+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Date post: 13-Mar-2016
Category:
Upload: argentum
View: 214 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
 
Popular Tags:
42
THE USE OF CLINICAL OUTCOMES TO PARTNER WITH ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATIONS ALFA May 2014 Anne Ellett, N.P., M.S.N. Sr. Clinical Specialist SILVERADO #ALFA2014
Transcript
Page 1: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

THE USE OF CLINICAL OUTCOMES TO PARTNER WITH ACCOUNTABLE CARE

ORGANIZATIONS

ALFA May 2014 Anne Ellett, N.P., M.S.N.

Sr. Clinical Specialist SILVERADO

#ALFA2014

Page 2: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Objectives Describe how Assisted Living communities can collaborate with ACO’s for common goals Discuss the value of tracking and measuring clinical outcomes in Assisted living How to identify which clinical outcomes will be most beneficial to your AL community and residents.

Page 3: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Accountable Care Organizations are intended to encourage voluntary networks

of providers to collaborate on care for Medicare beneficiaries with the aim of

improving outcomes and reducing costs.

Participating providers will be eligible to receive a portion of shared savings from bundled

payments

Page 4: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Translates to: ACO’s will seek out partners who have demonstrated quality and are able to

manage risk

Achieved by: • Measured outcomes by verifiable data • Excellent care management throughout the

progression of frailty • Aligned financial incentives

Page 5: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Post- acute is the Key to Managing Health Care Costs

Page 6: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Formation of ACO’s is in agreement with the ACA

Movement away from fee-for-service

(rewards for more care but not necessarily better outcomes/care)

towards quality based care

Moves the risk to the provider

Page 7: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Top 5 Needs of ACO’s

• Data management/technology • Network development • Case management • Patient engagement • Organizational realignment

Page 8: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Compare an ACO to Building a House

The ACO is the general contractor Wants to contract with other quality sub-contractors All of them share in the construction of the final product and are responsible for the final outcome

Page 9: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

ACO’s - Strategic Change Involving Hospitals and Their Partners

• Focus on 3 key areas:

Clinical Efficiency throughout the care continuum – partnering with post-acute providers Clinical Quality Physician partnerships

Page 10: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Clinical Efficiency

More efficient, coordinated management of a growing census of complex and comorbid patients Reduced hospital readmissions Build an infrastructure for enhancing transition planning Accountability between the hospital and post-acute providers

Page 11: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Clinical Quality Hospital reimbursement will be reduced if quality

measures are not met Quality measures cover a wide range: Patient satisfaction Adverse events/patient safety – i.e., infections/falls/pressure ulcers Care coordination/transitions Post-acute follow-up – immunizations/screenings Management of chronic dx – diabetes, HTN, CHF, CAD, COPD, osteoporosis, anti-coagulant therapy

Page 12: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Emphasis on Collaboration and Coordinated Management

Electronic medical records Shared risk for poor outcomes Increased reimbursement for good quality measures

Page 13: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Where Can Assisted Living Fit into the ACO World?

AL can become an integral part of the post-acute continuum Data driven hospital relationships Continuum of services for frail elderly with multiple co-morbidities –SNF, outpatient rehab, AL’s, home health, physician private practices Assist to enhance transition planning by building relationships with nurse care managers

Page 14: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

RESIDENT DEMOGRAPHICS

ALFA reports that the average age of AL resident is 86.9 years. Female residents (73.6%) outnumber male residents by almost 3 to 1. The average length of stay for assisted living resident is 28.3 months.

Page 15: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

RESIDENTS HAVE MULTIPLE COMORBIDITIES

Page 16: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

ASSISTED LIVING IS NOT PROVIDING HEALTH CARE, YET……LOOK WHO IS

LIVING UNDER YOUR ROOF…

Page 17: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

ACO’s are Going to be Very Interested in Your Management of

Your Frail Elderly Residents

What are your differentiators?

Page 18: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

What are the “Hot Buttons” for Hospitals and ACO’s now?

Rehospitalization within 30 days CHF, COPD, dehydration, pneumonia, sepsis, UTI’s Pressure ulcers Falls Management of chronic illnesses - HTN, CHF, CAD, COPD, DM, osteoporosis, anti-coagulant therapy

Page 19: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

System for Tracking, Collecting and Improving Clinical Outcomes

These systems will be your differentiators Demonstrate your 30-day readmission rate by condition and your plan to decrease readmissions How are you doing on managing those “hot buttons?” (hospitalizations, P.U., falls, management of chronic diseases?)

Page 20: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

AL is an Integral Part of the Continuum of Care

Partner with hospital on discharge plans for AL patients from first day of hospital admission Assist the hospital with decreasing in-hospital LOS by improved management of post-acute patients Effective use of your nursing resources Develop systems and show data of clinical outcomes Assist hospitals to decrease hospital readmission penalties

Page 21: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Partnerships are value-based. What can we bring?

Page 22: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

What is Worthwhile to Track?

