Title: QOF Assessment a refreshed look
1QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
2QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- Rebecca Thornley
- Primary Care Contracting Advisor
- East of England
3House keeping
- Fire Exits
- Mobile phones
- Refreshments available at 11.10am and 3.15pm
- Lunch will be served from 1.00pm 1.45pm
- Aim to finish at 4.00pm
4Aims of the day
- These events are aimed at QOF Assessor Teams,
Clinical Governance Leads, Data Analysts, PCT QOF
Leads and SHA Primary Care Leads - Revisiting the programme of education and support
for PCT QOF Leads - Workshops will highlight the lessons learnt from
QOF since its implementation in April 2004 and
will specifically cover - - QMAS and QOF Assessor Reports
- Sharing approaches to QOF
- Working with Internal Audit
- Examples of good practice
- Data triangulation and analysis
5Refreshed resources
- Events
- Website
- Research
- Communications
6Events
- During September and October PCC will be running
6 regional events - Pick up via QOF networks additional sharing of
approaches/good practice/problem solving - Additional, locally tailored events can be
organised via your local Primary Care Contracting
Advisor
7Website
- The current QOF resources available via the PCC
website require some review and refreshment - It is proposed that the section itself be
extensively revamped to place it as a major
information and learning site to PCTs and act as
a living resource which is regularly
maintained, has an interactive content and would
include - - Detail on what PCTs can and should do
- Description of model techniques from the
assessment to prepayment verification and counter
fraud processes and the relationships between
them PCT good practice - Access to NatPaCT QOF training resources
- New models of data management
- It is hoped that the refreshed web resource will
be available during November
8Research
- PCT documentation
- Questionnaire to PCT QOF Leads
- Responses to this questionnaire will be used in
future policy development and negotiation
9Communications
- Establish QOF Newsletter
- maintain an efficient and effective means of
communicating with PCT QOF Leads - First edition planned for October/November 2006
- This resource would be emailed to QOF Leads on a
bi-monthly basis and would include - - Examples of good practice
- Internal Audit/Counter Fraud updates
- QMAS briefings and updates
- Information Commission downloads
- FAQs
- Please go to Registration if you would like to
sign up to receive this publication
10www.primarycarecontracting.nhs.ukrebecca.thornle
y_at_pcc.nhs.ukTelephone 07770444025
11Lunch and Post-its
- You now have the opportunity to post questions
and/or what you would like to cover in the
breakout sessions - Post on board for specific topic
- Data Analysis
- QMAS and QOF Assessor Reports
- Internal Audit and PCT good practice
12QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
13QOF MIXTURESAssessment and quality
- Philip Leech
- Consultant Adviser for Primary Care
14 Assessment review Culture and
quality Assessment, PPV and 5 checks
15What we did
- Gather material
- Questionnaire
- Call for templates and protocols
- Gather opinions from key stakeholders
- Established an expert group
16What we found
- Everyone trying hard
- Some really very good work but
- no consistency
- not much of a result
- a lot of worry
- baffled by the data
17Why?
- Everyone in turmoil
- Budgets
- Job
- Loss of experience
- Loss of priority
18So, what are we going to do?
- New explanation of purpose
- New tool(s)
- Document extracts
- New materials on the website
- Road shows
- Follow up
19 Progress so far.
20Changes in management of coronary heart disease
1998-2003
Campbell et al. British Medical Journal 2005
331 1121-1123.
21Percentage of practices reaching 80 cervical
cytology target Baker et al. J. Epidemiology and
Community Health 2003 57 417-423
22-
-
- Major UK initiatives
- National standards
- Clinical governance
- Annual appraisal
- Contracts
- Public release
- Patient safety
- Collaboratives
- Inspection
100 quality
All of these things - no magic bullet
quality achieved
Baseline quality
23Practice performance in first year of new
contract
Quality points per practice, out of a maximum of
1050
www.ic.nhs.uk/services/qof
24QOF..
- Supports quality of care in an ordered and
systematised way that will produce hugely better
patient outcomes - Will help to develop a high quality public health
database - produces a too heavily weighted bonus payment
that has inhibited other developments in practice - risks neglect of clinical areas not incentivised
(e.g. osteoporosis).
