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Home At Last

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Linda Gordon Regional Coordinator. Community Care Concepts ... Hospitals are under pressure land lack partnerships to offload those pressures ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Home At Last


1
Home At Last
Community And Hospitals Working Together For A
Smooth Transition Home
  • Links2Care
  • Linda Gordon Regional Coordinator
  • Community Care Concepts
  • Veronica Macdonald Executive Director

2
Ontario, Canada
3
The Ontario Health Care System
  • Ontario
  • Central province and business heart of Canada
  • 1.08 million sq. kms larger than France Spain
    combined
  • 12.8 million population - number of seniors
    (baby boomers) doubling over next 25 years
  • Publicly-funded health care system (38 billion
    annually)
  • 21,000 fee-for-service physicians funded by the
    Ontario Health Insurance Plan
  • 154 hospitals
  • 14 Home Care Programs
  • 36 Public Health Units
  • 700 community support service agencies (CSS), 300
    mental health agencies and a small number of
    child treatment centres

4
A System In Transition and Under Pressure
  • Transition towards local health authorities - 14
    LHINs (Local Health Integrated Networks)
  • Move planning, coordination decision-making
    closer to the community
  • Very new established March 2006 fully
    operational March 2007
  • Integration, innovation new ways of doing
    business are at the forefront
  • Pressures on hospitals
  • Emergency departments bursting at the seams
  • Hospitals beds occupied by patients who could be
    cared for at home
  • Greater efficiencies in patient flow-through
    needed
  • Home Care and Community Support Services
    chronically under funded hospitals receive the
    bulk of the funding
  • Looking for integrated community solutions

5
The Aging At Home Strategy
  • New funding - 700 million over 3 years
  • Provide seniors and their care givers with a
    continuum of community-based services they need
    to stay healthier and live more independently in
    their own homes
  • Increase community-based services for seniors and
    involve non-traditional service providers
  • Relieve pressures on hospitals and long-term care
    beds
  • Looking for a comprehensive mix of community
    services, integration and innovation being key
  • LHINs are in charge
  • There are high expectations from the LHIN to
    provide innovative and integrated solutions .

6
AN AGE OLD ISSUE
  • As early as 1885, the need for effective
    discharge planning was recognized
  • There is a need for someone at the hospital to
    direct the patient, to represent the patient and
    his interests someone instructed as to all
    existing means of preventing and treating
    illness. He should help to make those who can
    become self-reliant or obtain help for those who
    need it or else medical care may fail of its good
    purpose.
  • Sir Thomas Locke

7
Setting the Scene Integration on the Ground
  • Health services operate in silos and government
    policy directs system focusing on elimination of
    silos, joint solutions and service integration
  • CSS agencies are junior players in a big playing
    field
  • Hospitals are under pressure land lack
    partnerships to offload those pressures
  • Home Care is focused on more direct service
    delivery and they are not focused on coordinated
    care.
  • There is a disconnect between community agencies
    and hospitals
  • Historically a provincial wide strategy has not
    been in place to bridge gaps, however with LHINs,
    the pressure is on to work together and integrate
    services but experience is lacking
  • In particular, the Mississauga/Halton LHIN are
    champions of change and are advocating for new
    and innovative ideas, especially Home At Last

8
Why Home At Last
  • Hospitals and community agencies realized that
    joint planning could improve transition from
    hospital to home utilizing multi-disciplinary
    hospital and community team works to streamline
    the discharge process
  • Improved patient throughput had potential to
    decrease the number of days that hospitals were
    experiencing critical bed shortages
  • Transition from hospital to home difficult for
    some patients
  • Safe transition often a barrier to discharge
    resulting in increase length of stay in hospital
  • Some families and patients falling between the
    cracks when discharged (into an abyss)

9
Role of Program Partners
  • Hospitals change their discharge processes to
    achieve a pre-determined daily discharge time
    that supports patient flow
  • Lead Community Agency coordinates required basket
    of services for the patient to remain safe and
    comfortable at home
  • Home Care provides nursing and support with ADLs
    and develop and monitor the basket of services if
    the client is eligible for their services