Falls/Fractures Hospitalizations and rehospitalizations Chronic disease management Pressure ulcers

Page 23: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Managing Transfers-out/ Rehospitalizations

Hospitals are penalized if they have patients rehospitalized for same diagnosis within 30 days AL can put together a program to demonstrate to hospitals their ability to care for their returning residents

Page 24: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Do you track hospitalizations? Do you know if you have a problem?

Every time a resident is “911’ed” , this is an opportunity for team review – what could have been done to avoid a 911 call? S/S of illness in elderly can be subtle

Page 25: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Emergency Send-outs

Prior known change of condition? Due to a fall? Exacerbation of chronic condition? Due to behavior changes ? Admitted/not admitted? # of 911 calls/month?

Page 26: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

A Resident Returning from the Hospital is at High Risk

Elderly admitted to the hospital: At discharge, 31% deteriorated in ADLs At 3 months, 51% had either died or worsened in functional status Continued decline in function after hospitalization: 2 days post-hospitalization, 65% lost ability to walk At discharge, 2/3 had not improved in function 10% deteriorated further

Page 27: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Elderly Admitted to Hospital

Bed rest

pressure sores

pain

poor motivation

incontinence

weakness

weight loss

Urinary infection/sepsis delirium narcotics

urinary retention

IMMOBILITY

Page 28: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Your Plan for Decreasing Rehospitalizations

Keeping in touch with your resident and family during the hospitalization Meeting with your team to formulate a rehabilitation program for the specific resident/diagnosis (there are no surprises) when they return to your community What are the goals for post acute discharge? – hit the ground running – no surprises… Establish a pattern of good communication with all providers involved in the resident’s care- team approach

Page 29: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Staff Training

What are the most common reasons for hospitalizations in your community? (falls, CHF, DM, pneumonia, behaviors) Do they know how to recognize the subtle signs of worsening conditions? Empower/reward them to report status changes early (S/S of illness are subtle in the elderly)

Page 30: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Resources

You can’t provide good care for frail elderly by yourselves We’re not delivering health care but…

Page 31: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Build Partnerships Communication with discharge

planners/nurse case managers Partner with an excellent home health with PT/OT/ST Active pressure wound prevention program Build relationship with a good hospice, integrate them into your community

Page 32: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Internal Resources

Nursing – if you have a nurse, don’t expect 1 nurse to be able to provide good nursing care to 100 frail residents… Regional/Consulting Nurse – are you getting the most value from them? Vendors that will provide staff training: Home health, PT, Pharmacy, Hospice, DME, Professional organizations – Alz. Assoc., Am. Parkinson’s Disease Assoc (APDA), Heart Assoc.

Page 33: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Summary – How to Manage Emergency Transfers and Rehospitalizations

What type of assessment and care plans were in place? Reason/dx for the send-out Identification of trends in your community What type of system do you have in place to communicate with the acute care system about your residents AL is expected to manage – or facilitate management of – chronic illnesses of their residents

Page 34: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Benefits of Measuring Clinical Outcomes

ALLOWS YOU TO SHOW EXCELLENCE! You can’t improve something if you are not measuring it Measuring specific outcomes assists you to communicate clearly with your team and increases the efficiency of work – provides focus Measuring and sharing the outcomes with the team empowers them and builds a culture of transparency

Page 35: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Sharing Your Outcome Measures with Residents/ Families is a

Customer Satisfier

Proving that you are measuring clinical outcomes is a powerful testament to your quality of care. The eyes are on AL now…

Bad things can happen even to good operators – by establishing a system of measuring outcomes, you have the tools to enable you to quickly respond to formulate a plan to address a bad situation

Page 36: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Hospitals and the Nurse Case Managers will Remember Which AL’s

Can’t Manage their Residents with Chronic Disease

Hospitals will look at their own analysis of who comes back into their hospital – Where had they been discharged to and what was the diagnosis?

Page 37: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

4.2%

4.4%

4.6%

4.8%

5.0%

5.2%

5.4%

5.6%

5.8%

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

5.1%

5.3%

4.8%

5.0%

5.3%

5.1%

5.4%

5.7%

4.9%

5.2%

SILVERADO AVERAGE RATE OF TEMPORARY DISCHARGE

Page 38: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Pulmonary 6%

Cardiac 8%

Lacerations/Wound repair 10%

Tx of Fx or rule out Fx 16%

Psych Eval or Tx 4%

Seizure/ Alt LOC 9%

Pneumonia 6%

UTI 7%

Infectious Process 7%

Dehydration 2%

GI 1%

Vascular 7%

Other 17%

Silverado - Temporary Discharges by Diagnosis

Page 39: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

AL Providers who have an organized approach and can show

data that demonstrates quality, will be a preferred partner with the

ACO’s in their post-acute network

Page 40: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

• What can AL’s do to partner with ACO’s? Communication What problem can you help them solve?

• Be proactive Do you know your physicians? Do they know your goals? Are your doctors affiliated with an ACO?

• Identify areas of improvement and fix it • Demonstrate quality with data that confirms it

Page 41: 2014 alfa conference the use of clinical outcomes

Recommended