25Issues in assessor review Practice culture
- If you deliver good clinical care the points
should look after themselves - We certainly will not stop just when we have
achieved an indicator - We need to ensure patients not represented in QOF
get just as good care - We need to know about all our patients, so we
will try to use exception reporting properly - We want to use QOF information to improve our
services and our commissioning
26Issues in assessor reviewPCT culture
- This is about patient care, not financial balance
- This is an opportunity to build relationships
with practices the annual review is only a
punctuation mark in a continuous process of
quality improvement - This is the chance to develop the practice for
the next year and integrate QOF with other
quality initiatives - This is the way to show fairness, with firmness
27Issues in assessor review Process
- Annual review .will involve significant
preparation and organisation for the PCT - Delivering Investment in General Practice,
December 2003, Section E (pg 74)
28Issues in assessor review Process
- What to do..
- Prepare!
- Who to involve
- Read the documentation
- Know the rules
- Understand the data
- Grade A evidence
- Prescribing
- Referral
- Public health
- Assessor reports
29Issues in assessor review Process
- Knowledgeable (context and quality)
- Trained (generic, specific), and expert
- Clinician
- Internal audit
- Quality manager
- Lay person
- Accountable
- Manager
- Clinician
- (Lay person)
30Issues in assessor review Process
- What to do..
- Prepare!
- Who to involve
- Read the documentation
- Know the rules
- Understand the data
- Grade A evidence
- Prescribing
- Referral
- Public health
- Assessor reports
31Issues in assessor review Process 7 documents
- GMS Contract 2003
- Delivering Investment in General Practice
- DH December 2003
- General Guidance on QOF Annual Review Process
- DH 12-05-04
- Technical Annex to Annual QOF Review Process
- DH 12-05-04
- SFE Consolidated April 2006 onwards
- Revisions to GMS Contract 2006/07
- PCCA Practice QOF Assessment Visits
32Issues in assessor review Process
- Indicators
- Previous year(s) QOF Report
- PACT data Pharmaceutical Advisors
- PH data PH team
- HES data PCT
- Prevalence
- QMAS Exception Reporting, Patient Experience
33Issues in assessor review Process
- QOF Assessor Validation Report
- Grade A evidence B and C as well
- OOHs data link to HES
- Clinical Audits (PCT and Practice)
- Business Rules
- Local knowledge
- PALs patient complaints
34Issues in assessor review Process
- What to do..
- Think about the service the patient is getting
- Be consistent across the PCT
- Have a quality dialogue
- Stand up for yourself
- Feed back at board level
- Keep smiling you can go back if you need to
35Issues in assessor review Process
- What not to do..
- Use expensive, paid for clinician time to do
mundane analyses - 20 sets of notes for every indicator
- No discrimination between practices
- Tick boxes
- Shift position
- Continue if there is something bad
- Be put off by confidentiality issues
36Issues in assessor review Training and tools
- Generic and specific
- QMAS
- QOF assessor validation reports
- Auditors tools
- Guidance
37Consider
- QOF Visits, PPV and 5
- Confidentiality
- Establishing Accuracy
- Exception reporting
- Expected prevalence
38Exception reporting for clinical indicators
- Patient refused
- Not clinically appropriate
- Newly diagnosed or recently registered
- Already on maximum doses of medication
39Other issues
- How does QOF fit with other incentives?
- QOF developments - what is it best at doing?
- How could we improve QOF?
40If you think I made myself clear, you must have
misunderstood what I said (Greenspan to Congress)
Philip_at_primarycareleads.com
41QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
42QOF Assessment a refreshed look
43QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
44QOF Assessment a refreshed look 2006
QOF Assessor Validation Reports Their place in
the practice annual quality review
Cheryl Cowley Primary Care Programme NHS
Connecting for Health
45Purposes of QOF Annual Review Visit
- to review the contractors current achievement
and to provide the PCT with an assessment of
achievement by March 31 - to confirm that data collection and quality (and
hence any payments made on the basis of this
data) are accurate - to discuss the contractors aspiration for the
following year - Ref General Guidance on QOF Annual Review
Process DH 12-05-04
46What is data?
- Data
- A group of known, given, or ascertained
facts.. (Ref Penguin dictionary) - Data item
- A single unit of data (Ref Peter Collins
dictionary of IT)
47Information versus data
- DATA
- stored facts
- inert (it exists)
- technology based
- gathered from various sources
- INFORMATION
- presented facts
- active (it enables doing
- business based
- transformed from data
48Data, information, knowledge
- 1234567.99 is data
- Your bank balance has jumped 8087 to 1234567.99
is information - Nobody owes me that much money is knowledge
- .and wisdom?