10
Home At Last - Eligibility
  • Client Characteristics
  • 65 years
  • Lives in service area
  • Able to direct own care, e.g. medications,
    self-administer insulin injections, oxygen etc.
  • Medically stable, not in need of immediate
    medical home care intervention
  • Mobile weight bearing with a minimal assist of
    one person and are able to get into vehicle or
    home with the assistance of one person

11
Home At Last Process
12
Home At Last - Description
  • Is an innovative partnership between community
    support service agencies, Home Care and hospitals
    to provide for planned, escorted discharge from
    hospital to home following their hospital stay.
  • Helps patients make the transition from hospital
    to home safely, smoothly and comfortably. The
    program ensures that patients need not feel
    vulnerable and alone after their hospital stay,
    but instead have the support they need.
  • Designed for seniors living alone, with an older
    or frail caregiver, or with family away all day.
  • There is a 24 hour pre-determined/coordinated
    discharge to minimize delays in hospital
    discharge and preventable readmissions
  • Care Coordinator and front line staff assess home
    environment and ensure community care supports
    are arranged to ensure the person is receiving a
    basket of services which will enable them to
    remain in their home as long as possible.

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18
Results and Benefits
  • Model for hospital-community integration, working
    together to improve health system performance
  • Decrease length of stay (every hour counts)
  • Decrease risk associated with complex discharges
  • Improved patient satisfaction with discharge
    process
  • Improved patient safety beyond the hospital
    walls
  • Increased engagement of patients and physicians
    in the discharge process
  • Supported the philosophy and belief in seamless
    care between community and hospital
  • Reduction in re-admissions
  • Improved identification of and response to
    patient needs appearing after the return home

19
Challenges and Helpful Hints
  • Hospitals can be hesitant to involve
    non-traditional partners and may not recognize
    benefits to their business
  • Hospitals are large and complex and it is vital
    to the program to identify an hospital champion
    who can effect change
  • Hospitals need to make changes on their end to
    enhance discharge - this is no small task - be
    patient
  • Program required units with good care paths help
    to identify an expected date of discharge and
    thus able to meet a pre-determined discharge time
  • Educate, inform and update doctors and all levels
    of hospital staff on the program and encourage
    them to provide 24 hour notice of discharge

20
Program Evaluation
  • Evaluation Objectives
  • Describe the services provided
  • Identify impacts
  • Provide feedback on the development and
    implementation
  • Evaluation Methods
  • Discharge and service tracking
  • Discharge Patient Satisfaction Surveys
  • Follow-up Patient Satisfaction Surveys
  • Caregiver Satisfaction Survey
  • Focus Group Interview with Key Stakeholders and
    Frontline Workers
  • Project Potential Outcomes
  • Reduce length of hospital care
  • Reduced delay in hospital discharge
  • Improved discharge processes with respect to
    hospital flow
  • Reduced challenges associated with the transition
    from hospital to home
  • Increased access to community based services
    following discharge
  • Reduced stress and burden of care for informal
    (family) caregivers
  • Patient and caregiver satisfaction with discharge
    process and transition to home
  • Reduced re-admissions to hospital

21
Integration Key Learnings
  • The first steps in developing the program are
    difficult and time consuming
  • The community sector is often primary leader and
    most often makes the first move to initiate the
    program
  • Improving health care/hospital performance can
    strengthen the case for reinvestment of funding
    dollars into community services
  • Other hospitals watch for positive outcomes and
    once those happen are quick to adopt innovative
    solutions such as Home At Last
  • In the end hospitals learned to look beyond
    traditional boundaries and that innovative
    solutions and partnerships enhance care and
    improve outcomes in a cost effective wayEveryone
    wins!

22
Contact Information
  • Contact for information on the Home At Last
    Program
  • Links2Caresmelhuish_at_links2care.ca
  • Community Care Concepts
  • Veronica MacDonald
  • ccc1_at_golden.net
  • Grand River Hospital
  • Gloria Whitson-Shea, VP, CNO
  • gloria.whitson-shea_at_grhosp.on.ca
  • Ontario Community Support Association
    www.ocsa.on.ca
  • Contact for information on the Aging At Home
    Strategy
  • Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-term Care
    Aging At Home Strategy www.health/gov.on.ca
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