Accountants are increasingly becoming concerned with issues of quality• In manufacturing• And in service industries such as
healthcare
In healthcare, as in manufacturing, it was traditionally believed that quality increases costs.
Japanese manufacturing techniques involving such things as total quality management (TQM) and continuous quality improvement (CQI) are demonstrating that this is not so.
Quality can cost less
• Costs of– Rework– Scrap– Unhappy or lost customers– Product liability
• Often exceed the cost of doing something right the first time!
Studies in places like Pennsylvania have indicated that the highest cost hospitals are not always those with the best outcomes in terms of morbidity and mortality.
Four stages of competitive development of markets• First stage--If you build it they will come
• Second stage—supply catches, then exceeds demand
• Third stage--industry restructuring to reduce capacity
• Forth stage--providers focus on quality and customer value
Studies on improving physician decisions• Physician memory• Cue weighting• Problem definition• Hypothesis formulation• Information search
We will look at three that relate to the new information system installed at Peter Brannan Community Hospital.
Cue• A cue is a piece of information that
assists the physician in determining the patient’s true diagnosis
• A cue can be– A symptom– A vital sign– The result of a diagnostic test
A cue weighting is the importance the physician attaches to each individual cue.
One can actually demonstrate the physician’s decision model through the equation:
Y = a + b1X1 + b2X2 + . . . bnXn
Where Xn are the cues, bn are the weights the physicians attach to these cues, Y is the outcome in terms of morbidity and mortality, and a is a constant,
Brunswick Lens Model
Physician
The Patient’sTrue Stateof Health
Lensof
Cues
Lab test 1
Lab test 2
Xray test 1
Blood Pressure
Pulse
Expanded Brunswick Model
Regression Formulation of the Lens Model
Cues
X1
X2
X3
X4
Xn
Predictability ofthe MD
Rm = rymy’m
Predictability ofthe diagnosis
Ra = ryay’a
Achievement Index
r = ryArym
Matching Index
r = ry’Ary’m
ActualDiagnosis
Ya
PredictedDiagnosis
Optimum Model
Y’a
MD’s SelectedDiagnosis
Ym
PredictedDiagnosis MD’s
Model
Y’m
Y’m = am + b1mX1 + b2mX2 + . . . bnmXnY’a = aa + b1aX1 + b2aX2 + . . . bnaXn
Original list of factors studies in improving physician decisions• Physician memory• Cue weightings • Problem definition• Hypothesis formulation• Information search
Hypothesis Formulation . . .• Takes place when the physician
identifies possible causes of the patient’s problem, (the list of possible diagnoses).
A study in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that physicians who identify the right diagnosis in their list of possible diagnoses almost always select the correct final diagnosis.
Physicians who select the wrong diagnosis do so because they don’t initially generate and adequate number of hypotheses.
That is not the end of the process, however. Having identified the correct diagnosis, a physician must then select the optimum treatment.
One can also use a regression model to signify the proper combinations of medical inputs.
Regression Model
Yo = ao + b1oX1 + b2oX2 + . . . bnoXn
Where Yo is the optimal outcome given the current state of medical knowledge,
Xn are the medical inputs (prescriptions, treatments, etc.) and
bn are the amount of each Xn
Outcomes Management
• Proposed in 1913 by Harvard Surgeon named Emery Codman– Consisted of tracking surgical patients
to see how their treatment turned out– Objective: Determine the most likely
cause of success or failure
• The AMA essentially ignored the study
Outcomes Management
• In 1919 the American College of Surgeons performed a study of 692 hospitals– 89 met minimum standards– The report was carried to the
basement of the hotel where the presentation was made and burned
Outcomes Management
• Despite its rocky beginnings the concept is receiving renewed attention
• One approach is to build– Clinical pathways– Physician guidelines– Treatment protocols
There are large variations in physician practice patterns• Patients like to think their
physician’s approach is based upon what the research has shown works best, but unfortunately this isn’t true
Why don’t MDs follow the best practices?• They don’t know what the best
practices are• They bog down in the tremendous
amount of information needed to make decisions
They don’t know what the best practices are• Most practices in clinical medicine
have never been tested in double-blind peer-reviewed scientific studies, or even through retrospective statistical analysis.
• Even when they are, many physicians fail to hear the results
• Education is a key
Given this theory, what can medical staffs in small hospitals do to improve physician decisions?• Outcome audits• Encourage physicians to use
existing computer technology to store, organize and retrieve these protocols
What can administrators do?• Install information systems to track
resource consumption profiles by physicians– Link these to outcomes
What can administrators do?• Adopt many of the recent innovations
of manufacturers in the areas of continuous quality improvement (CQI) and total quality management (TQM)– The initial focus should be on eliminating
waste and rework and on improving productivity, customer satisfaction, market share, and profitability
To really work, the system must be clinically meaningful. The system must gather and report clinical data.