Title: Patient Flow Collaborative Learning Session 2
1Patient Flow Collaborative Learning Session 2
Welcome 5TH October 2004 Melbourne Convention
Centre
2Patient Flow Collaborative Learning Session 2
Dr Jenny Bartlett Chief Clinical Advisor 5TH
October 2004
3Welcome
- Challenge each other to improve patient care
- Promote team work
- Plan to spread
- Lots to share
- Have fun
4Victorian Travelling Fellowship Program
- Strategically drawn together to underpin the
Patient Flow Collaborative innovations - Story boards on display highlighting
- Who
- Where
- When
- Major learnings
5Housekeeping
- Mobile phones to silent/vibrate
- Delegate Packs on tables
- Lunch will be served in the foyer (1200
1245) - Rest rooms
- Fire alarms and exits
6Housekeeping
- Take your belongings with you during the day
room configuration will change - Work in partnership no one knows all the
answers - Support people Clinical Innovations Team
Planning Group Members (red badges)
7Story Board Voting
- Each team has been given a sticker to allocate to
the storyboard they think is the best - Criteria includes
- Achievements
- Team development
- Impact for communication
- Deadline for voting is 1430hrs
- Winner announced at the end
- of the day
8Agenda
- 9.10 10.30 Where are we and whats next? Lee
Martin - 10.30 10.45 Morning Tea
- 10.45 12.00 First Concurrent Session
- Team Presentations
- 12.00 12.45 Lunch
-
9Second Concurrent Session12.45 2.00
-
- How to encourage a culture of innovation Cathy
Balding and Mary Mitchelhill - Outpatient department toolkit Veronica
Strachan and Kim Moyes - Communication strategies Julian Murphy and
Sharon Neal - Advanced project management Ruth Smith and
Claire Mackinlay - Managing variation, elective emergency Lee
Martin and Bernadette McDonald
and Marcus Kennedy
10Agenda
2.00 2.30 Afternoon tea 2.30 3.15 Team
planning time 3.15 - 4.30 Healthsmart Anthony
Bibby Update web delay tracker Marcus
Kennedy Paper based delay tracker Peter
Wright 4.30 4.45 Update Melbourne
Health Melbourne Health Next steps and
close Marcus Kennedy
11To change the results, we need to change the
paradigm
12Hospital Demand Management Performance
Kathryn Cook Director Metropolitan Health Service
Relations 5 October 2004
13Hospital Bypass
14Percentage of time spent on bypass by hospital
September 2004
15Patients spending longer than 24 hours in the ED
16Patients spending longer than 24 hours in the ED
by hospital
17Patients spending longer than 48 hours in the ED
18Patients spending longer than 48 hours in the ED
by hospital
19Mental Health Patients spending longer than 24
hours in the ED
20Mental Health Patients spending longer than 24
hours in the ED by hospital
21Percentage of elective patients postponed before
admission grouped by postponement reason by
hospital
22Patient Flow
23Where are we and whats next?
Lee Martin Collaborative Director 5 October 2004
24Resource pack
25Orientation ?Learning session 1
- Masterclass series
- 12 weeks of rigorous diagnostics
- Whole system overview
- Social networks
- Breaking the myths
26Learning session 1
- Formed innovation teams
- Constraint diagnostics
- Started improvements
- Utilisation of the first draft toolkits
- Building on the excellent work done already
- Formed communication plans
27Individual constraint areas
- Bed management
- OPD
- LOS
- Elective stream
- Theatres
- Radiology
- Emergency Care
- Sub-acute
28Stickers
29Individual constraint areas
Bed Mgt
OPD
Elect
LOS
Radiology
Sub Acute
ED
OR
30Voting
- The answer is NO
- disruptive
- pointless
- vote the right/best way
- The answer is YES
- progressive
- helpful
- moving in right direction
- The answer is
- AMBIGUOUS
- results are mixed
- pros and cons
- good in parts
- The answer is
- HARD TO DETERMINE
- not enough data
- not clear, not sure
- need to investigate
- hard to make sense of
31Voting time
From the Collaborative work so far, do you feel
you have identified the true constraint areas?
No
Yes
Ambiguous
Hard to determine
32Organisational view
?
?
- Building whole care view
- Removing key constraint area
- Practiced improvement tools and creating new ones
- Building on appreciation in our organisation
(Can
do this task!) - Starting to look at sustainability?
33Sustainability planning
Sustainability assessment toolkit
34Next challenge
- Once removed major constraint, what next?
- Remove constraint ?
- Understand and manage capacity and demand
- Manage flow with pull systems (no delays in
process) - Build new ways to treat patients
- Develop your modernisation plan
35Voting time
Would establishing capacity and demand management
with scheduling systems help to build effective
organisational flow?
