, OFMQ and the Oklahoma City Area Inter-Tribal Health Board have helped spread the importance of heart health and the goals of the Million Hearts™ campaign to the Oklahoma Native American population. The Million Hearts™ campaign is a national public-private initiative of the Department of Health and Human Services that aims to prevent 1 million heart attacks and strokes by 2017.

As part of the Cardiac LAN efforts, OFMQ staff conducted support calls and site visits with Native American clinics to help them more meaningfully use electronic health records (EHRs) and standardize data collection on blood pressure, aspirin therapy, smoking cessation, and other cardiac-related measures. OFMQ also helped the clinics identify best practices and areas of improvement to promote continued improvement in these measures.

OFMQ gathered its baseline data for the LAN in June 2011, and its most recent re-measurement data was reported in December 2013. Overall, the clinics participating in the LAN, which represent 347 physicians and more than 50,000 cardiac patients, showed improvement on cardiovascular measures. LAN participants reduced LDL cholesterol by 5.8 percent, improved tobacco cessation counseling by 8.9 percent, and increased the appropriate use of aspirin therapy by 8.2 percent. The strongest performance within the LAN came from Oklahoma’s Choctaw Nation Health System, which includes nine clinics and 122 physicians serving more than 17,000 cardiac patients.  The Choctaw Nation showed 6.5 percent improvement for LDL cholesterol reduction, 10.3 percent improvement for tobacco cessation counseling, and 12.4 percent for increased appropriate use of aspirin therapy. 

*In spring of 2014, CMS determined to separate the consumer type protection activities – case review, beneficiary complaint and appeals – from the quality improvement work for the QIO program going forward.  As of August 1, Oklahoma is represented by two Quality Improvement Organizations. TMF Health Quality Institute has partnered with the Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care, Primaris in Missouri and the Quality Improvement Professional Research Organization, Inc. in Puerto Rico to form the TMF Quality Innovation Network Quality Improvement Organization (QIN-QIO) to provide quality improvement work throughout Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Puerto Rico and Texas. Beneficiary and family centered care services are now provided by KEPRO.

Arkansas QIO Works with Libraries to Improve Patrons’ Health Literacy and Heart Health

As part of its work to improve cardiovascular health and health literacy in the Arkansas Delta, AFMC – the Quality Improvement Organization for Arkansas through July 2014* – partnered with seven public libraries to create health hubs in the libraries.

With assistance from AFMC:

  • The participating libraries hosted Heart Health 101 events and other health-focused learning sessions for patrons, including free health screenings.
  • Three libraries were selected to receive blood pressure monitors from the Arkansas Department of Health and set up permanent blood pressure stations.
  • The libraries created displays featuring books about healthy eating and heart health.
  • Three libraries incorporated the Million Hearts initiative in their summer reading programs. 
  • The libraries provided free health tools for patrons, such as a blood pressure wallet card from AFMC.

The libraries embraced the partnership, which began in July 2012 and ran through July 2014. In the three libraries with blood pressure stations, librarians took an active role in encouraging patrons to use the monitors.

Some of the positive results of the program included:

  • An increase in the check-out rate for health-related books the librarians say would otherwise stay on the shelf.
  • A patron of a library in Dumas brought her 85-year-old mother, Gracie, to the library to check her blood pressure because she wasn’t feeling well. The monitor showed Gracie’s blood pressure was very high, and the librarian encouraged Gracie to follow up with her physician. Gracie’s blood pressure medication was adjusted and her blood pressure is now under control.

View an AFMC video profiling several of the libraries’ individual efforts to promote heart health here.

*In spring of 2014, CMS determined to separate the consumer type protection activities – case review, beneficiary complaint and appeals – from the quality improvement work for the QIO program going forward.  As of August 1, Arkansas is represented by two Quality Improvement Organizations. TMF Health Quality Institute has partnered with the Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care, Primaris in Missouri and the Quality Improvement Professional Research Organization, Inc. in Puerto Rico to form the TMF Quality Innovation Network Quality Improvement Organization (QIN-QIO) to provide quality improvement work throughout Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Puerto Rico and Texas. Beneficiary and family centered care services are now provided by KEPRO.