Title: Health Informatics Masterclass
1Bridging the Quality Chasm
- Health Informatics Masterclass
- 20th January 2006
- City University London
I am sorry. Your disease and our
organisation just do not match.
Marc Berg Full Professor Health Policy and
Management, Erasmus University,
Rotterdam Partner, Plexus Medical Group, Amsterdam
2The Quality Chasm
- There is a large gap between what the health care
system could deliver and what it actually
delivers - Coordination problems
- Delays before and during care process
- Communication errors
- Absence of patient-centered approach
- Waste
- Direct harm through mistakes, unnecessary
waiting, sub-optimal diagnosis/treatment
3Variation
Acute cholecystectomies per hospital/regional
population (Source RVZ Gepaste Zorg)
4Patient safety and effectiveness
- Volume of high risk surgery abdominal aorta
surgery
N 71. Source Hospital performance Indicators
Dutch Healthcare Inspectorate
5Patient safety and effectiveness
- Volume of high risk surgery esophagectomy
N 71. Source Hospital performance Indicators
Dutch Healthcare Inspectorate
6Patient safety and effectiveness
7The Cost of Poor Quality
- Cost of Poor Quality
- error rates are orders of magnitude higher than
in other industries - poor quality care accounts for 35-45 of HC
expenditures in US - Most costly
- medication misuse
- hospital overuse
- preventable hospital-acquired infections
- poor disease management diabetes, depression,
HF, vaccination, etc. - Of course, in Mainland Europe much less waste
- 20-25?
8The Cost of Poor Quality
- Recent Dutch Study
- Costs of Pressure Sores, Wound Infections and
Medication Errors in Hospitals 0,5 Billion Euros
per year - is 1 of total health care costs in Holland
- And in UK, national target is to increase
spending to European Average - . What a waste???
9Vision bridging the quality chasm
- Delivering top quality care
Optimally patient-centered
Effective safe
Learning organisation
Efficient
10 IT SEEMS, THEN, THAT WE REALLY NEED IT.
11A little history the link between IT and Quality
- 1950s Computer will rapidly improve doctors
decision making! - 1990 Dick and Steen report USHealth care in
dire need of a central nervous system EPR by
year 2000 - End of 90s disappointment set in, health ICT
just wasnt delivering - Internet bubble crashed projects and subsidies
and research groups withered away
12Why the disappointment?
- We have to face the fact that the majority of ICT
projects fails - all over the board. Some countries (UK) more
open than others (the Netherlands, France) - Types of failure
- technical
- financial
- organisational
- clinical
- Is primarily due to human and organisational
reasons!
13The search for synergy
Information System
Primary work processes - patient care activities
Secondary work processes - management - support
14For IT to become really powerful
- IT can monitor processes, allow cooperation
between professionals over larger spans of time
and space, allow interorganizational
cooperation. - We require Uniformity of Terminology
- We require Standardization of Work Processes
- We require interprofessional transparancy about
processes and data - We require usually more registration work
- More complete records
- More precise records
15Has IT so far significantly helped overcome the
quality chasm?
- Not really we tend to forget that
- IT implementation is organizational development
- there are no technological solutions for
organizational problems - Asking the question whether Electronic Medication
Systems can prevent medication errors without
integrally taking its practices of use into
account is like evaluating the efficacy of a drug
without taking note of how and when and with what
other substances the drug is taken
16IT and Quality have become specialties the
problem is being approached in fragmented ways
17IT is a case in point
- US CPOE set as target without proper idea of
how, why - Doing CPOE without having basic IT infrastructure
is like building a roof without first building
the walls - CPOE as separate project is meaningless
- Has to be integrated in a larger program of
organizational change - Formalizing Ordering Process
- Protocolizing sets of orders
18Let us Not Forget the Painful Lessons!
- IT is probably the simplest part of the complex
sociotechnical changes we want to bring. - Yet if we do not start with these complex
changes, we might as well forget the IT! - The only way is the hard way
19What is required?
