Title: Measuring the Patients Experience with Care
1Measuring the Patients Experience with Care
- Disclosure Project Discussion Forum
- July 12, 2007
- Dale Shaller, MPA
- Shaller Consulting
- Managing Director, National CAHPS Benchmarking
Database - d.shaller_at_comcast.net
- 651-430-0759
2Presentation Outline
- What is the patient experience with care?
- Why is it important?
- How can it be measured?
- What is the unique contribution of CAHPS to
measuring the patient experience? - How is the nations health system performing on
key CAHPS measures?
3IOMs 6 Aims for Improvement
Institute of Medicine. Crossing the Quality
Chasm. Washington, DC National Academy Press
2001.
4IOM Definition
- Health care that establishes a partnership among
practitioners, patients, and their familiesto
ensure that decisions respect patients wants,
needs, and preferences and that patients have the
education and support they need to make decisions
and participate in their own care.
Institute of Medicine. Envisioning the National
Health Care Quality Report. Washington, DC
National Academy Press 2001.
5Picker Dimensions
- Respect for patient values, preferences
- Coordination and integration
- Information, communication, education
- Physical comfort
- Emotional support
- Involvement of family and friends
- Transition and continuity
- Access to care
Gerteis M, et al. Through the Patients Eyes.
San Francisco Jossey-Bass 1993.
6Patient experience is strongly correlated with
other key outcomes
- Health Outcomes
- Patient adherence
- Process of care measures
- Clinical outcomes
- Business Outcomes
- Patient loyalty
- Malpractice risk reduction
- Employee satisfaction
- Financial performance
Edgman-Levitan S., Shaller D. et al. The CAHPS
Improvement Guide. Boston Harvard Medical
School 2003.
7Patients Who Experience Worse Hospital CareAre
More Likely to Report Chest Pain 12 Months After
AMI
Percent of patients with symptoms
Fremont A, et al. Patient-Centered Processes of
Care and Long-Term Outcomes of Myocardial
Infarction. JGIM 16 (December 2001) 800-808.
8Approaches to measuring patient experience with
care
- Patient surveys
- Proprietary tools
- Public domain instruments (CAHPS)
- Focus groups and interviews
- Walkthroughs
- Mystery shopping participant observation by
trained informants - Web-based convenience reporting
9Caveat emptor example of consumer convenience
reporting
10The Evolution of CAHPS
- CAHPS Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems - Most widely used survey tools for measuring the
patients experience with care - CAHPS Consortium initiated and funded by AHRQ
since 1995 - CAHPS I Focus on health plans and consumer
choice - CAHPS II Expansion of survey instruments
- CAHPS III New focus on QI and reporting
applications - Current consortium members include AHRQ, CMS,
AIR, RAND, Yale/Harvard, and Westat
11Expanding Suite of CAHPS Surveys
Facility Care
Ambulatory Care
- Health Plans
- Group Practices
- Individual Clinicians
- Behavioral Health Organizations (ECHO)
- Home Health
- Hospitals
- Dialysis Facilities
- Nursing Homes
12Common CAHPS Design Principles
- Include reports and ratings of experiences not
satisfaction - Standardization to enable valid comparisons
(through CAHPS Database) - Content based on evidence of what patients want
to know and for which they are the best or only
source of information - Question items and survey protocols based on
rigorous scientific development and testing, as
well as stakeholder input
13Common CAHPS Design Principles (continued)
- A core set of question items with option to add
from a bank of tested supplemental questions - Special populations (e.g., chronic conditions,
persons with mobility impairments) - Quality improvement applications
- Focus on development of reports as well as survey
instruments - All CAHPS surveys and services are in the public
domain
14CAHPS Health Plan Survey
- Over 138 million Americans are enrolled in health
plans that are assessed using CAHPS - Major users
- Federal purchasers CMS, OPM, DoD
- NCQA Health plan accreditation
- State Medicaid Agencies
- Health plans
- Employer coalitions (e.g., NBCH eValue8)
15Major Domains of CAHPSHealth Plan Survey 4.0
- Access getting needed care
- Access getting care quickly
- Doctor communication
- Health plan customer service, information, and
paperwork - Global ratings (overall care, health plan,
personal doctor, specialist)
16National CAHPS Benchmarking Database. 2006 CAHPS
Health Plan Survey Chartbook. (October 2006)
17CAHPS Hospital Survey (H-CAHPS)
- Nations first standardized survey of inpatient
experiences with care - Endorsed by National Quality Forum in 2005
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS)
- 2007 H-CAHPS reporting tied to hospital payment
increases - Public reporting in March 2008
18Dimensions Measured by H-CAHPS
- Composites
- Communication with doctors
- Communication with nurses
- Communications about medications
- Pain management
- Cleanliness and quiet of hospital environment
- Discharge information
- Overall rating
- Willingness to recommend
192006 H-CAHPS Composite Results
National CAHPS Benchmarking Database. 2007 CAHPS
Hospital Survey Chartbook. (May 2007)
20CAHPS Clinician Group Survey
- Adopted by AQA and submitted for endorsement by
NQF - Adult, pediatric, and specialty versions
- Core composites
- Access Getting appointments and care when needed
- Doctor communication
- Office staff courtesy and helpfulness
- Many supplemental items
- Health promotion and education
- Shared decision making
- QI items
- Visit-specific questions
21Implementation Models for CAHPS Clinician Group
Survey
- Regional collaboratives
- BQI markets
- Aligning Forces markets
- Accreditation/certification
- American Board of Medical Specialties
- National health plan consortium
- CSS initiative
- Independent efforts
- Health plans
- Medical groups
22Public Reporting of Survey Measures
- Out of 211 report cards in AHRQs Report Card
Compendium - 113 include patient experience measures
- 69 health plan reports
- 20 medical group/clinic reports
- 19 hospital reports
- 3 nursing home reports
- 2 individual physician reports
- http//www.talkingquality.gov/compendium/index.htm
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