No
Yes
Ambiguous
Hard to determine
36Analysing variation and manage capacity and
demand
Speciality
Divisional
Organisational
37Emergency Admissions
Range between the process limits is 20-55 Average
is 38
38 Elective Admissions
Range between the process limits is 4-50 Average
is 27
39Understanding EL/EM Variation
Which has the greater variation Emergency or
Elective
40Admissions
Range between the process limits is 19-95 Average
is 57
41Discharges
Range between the process limits is 5-107 Average
is 56
42Understanding Adm/Disch Variation
Which has the greater variation Admissions or
Discharges
43Variation in Inpatient Processes
44Predicting Emergency Admissions
45Variation in Admissions and Discharges/Deaths
46Variation in Bed Usage
47Murphys law
Problem will occur at the worst point, the worst
time and when you least expect it.
48Simple pull system for managing inpatient delays
Front page
Back page
49Hot topic call
50Managing capacity and demand
Elective Increase day surgery
Remove delays in length of stay
ED Capacity and Demand Remove through Chronic
Disease Management
Length of stay Decrease repeat tests, examinations
Eliminate not ready for care, cancellations on
day of admission
51NHS 10 High Impact Changes
Further information
52Postcards
Right now, what is the one service improvement
program that is your priority to deal with flow
constraints?
53Concurrent Session 1Team Presentations
- Bellarine Room 1
- Ballarat Health Service
- Goulburn Valley Health
- Western Health
- Royal Children's Hospital
- Felicity Topp and Rochelle Condon
54Concurrent Session 1Team Presentations
- Bellarine Room 2
- Royal Womens Hospital
- Southern Health Monash Medical Centre
- Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre
- Maroondah Hospital
- Calvary Health Care
- David Langton and Mary Mitchelhill
55Concurrent Session 1Team Presentations
- Bellarine Room 3
- Northeast Health - Wangaratta
- Bendigo Healthcare Group
- Southern Health Dandenong Hospital
- Peninsula Health
- Box Hill Hospital
- Melanie Hendrata and Kim Moyes
56Concurrent Session 1Team Presentations
- Bellarine Room 4
- LaTrobe Regional Hospital
- St Vincents Health
- Northern Health
- Angliss Hospital
- Bayside Health
- Tony Snell and Prue Beams
57Concurrent Session 1Team Presentations
- Bellarine Room 5
- Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
- Melbourne Health
- Barwon Health
- Austin Health
- Peter Bradford and Ruth Smith
58Morning Tea
Meet us in the concurrent sessions at 10.45
59Team Planning Time
- Lee Martin
- Manager Clinical Innovation Agency
- 5H October 2004
60Team Planning
- Share the knowledge and ideas you have gained
today - Use sustainability tool results in planning
- Work through the planner and develop your
strategic approach
61Ask yourselves
- Will our plans help us make a significant
improvement in our program measures? - What other clinical areas would benefit from
learning about the improvements we have made? - Who are the expressive team members that can help
us engage with other departments and disciplines? - Does our communication plan support spread of our
improvements? - Do we have all the key people involved in our
innovation work that we need?
62Task List
- Share today's learnings
- Develop the project plan
- Use the laptops and CDs for further ideas
- Review and update communication plans
- Use results of sustainability tools
63Health SMART
Anthony Bibby Portfolio Manager Patient and
Client Management Systems Office of Health
Information Systems
Department of Human Services
64Agenda
- The HealthSMART program
- The Governance Structure
- Status of Projects
- Finance Materials Management
- Patient Client Management
- Clinical Systems
- Shared ICT Services
65HealthSMART The Strategy
- Replace obsolete, unsupported core systems with
capable, industry-standard ones - Introduce new systems capable of supporting the
transformation of health care - Refresh and develop the ICT infrastructure
- Develop a strategic program management structure
- Deliver ICT services through Shared ICT Services
using accredited (panel) products
66HealthSMART a 4 year Program -Three project
streams
- Resource Management Systems
- Finance and materials
- Human resources
- Clinical Systems
- Medication management (e-prescribing)
- Investigative services ordering and results
reporting
67HealthSMART a 4 year Program -Three project
streams
- Patient / Client Management Systems
- Hospitals (deliverable)
- Primary and Community Health Services
(deliverable) - Mental Health (integration)
- Ambulance (VACIS project)
- Dental (EXACT project)
68Department of Human Services
69HealthSMART program structureAgency
participation the partnership
Board of Health Information Systems Chair
Patricia Faulkner
Clinical SystemsSteering Committee Chair
Brendan Murphy
Resource Management Steering Committee Chair
Kathy Byrne
Patient Client ManagementSteering
Committee Chair Sherene Devanesen
Financial Management Group Supply Chain Group
Inpatient Management Group Ambulatory Services