- To address Quality Chasm, we need to
fundamentally integrate Quality and IT
development - Fundamental redesign of existing care processes
at the level of the primary process of care - while integrating professional and
organizational quality
20Integrated Care Pathways as Organizational Root
Model
- Our current step-by-step mode of delivering
health care used to be the perfect way of
delivering care - But has become dysfunctional
- Inefficient loss of time, unnecessary steps
taken - Patient unfriendly search your way through the
jungle - Continuous battles at shop floor
- Increases chances of errors much falls between
the cracks - Examples
- Heart Failure Care
- High readmission rates
- Poor guideline compliance
- Stroke Care
- Long LOS, many wrong beds
- Poor guideline compliance
21Integrated Care Pathways as Organizational Root
Model
- Restructure current processes from the light of
the clinical problem
Learning Organisation
Patient centered
Effectivity
Efficiency
Care Processes
Care pathways
Flexible Standardization
22Integrated Care Pathways as Organizational Root
Model
- Integrated care pathways can be developed for
largest categories of patients - 80 of activities can be standardized for 80
- No standard approach to every individual, but to
category of patients - Leaves individual trajectories fully flexible
- Embedded in working agreements (SOPs), forms,
IT - Realize
- Evidence based SOPs
- Reduced coordination work
- Patient centered organization of care
- The core ingredient of patient safety
23 INTEGRATED CARE PATHWAYS SEVEN PRINCIPLES
24Embed the desired process in the organization for
a cluster of care pathways
- Combine organizational and medical quality -
integrate guideline as organizational default - Program the individual steps in planning
- i.e. triage system, SLAs CT, etc
- ? filemanagement system.
252. Organize process so that each step adds value
- Optimize efficacy and patient-centeredness
- Minimize safety-risks
- Optimize efficiency
Diagn
Surg
Inpat.
Inpat.
Outp
Outp
263. Organize process so that each professionals
expertise is maximally used
- Redelegation of tasks
- Team work optimizing cooperation
- Share responsibilities
- With the patient as a partner
- Shared (medical)record keeping
274. Smart standardization
- The average patient does not exist as an
individual - But 80 of all patients do go through an 80
similar trajectory! - Only standardize when it addresses a problem
- Not just making a protocol or finegrained
pathway!
284. Smart standardization
295. Enable care to be planned......and plan it
where necessary!
- Knowing which patient categories need what at
which time proactive planning - Slots / direct access
- Keep some free time slots for emergency calls
- Access to the agendas of other departments
306. Performance management
- Create performance indicators for integrated care
pathways - (Clusters of) care pathways will become
self-steering units - The dream of the dashboard...
- ...and the struggles with present IT
infrastructure.
316. Performance management
Coloncarcinoma
327. Improving upscaling
- Solve bottlenecks for the largest possible number
of trajectories - no suboptimization
- Prevent a project-jungle
- several patient groups
- entire location / hospital wide
- Take 80 of patients as starting point
- Look at crucial bottlenecks
- Upscale interventions as much as possible
- Make sure care programms are an outcome
337. Improving upscaling
Nurse visit
Outp
Surg
Diagn
Diagn
Inpat.
POS
Nurse follow up
34Change process that takes time!
Organisation
ICT
35Process supporting ICT Future EHCR
- Integrated guidelines that guide without overly
constraining - Order-communication
- With Order-sets
- Workflow
- Based on steps and task delegation within care
programs - Smart EPRs
- Reminders, alerts, taken from the care programs
underlying guidelines - Triage supporting systems
- support triage through the care programs
underlying guidelines - Datawarehouse systems
- Crucial voor measurement infrastructure, and
real-time coding - Protocol-driven booking systems
36Process supporting IT
- This can only succeed when standardizing care
programs. - and this subsequently affords the integration
of the individual steps in the care program - Crucial, then, for EPR, DWH, order/entry
- Which fields standardized?
- Which decision rules built in?
- How to design DWH?
- All these questions are answered by through the
care programs selected, and the monitoring data
that those care programs require
37ExternalQuality and Cost Reports
InternalQuality and Cost Management Reports
Feedback
Outcomes