Title: The Canadian Melting Pot Transforming Primary Care
1The Canadian Melting Pot Transforming Primary Care
- Canadian Health Improvement Forum
- March 21,2009
-
- Dr. Robert Wedel MD,CCFP,FCFP
- Physician Lead, Chinook Primary Care Network
- Co-Chair, Alberta AIM Initiative
-
- Facilitated by Arvelle Balon-Lyon RN, BN
- Alberta Toward Optimized Practice Program ( TOP)
2Overview
- The Way we Were
- The Way we Are
- The Way forward in Canada
3Primary Care Renewal in Canada
4The Evidentiary Vacuum
- Discussions of innovations in primary care
invariably take place in an evidentiary vacuum.
Strong evidence is lacking to support the
superiority of any one model of organizing,
funding, and delivering primary care and of many
suggested model components, including group
practice, multidisciplinary practice and
remuneration methods. - Hutchison B, Abelson J, Lavis J. Primary care in
Canada so much innovation, so little change.
Health Affairs 200120116-31.
5New Script, same old Play?
- Commission on the Future of Health Care in
Canada. Building on Values The future of Health
Care in Canada ( Romanow, Ottawa2003) - Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs,
Science and Technology. The Health of Canadians
the Federal Role, Final Report on the State of
the Health Care System in Canada (Kirby, Ottawa
2003) - Alberta, Premiers Advisory Council on Health. A
Framework for Reform. (Mazenkowski,
Edmonton2001) - Saskatchewan Commission on Medicare. Caring for
Medicare, Sustaining a Quality System (Fyke,
Saskatoon 2001) - Ontario Health Services Restructuring Commission.
Looking Back, Looking Forward, A Legacy Report
(Toronto2000) - Quebec Study Commission on Health Services and
Social Services. Emerging Solutions, Report and
Recommendations (Quebec2000) - Health Services Review Committee.
Fredericton1999 - Jeffery Simpson, Globe and Mail editorial, Jan 8,
2004 - New script, same old play?
- Reform primary health care.
- (pick a model, any model)
6National Primary Care Forum, CFPC 2005
- The most obvious revelation here today is the
huge provincial variation in approaches to
primary care renewal initiatives across this
country. - Closing remarks, Dr Ruth Wilson
72003 First Ministers Accord on Health Care Renewal
- 800M invested in primary health care between
2000 and 2006 through the Primary Health Care
Transition Fund (www.hc-sc.gc.ca) - With a goal toward Timely and equitable
access, a higher quality of care, a healthier
population, a solid future
8The Problem
- Despite all our best efforts
- using our traditional medical model,
- and the resources currently available to us,
- we have been singularly ineffective in meeting
targets and providing guideline level quality
of care. - While once Canada was seen in middle of the pack
in primary care (Starfield et al,2002), - other countries of similar wealth and health
systems have advanced and left us behind. - Health Quality Council of Canada 2007
- 2008 Commonwealth Fund Survey
9CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASMA NEW HEALTH SYSTEM
FOR THE 21TH CENTURY DON BERWICK
- These quality problems occur typically not
because of failure of good will, knowledge,
effort or resources directed to health care, but
because of fundamental shortcomings in the way
care is organized
10What we Know
- Practices that provide comprehensive and
coordinated quality primary health care confer
the most benefit to their patients. - Generally, such practices
- have a sound knowledge of their patients and of
their community resources - have effective patient flow processes
- use protocols and guidelines to support provision
of evidence-based care - provide collaborative team-based care, whether
co-located or not - use and share sophisticated electronic medical
records that include clinical decision support,
prompts, reminders, registries, etc.