Group Client Management Group Health Info Mgmt
Group
Medication Management Group Orders Results Group
Office of Health Information Systems
Chief Information Officer Group
Policy/Legislative Change Groups
Technical Expert GroupsDevelop and implement
technical design and standards
Health Service Implementation
Health Service Implementation
Health Service Implementation
Health Service Staff
Vendor
Health Service Staff
Vendor
Health Service Staff
Vendor
70System-wide Approach
- Lead Agency approach
- Funding provided to all Health Services to
support participation in Program - Single product evaluation and selection processes
(Panels) - Standard baseline of core products across all
agencies - All implementations will use defined standards
and project methodologies - Single program with multiple projects
71Guiding principles
- Maximum leverage will be derived from existing
investments - Buy not build Internal development, if any,
will be minimised - Purchasing power will be maximised
- Financial support conditional on adopting the
HealthSMART strategic approach and principles - DHS provides majority funding (70 - 80) to
implement panel products, agencies contribute to
projects and carry recurrent
72OHIS functions
The Office will provide a number of core
competencies, functions and services supporting
delivery of the Health ICT Strategy
Health Systems Development
Program Management
Strategy Policy
Technical Services
Engages other departments including state and
regulatory representation on strategy
development, healthcare system design and
innovation, and policy and standards creation.
Comprises portfolios of Resource Management
Systems, Patient Client Management Systems, and
Clinical Systems. Works with stakeholder groups
to provide direction on all stages of product
life cycle management - development, procurement,
implementation, maintenance and support.
System architecture and design. Technical
architecture and design. Development and
implementation of standards. Establishment of
essential hardware and software infrastructure,
development of shared services capability.
Design and implementation of integration
technologies. Provides expertise to portfolio
managers and health services to insure
infrastructure, technical services and
underpinning integration supports systems
delivery.
Methodologies and tools to ensure consistency and
accountability across projects in the areas of
procurement, implementation, project management,,
financial, risk, quality and change management,
governance, benefits realisation and outcome
evaluation.
73Shared ICT Services
Department of Human Services
74Shared ICT services - Scope
- Data centres
- Communications (agencies ?? data centres)
- Technology platforms to support core applications
- Database administration
- Specialist application support (2nd level)
- Redundancy
75Shared ICT Services - Status
- Technology refresh funding 2004
- Acute 20M
- Community 2M
- HealthWAN
- Southern Region commenced
- Conceptual design complete
- Shared ICT Services
- Work plan developed
- Work to design entity commenced
- Architectural design commenced
- FMIS infrastructure ordered
- Interim arrangements through Bayside Health
76- Resource Management Systems
Department of Human Services
77Current StatusFinance Materials Management
- Lead Agencies Bendigo, Eastern, Peninsula
- Contract let with Oracle February 2004
- Implementation Planning Studies commenced 1 March
2004 recently signed off - Design of common system configuration complete
(involved all health services NOT just lead
agencies) - Issues
- Request for scope creep (Discoverer, report
writer) - Difficulty in establishing business cases with
costs of Shared ICT Services not available - 20 contribution by sector
78Current StatusHuman Resource Management
- Allegiance sale to Mantrack (and subsequent
dispute with SAP) finalised - Advisory Group established
- Consultants appointed to facilitate development
of common requirements (agencies and DHS) and
business case. - Workshops held - gt150 agency staff participated
- Issues
- Agencies will need to commit to participate (or
not) to allow business case to be developed
accurately - Not clear that there is a common commitment to
progressing with functional HR management systems
as compared to doing little more than payroll
management
79- Patient Client Management Systems
Department of Human Services
80Current StatusPatient Client Management
- Lead Agencies Peninsula, Gippsland, Melbourne,
Southern, Northern, Western, Mercy, SWARH,
Womens, MonashLink, Inner South, Western Region
and Bendigo - RFT released 6th August
- Tender closed 23 September
- Pre implementation project funding allocated
(250k) - Issues
- Media aggravation - Probity issues
- Enormous amount of effort required for evaluation
pressure on staff - Difficult getting and retaining Community sector
involvement
Note Grampians have been removed from Lead
Agency group as they entered into a contract with