49Purposes of QOF Annual Review Visit
- The first purpose entails verification,
which will therefore be an element of the visit - The second purpose, to be meaningful, entails
consideration of learning, development and
support needs, and other problem solving. - Ref ScHARR GMS QOF Annual Review Visits
Emerging Conclusions 2004
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51Information sources for the practice QOF Review
Process
- Pharmacist PACT data
- Director of Public Health Local Public Health
data - National v local disease prevalence
- PCT team Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) data
- Grade A submitted evidence previous years
evidence and achievement - PCT local practice clinical governance agenda
- PCT protected time clinical meetings
52Information sources for the practice QOF Review
Process (cont.)
- Practice clinical meetings
- PCT and practice clinical audits
- PCT data quality facilitator knowledge/activity
local IT training needs assessments - Local deanery practice engagement
- Out of hours data
- PALS - Patient complaints patient praise
- QMAS monthly reporting functionality
- QOF Assessor Validation Reports
53PCT Collating Evidence
- Once the PCT has received and analysed this
information it will identify areas for
discussion. It is sensible to resolve as many
issues as possible with the contractor before the
visit to ensure the agenda is kept to a minimum
of key issues forming the agenda for the visit. - Ref General Guidance on QOF Annual Review
Process DH 12-05-04
54Purpose of QOF Assessor Reports
- Support decision of PCT for
- intensity of the visit
- need for visit
- Email suite of reports to QOF Lead prior to the
visit - Evaluation of reports prior to visit
- Enable weekly reports
- Minimise resource gaining consent
55Code of Confidentiality
- Where practices are unable to anonymise
records, those who act on behalf of PCTs are
entitled to access non-anonymised records either
for NHS management purposes (if they are
themselves under a duty of confidentiality) or to
check a persons legal entitlement to payment. It
is not necessary for practices or PCTs to inform
individual patients that individual records will
be accessed for such purposes, nor to seek the
consent of individual patients to obtain access
to individual records in such circumstances.
Nor, in the view of the Department, would such
access constitute a breach of the data Protection
Act."
56Three hurdles.
- Software has been procured for the purpose
- Informed patient consent
- If 1 or 2 not possible then anonymise records
- ONLY if 1, 2, and 3 cannot be achieved
57Communications
- All PCT QOF Leads
- Initial briefing bulletin July 2005
- Second briefing with
- - Produce data validation reports for QOF
Assessors - Establishing Accuracy in QOF data
- NHS CFH website
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64Process
- Practices download and install software
- EMIS and Microtest patched
- Slow connections sent a CD
- Reports scheduled remotely
- Reporting wizard
- View reports
- Email reports
- Run another set of reports
- Before visit practices email reports to QOF Lead
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72QOF Records Report
- Random selection 20 patient records e.g
- CHD 1 Stroke/TIA 2 Hypertension 1 Diabetes 0
COPD 2 HF/LVD 1 Thyroid 1 Depression 2 MH 0
CKD 0 Dementia 1 4 or more repeats 1 Cancer 1
Palliative care 0 Pts from pract pop 1 Learning
disabilities 1 AF 3 - Females 8 Males 12
- Age bands lt20 1 20yrs 0 30yrs 1 40yrs 1
50yrs 4 60yrs 6 70yrs 4 80yrs 3 90yrs 0
73QOF Records Report..cont
- Random selection 20 patient records e.g.
- CHD 3 Stroke/TIA 1 Hypertension 2 Diabetes 3
COPD 1 HF/LVD 2 Thyroid 1 Depression 2 MH 1
CKD 1 Dementia 1 4 or more repeats 1 Cancer 2
Palliative care 1 Pts from pract pop 2 Learning
disabilities 1 AF 1 - Females 11 Males 9
- Age bands lt20 1 20yrs 1 30yrs 0 40yrs 4
50yrs 6 60yrs 4 70yrs 2 80yrs 1 90yrs 1 - Last 2 years data entry
74- www.connectingforhealth.nhs.uk/qof/
- Cheryl.Cowley_at_cfh.nhs.uk
75QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
76QOF Assessment a refreshed look
77Lunch and Post-its
- You now have the opportunity to post questions
and/or what you would like to cover in the
breakout sessions - Post on board for specific topic
- Data Analysis
- QMAS and QOF Assessor Reports
- Internal Audit and PCT good practice
78QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
79Data Analysis as part of the Assessment Process
- Jill Burke
- Insight Solutions
80Who are we?
