Title: Group Clinics
1Group Clinics
- Paul A. Heineken, M.D.
- ACOSAC, SFVAMC
- Clinical Professor, UCSF
2Goals
- Be clear about your goals and potential conflicts
between goals - Medical outcome
- Patient satisfaction
- Value medical outcome / cost
- (also called efficiency)
3Medical Outcome How can group visits bring
improvement?
- Self-care
- Improved quality indicators
- EPRP prevention and practice guideline compliance
- Disease specific outcomes
- Diabetes A1C levels
- CHF fewer hospitalizations
- Chronic geriatric care fewer complications
4SFVAMC Primary Care Groups
- Diabetes self-care
- Diet, home glucose monitoring, insulin/medication
teaching, foot care - Advanced directive education
- Bereavement support
- Dementia caregiver support
- Medi-Cal planning
5Patient SatisfactionThree examples
- Kaiser model, single providers panel identified
high users - Ongoing groups, 10-15 pts, visit shared with RN,
pharmacist, guests - Vitals, short individual attention by health
professional, group teaching - Outcomes high patient satisfaction, fewer
individual visits
6Group Health Cooperative of Puget SoundColeman
et.al. JAGS 47775-783, 1999
- Chronic Care Clinic for frail elderly
- Patient satisfaction improved
- No other outcome measures did
- incontinence, falls, depression scores,
hospitalizations, hospital days, ER visits, AC
visits, medication costs, and total cost of care
unchanged
7SFVAMC High User ClinicEzekiel and Jain,
submitted 2002
- Frequent ER/Urgent Care visitors generally arent
satisfied - Identified high ER/Urgent Care, 5 visits in 9
months - Patients recruited from multiple providers
- Invited patients by mail or phone call, group
would help their overall care - Scheduled group sessions for 9 months
- Post-intervention use of ER/Urgent Care
8Intervention
- Monthly group visits
- 9 patients expected in each
- Average attendance 50
- Opened by doctor and blessed
- 1.5 hours total with a facilitator--RN or social
worker, and a guest--pharmacist, nutritionist,
podiatrist, etc. - Topics medication use, flu shots, advanced
directives, healthy diet, foot care, etc.
9High Users Urgent/ER visits 9 months before and
after intervention9 months of monthly group
visits
10Medical Practice Orientation Clinic (MPOR)
- Observations
- New PC patients had high no-show rate
- new slots were unavailable while no-shows
wasted valuable slots - Goal 1 Improve value, through better access for
new patients, and improved clinic efficiency - Dont waste valuable slots on no-shows
11Medical Practice Orientation Clinic, continued
- Observations
- VHA screening and prevention requirements (not
guidelines) mushroomed - Centralized electronic documentation required
- Goal 2
- Nurses complete most required screening and
documentation - Allow primary providers to concentrate on high
yield interventions at their visit
12Long before ACA
- SFVAMC required an orientation visit for each
non-urgent new primary care referral - Staffed by an RN
- Patient sent letter in advance explaining purpose
of visit - Medical questionnaire, including health
maintenance, medication, and immunization history
completed - Nutrition, (MST, and Hep C risk) screens
completed
13Visit content
- Check-in, including Means Test if required
- Vitals
- One-on-one review of health questionnaire with
RN, for completeness and positive screening
results - Immunizations provided by RN or LVN under
standing orders - Obvious triage (anticoagulation, derm, etc.)
14Group Teaching
- Clinic procedures
- Appointments, urgent needs, contacting provider,
telephone care - Pharmacy, co-managed care
- Outside medical records
- Co-payments
- Advanced directives education
15Prevention ActivityTemplated note entered by RN
- Risk factor identification tobacco, alcohol,
nutrition, exercise, depression, MST, Hepatitis C - Behavioral counseling diet, exercise, tobacco
use - Prostate cancer screening information
16Prevention Effectiveness
- Screening activity only, realistically one group
visit wont change behavior - Group visits, and counseling about multiple
behavioral changes at one time are NOT the
procedures used in the evidence upon which VA
prevention recommendations are based - At best, MPOR identifies some veterans who are
ready for a changewhen they visit their provider
or specialist, e.g. nutritionist - At worst, it is a documentation exercise for EPRP
17Advanced Directive CompletionDipko, Xavier,
Kohlwes, submitted for publication
18MP Orientation Clinic Outcome measure success
- No show rates YES!
- dropped from 45 to 18, between MPOR and first
provider visit. Jain and Chou, J Gen Int Med
200015878-880 - EPRP scores YES!
- Patient satisfaction yes and no
- 82 satisfied, some resented not seeing a
provider and making an extra trip, especially
from distance - Nutrition screen f/u yes
19Nutrition Screen F/u GroupSept 01-Mar 03Ceresa
and Arnold, SFVAMC, 2003
20What About the MPOR No-shows?
- Population Urban, high prevalence of substance
abuse and homelessness - Required scheduled primary care wastes slots on
habitual no-show patients - Episodic primary care accessibility is
essential - ACA model may work, if patients are assigned to
primary care teams after failing MPOR and
episodic primary care is made acceptable
21Group Clinics Problems
- Competing goals--efficiency vs. outcome vs.
patient satisfaction - Recruiting patients from multiple providers
- MPOR easier to fill than high-user groups
- Behavior change groups have high no-show rate
- Multiple personalities may not mix
- Confidentiality (what seems appropriate for one,
may not be comfortable for all)
22Group Clinics Conclusions
- Set goals
- Assign a leader team
- Plan duration and outcome measures
- Realistic expectations
- Re-evaluate