a vendor to replace their patient management
systems
81Department of Human Services
82Current StatusClinical Systems
- Lead Agencies Barwon, St Vincents, Bayside,
Childrens, PMCI, RVEEH, Hume, Austin - RFT released late September 2004
- Pre-implementation project funding allocated
(250k) - Issues
- Difficulty attracting staff to the project
- Most difficult to define and manage scope
83OHIS HealthSMART Contact details
- Office of Health Information SystemsTelephone
03 9616 2787 - EmailOHIS.GeneralEnquiry_at_dhs.vic.gov.auOHIS.Vend
orEnquiry_at_dhs.vic.gov.au - OHIS websitehttp//www.dhs.vic.gov.au/ahs/healthi
t - HealthSMART website http//www.health.vic.gov.au/
healthsmart
84Victorias Whole-of-Health ICT Strategy
Department of Human Services
85Royal Melbourne HospitalWeb Delay Tracker
- Dr Marcus Kennedy
- Clinical Lead
- Patient Flow Collaborative
An initiative of the Patient Flow Collaborative,
E.D. R.M.H., Melbourne Health
86Introduction
- Monitoring Patient Flow through the Emergency
Department, R.M.H. via a Web Browser. - This will help in identifying bottlenecks in
patient flow through the Emergency Department to
the Wards, and other Depts. - Accessible on the hospital intranet
87Outline
- Accessing the Web browser
- Web Browser appearance
- Significance of colours
- How to update the Status of a Patient
- Who updates the Status of the Patient
- Action Sheets
88Overview
- Emergency Departments through out Victoria are
facing a dilemma with Patient Flow through the
Department. - The Patient Flow Web Browser has been developed
by Melbourne Health I.T. Dept., in conjunction
with the Patient Flow Collaborative, Emergency
Dept. R.M.H. to help identify the bottlenecks
associated with Patient Flow through the E.D. - These bottlenecks will be addressed by Action
Sheets which have been developed to tackle the
respective bottleneck.
89Accessing the Web Browser
- On the Desktop of the designated PCs there is an
icon
- Click on the icon the Patient Flow Display
will open.
90(No Transcript)
91Patient Flow Display
92Patient Flow Display - detail
93Significance of the Colours
94Updating the Patient Status
Under the Status column, click on the Drop Down
arrow
to display the list of Delay Reasons
Select the appropriate Delay Reason to update the
Status of the Patient.
Once updated, the time since the last update
reverts to 0 m
95Who Updates the Status?
- Senior Staff on duty for each shift are
responsible for updating the Status of the
Patients i.e. Clinical Coordinator in Charge
Consultant in Charge. - The Status should be updated every 60 minutes
(second hourly overnight)
96Action Sheets
- Action Sheets have been developed in association
with the Delay Reason, these Actions Sheets will
guide the next step to take in rectifying the
Delay. - Action sheets refer to actions that will be taken
in ED, wards, at exec level, in service
departments etc in response to specific
situations. They are policy driven.
97LaTrobe Regional HospitalPatient Delay Tracker
- Peter Wright
- Emergency Care Director
- Latrobe Regional Hospital
98Manual Hourly ED Tracking
- Why we embarked on manual tracking
- Detailed analysis of ED patient flow
- Simple
- Well accepted by ED staff
- Highly visible
- Highlighted key constraints
99Initial hourly tracking template
100Codes used
101Completed day sample
102Refinement of hourly tracking
103Refinement of hourly tracking
104Desired Impact
- Our expected impact will be
- Bed allocation time reduced to an hour for all
stable patients - Refinement of hourly patient tracking will
determine new action plans
105- Questions
-
- Wendy Bezzina
- PFC Coordinator
- wbezzina_at_lrh.com.au
- (03) 5173 8139
?
106Melbourne Health team update
- Access Subacute services
- Bed Management
- Workforce Communication
- Access Theatres
- Access Radiology
- Emergency Department
107Next Steps
- 16 weeks take us to the week before Learning
Session 3 - Plan to make a significant change to your program
measures - Test all your changes carefully before spreading
- Next site visit with the Executive Sponsor
- and project facilitator only
108Next Steps
- Involve the Collaborative management team
- Use your planning group members and each other as
resources - Connect to the Travel Fellows and the test bed
work
109Remember
- Urgency out of Emergency conference Le
Meridien 19th 0ctober - Web casts, see sheet or website
- Project Coordinators training day 2 Melbourne
Health 11th November - Hot Topic Call
- Simple Length of stay management
- Call 1800 063 705 pin number 4405 173
- Wed 3rd November 2.30-3.30 pm
110Project Coordinator Training Day Number 2
- November 11th
- Royal Melbourne Hospital
- Registration pack will be out shortly
111Best Storyboard Competition
- As voted by you
- The winner is.
112Evaluation forms
- Fill out the evaluation forms
- Safe trip home
- Thanks for a great day ,see you in February next
year!
113Conclusion
Marcus Kennedy Clinical Lead (Flow) 5 October
2004
114Access Block
115Improvement / Change
116The "Triple A" approach