- Established since 2001
- Independent IT training consultancy
- Not affiliated to any of the clinical suppliers
- Designated Clinical System trainers for all major
systems - Working with 2500 practices
- Working in over 75 PCOs/LHBs
- Accredited training Company
- main contract software suppliers
- Welsh Assembly Government
- nGMS Contract Training specialists
- IT Training Specialists for Primary Care
81Ethical Disclaimer
- All information provided during this presentation
is an opinion and is, therefore, optional. It is
designed to enhance your abilities to work with
the nGMS Contract should you wish - It is based on how QoF 2 stands today! There are
likely to be many changes, it is the
responsibility of the practice to ensure they
keep up-to-date with any future changes made - The decision to implement any changes rest
entirely with each practice/clinician
82Why?
- Assessments in the past have often been routine
- Assessors going through learning curve
- Practices expecting you to look at patient data
for evidence - Largest investment in Primary Care
- Practice income higher than ever before
83Where are we now?
- QoF2
- Established a process of assessing
- Identified a need to move this forward
- 2 years of back data and information from QoF
- years of other information
- Prescribing data
- Prevalence
- 2 years experience of assessing
- But not necessarily using all the information
together
84Where do we want to be?
- Assessing practices
- Accurately, consistently and relevantly
- Justifying payments
- Confident practice have achieved as a result of
hard work - Not just ticking boxes
85Benefits outside of QoF?
- Chronic Disease management
- Powerful information for commissioning of
services - Community Matrons
- Admissions Prevention
- Practice Based Commissioning
- Accurate Disease Prevalence
- Budget Setting
- Better Patient Services
- Patient Pathways
86Data AnalysisA new dimension
87Three Approaches
- Comparing expected and observed prevalence rates
- Identifying high levels of exception reporting
- Comparing prescribing and prevalence rates
- Approaches will identify lines of enquiry not
definitive answer to questions of gaming - Making assessments worthwhile
881. Prevalence Rates
- QMAS reports crude prevalence rates not
adjusted for risk factors (age, sex ethnicity
etc) - Very high / low rates might be explained by these
factors - Doncaster PCT have generated a tool that refines
expected prevalence rates for 7 conditions based
on practice level socio-demographic factors
89Data required
- Practice Level
- Reported prevalence rates (QMAS)
- Age sex breakdown
- Deprivation
- Ethnicity
- PCT will need to data entry into spreadsheet
time consuming but worthwhile results
90Model Output
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932.Exception Reporting
- Exception reporting codes concerns
- over-use
- under use
- misuse
- Comparison can be made with reference to PCT
average level of exception reporting and size of
disease register - QMAS provides data on levels of exception
reporting
94Automatically identifies indicators where the
practice varies from PCT average
95Locate data in QMAS
96Download into Spreadsheet
97A few simple calculations
98Produce Control Chart
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1003. Comparing Prescribing and Prevalence Rates
- One would expect strong association between
prevalence rates and prescribing rates for
chronic diseases - Variance from expected might indicate inaccurate
registers - School of Medicines Management (Keele Uni) have
investigated this approach
101CHD Register Size vs Chapter 2 Prescribing
EXAMPLE
102CHD Register Size vs Chapter 2 Prescribing
Poor Data Quality? Patients not identified on
Registers
Poor Data Quality Inflated registers?
103Practice to benefit
- If prevalence is high and incorrect, practice
targeted to deliver services to patients who not
in need - More work
- Less success
- Fewer points
- If prevalence is low and incorrect , practice may
be doing the work but not getting recognition - Less per point
104Who benefits?
105Patient to Benefit
- Correct services offered to relevant patients
- Patient care to improve
- Practices dont waste patients time
106PCT to Benefit
- Correct investment of public money
- Patient services improved
- Practice achievement improves
107Other possible checks
- Hypertension prevalence vs anti-hypertensive
prescribing - BP5 vs anti-hypertensive large amount of points
- Asthma and COPD prevalence vs BNF Chapter 3
prescribing - Diabetes prevalence vs diabetic prescribing
- Epilepsy prevalence vs anti-epileptic prescribing
- CHD8 compared with lipid lowering prescribing
108What to target
- With so many areas / indicators / disease
registers be selective - Identify which registers / indicators are best
for target - High points potentially expensive for PCTs if
there is concern - Speciality within practice/PCT
- Diabetes
- Asthma etc.