Katz, Glasier et al. Applying what works in
Canada Closing the Gap. CHSRF Working Group.Jan
2008
11The Medical Home
- The greater the range of services provided by
primary care practitioners, the lower the
all-cause mortality, life expectancy, and overall
costs for health services. - those who had a primary care physician as their
regular source of care had one third lower costs
and were 19 less likely to die, even after
controlling for several other predispositions to
dying
Starfield B, Shi L. Policy relevant determinants
of health an international perspective. Health
Policy. 2002603201218 The Future of Family
Medicine. Annals of Family Medicine, 2004
12Patient-Physician Connectedness Quality of
Care
- Academic network of 4 community based health
centres and 9 hospital affiliated family
practices - 155,590 patients
- 59.3 connected to a specific physician
- 34.5 connected to a specific practice
- 6.2 could not be connected
- Physician connected pts significantly more likely
to receive guideline level care than practice
connected pts - Mammograms 78.1 vs 65.9
- HgA1C 90.3 vs 74.9
Atlas, et al. Ann Int Med1505. 325-335. March
2009
13What will it take?
- Quality doesnt just happen.
- Working harder helps, but is not sustainable.
- We need to work smarter.
14The Power of People
- Patients as Partners
- Unleashing Patients Power
- Community Engagement sensitive to family and
culture - Group visits From Need to Nutrition
15From One to Many Team Based Care
- Too much work not enough hands
- Creating Links outside the Box
- Reconstructing not only our professional identity
- But also Reconstructing our system approach to
program planning in silos - Are you up there for you, or are you up there
for the audience?
16Professional Identity Under Reconstruction
- Most difficult shift identified was for
physicians - From a traditional role, with physicians holding
the sole responsibility for patient care. - To shared responsibility, recognizing the
expanded capacity for high quality care offered
by a team. - Other disciplines are also struggling with the
same issues - Gradual recognition of the subtle difference
between substituting other providers and
supplementing the work with a team made all the
difference.
Wedel, et al. Turning Vision into Reality
Successful Integration of Primary Healthcare in
Taber, Canada, Healthcare Policy, Aug 2007
Chreim S, et al. Inter-Level Influences on the
Reconstruction of Professional Role Identity.
Academy of Management Journal. Dec 2007.
17Care Coordination The jam of integration
- Connecting the Dots to coordinated Care
- Service agreements to integrate care
- Why cant specialists get their act together?
- Capacity at the front end is only as good at the
back end - Packaging sending the work in the right way
- Avoiding Duplication, Waste and Errors
- Specialists caring about FPs and vice versa
- We are in this together.
18Access the single most important issue for
Canadians
- Office Redesign
- Without access there is no quality
- Impact BC, BCMA
- Alberta AIM (AHW, AHS, AMA)
- HQC Sask
- Manitoba Health Mb Access Initiative
- PIN Pointing Physician Integrated Networks
- Ontario (Health Quality Council, FHT)
19The Infinite Role of the Measurement
- EMR Implementation The sweat of it all
- A Disruptive innovation'
- Measurement .. the drumbeat of change
- What identifies change and what sustains it
- Indicators and Pay for Performance
- Hows my ing?
- Clinical Data Assessments, Scorecards, Checklists
- Outcomes feed our spirit
20The Medical Home
- Bringing the Pieces Together
- Access
- Co-location taking service to the people
- Connectedness and Comprehensiveness
- Safe, High Quality Clinical Care through evidence
- Collaborative teams, not autonomous substitute
providers - Sensitive to the culture and resources of the
community
21The Way Forward
- The role of the public, our patients, should not
be underestimated. - Accountability in all directions
- Accountability that supports a culture of
continuous quality improvement and ongoing
performance measurement and monitoring. - The requisite governance and organizational
effectiveness. - a clear mission and vision,
- sustained leadership and change management
strategies, with a focus on Clinical Excellence.
22The Way Forward
- What we need is more work to disseminate the
knowledge arising from these initiatives we heard
about today - this is the body of knowledge that is filling the
evidentiary vacuum we have been working in
until now. - It is time to share and publish
- Do it!
- The Canadian Melting Pot
23- With diligence, we can achieve good health for
all. - John Wesley, 1745