Use data analysis to establish this
109High Point Indicators
- CHD5 BP less that 150/90 - 19
- CHD8 Cholesterol less than 5 - 17
- BP4 BP recorded in past 9 months - 20
- BP5 BP less than 150/90 - 57
- DM20 HbA1c 7.5 or less - 17
- MH9 review in past yr - 23
- Asthma3 variability/reversibility - 15
- Asthma6 review - 20
- DEM2 review - 15
- DEP2 assessment - 25
- AF3 anticoagulation/platelet - 15
- Smoking - 68
110Best use of data
- Pointless to have all this data and use it in
isolation - Cross referencing all sources
- E.g. Prescribing versus prevalence
- Prescribing versus achievement
- Exception reporting versus Prevalence
- Practice to practice comparisons
111Summary
- Data will need to be collected, prepared,
analysed and understood before the assessment - Assessors should have the questions ready to ask
- May need practice input for some data
- Standard approach across PCT for all practices
- Target areas pre defined
- Training if required
- Assessors need to see the benefit
- May require specific training e.g. Excel
112QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006
113Good practice and internal audit
QOF
John Dixon
114Good practice and internal audit
Our
115Life in a cardboard box
116Ideals
- Rigour
- Fair and consistent
- Summative and formative element
- Clinical domains
- Non-clinical domains
- Other data
- Triangulation
- Use beyond the QOF
117Feasibility constraints
- Rigour
- Fair and consistent
- Summative and formative element
- Clinical domains
- Non-clinical domains
- Other data
- Triangulation
- Use beyond the QOF
- Rigour
- Fair and consistent
- Summative and formative element
- Clinical domains
- Non-clinical domains
- Other data
- Triangulation
- Use beyond the QOF
- Rigour
- Fair and consistent
- Summative and formative element
- Clinical domains
- Non-clinical domains
- Other data
- Triangulation
- Use beyond the QOF
118Value for ?
- More efficient data capturing
- Augmented relationships with practices
- Sharing of good practice
- Learning PCT and practices
- .and the long term VFM of the QOF?
119Value for ?
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121Cost 2004/5
61,000
122Cost 2005/6
61,000
37,000
123Cost 2006/7
61,000
37,000
21,000
124Front office
Back office
v
125Variance
- "Almost all measures lose variance and hence the
capacity to discriminate good from bad
performance
MEYER, M. (2002) Finding performance The new
discipline in management. In A. NEELY (ed.)
Business Performance Measurement Theory and
Practice. Cambridge University Press.
126Variance
Number lt 90 max
3 lt 950
2 lt 495
14 lt 166
127Back office systems
- Communication data recording
- Risk analysis of non-clinical indicators
- Comparative analysis of prevalence exception
reporting data - Pre-payment verification process
- Patient experience indicators
- Organisational knowledge
128Communications and data recording
- Paperless system
- Standardised electronic (Excel) recording system
/ audit trail (QVR) - Single entry of data
- Generic visit agenda
- No pre-visit meetings
- No post-visit meetings
- Standard visit report generated from initial data
entry - All communication by email
- All reports, verification records available
electronically and e-indexed electronic QOF
guidelines - Pre-payment verification reminder of outstanding
indicators generated electronically form original
record
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130Space for final request
131Appropriate comment re outstanding indicator
entered on to PPV Summary reflects findings after
visit
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133Risk analysis
134Prevalence and exception reporting
- What is normal?
- What is acceptable?
- What demands clarification?
135Prevalence and exception reporting
QMAS
Practice prevalence and exceptions data
Establish national and PCT average ( normal)
EXCEL
DEFINE
Acceptable range average /- x
Acceptable number of domains outside range
Practices with data which requires clarification
136Prevalence and exception reporting
- 8 practices had prevalence rates falling at least
15 below from the national average in 7 or more
clinical domains - 6 practices had prevalence rates falling at least
10 below from the PCT average in 7 or more
clinical domains - 6 practices had exception rates falling at least
20 above the national average in 7 or more
clinical domains
137- All variation limits set to 100
138- Prevalence variation limit National raw prev
rate /- 15 - Prevalence variation limit PCT average raw prev
/- 10 - Exception variation limit National average /-
20
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140Raw exceptions data extracted from QMAS
141Exception rates
142Prevalence data extracted from QMAS
143Prevalence rates
144Pre-Payment Verification Aspiration v Achievement
145Audit ( Consistency)
- QOF assessment team
- Communication
- Quality assurance panel
- External auditors
- Internal auditors
- Cross PCT 5 random counter fraud checks
- The future.is bright?
146Triangulation
- Information group
- 2005/6 use of additional data
- Prescribing report
- Hospital activity data 1st OPD and admissions
- Out-of-hours activity
147Triangulation?
QOF
Knowledge
RESOURCES OPERATIONAL SKILLS
OTHER DATA
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149QOF Assessment a refreshed look
- De Vere Hotel Cambridge
- 20 September 2006