Title: Quality & Safety in Health Care
1Quality Safety in Health Care
- Dwight R. Hiesterman, MD
- Mountain-Pacific Quality Health Foundation
2Quality Care is Safe Care
3If we keep doing what we are doing, we will keep
getting what we got!
Yogi Berra
4What is Transformational Change?
- Change which enables a provider to deliver care
- meeting the goals of safety, effectiveness,
- efficiency, timeliness, patient-centeredness,
equity. - Results from the implementation of four
strategies - Transform organizational culture
- Redesign care process
- Measure and report performance
- Adopt HIT, and use it effectively
5QIO 8th Scope of Work
- Task 1 Clinical Quality Improvement
- 1a - Nursing home
- 1b - Home health
- 1c1 - Hospital
- 1c2 - Critical Access Hospital/Rural
- 1d1 - Physician Practice
- 1d2 - Physician Practice Underserved
- 1d3 - Physician Practice Pharmacy
6Hospital Task 1c1
- Improve by 50, a group of hospitals, on a
composite of 10 reported measures - AMI, HF, Pneumonia
- Improve 13 surgical care processes in a second
group of hospitals - Infections, CV complications, VTE, VAP, and ESRD
vascular access
7Hospital Task 1c1 contdSIOC(System
improvement and organizational change)
- Help a 3rd group adopt and use IT
- CPOE, bar coding, telehealth technology
- PPS and CAH
- 15 of hospitals in state
8Hospital Task 1c2 Rural/Critical Access
- Identified Participant Group (IPG)
- Statewide
9 Statewide
- Rural performance measures
- Report data on a new set of 12 CAH quality
measures - Assist in use of CART
- Document improved patient care on one or more of
these measures - ED transfer communication
10Critical Access Hospital Identified Participant
Group
- Organizational Safety Culture Change
- Assess the organizations safety climate at
baseline and at re-measurement - Identify an area to focus on to improve
patient safety
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12DOQ-IT objectives
- Provide implementation assistance for small
medium sized physician practices - Provide assistance in
- IT adoption decision
- Implementation and workflow efficiencies
- Care management/patient self-management
- Use clinical data reports for improved practice
performance and outcomes
13Data collection
- Chronic stable coronary artery disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Heart failure
- Osteoarthritis
- Hypertension
- Prevention measures
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15Adding wings to caterpillars does not create
butterflies it creates awkward and
dysfunctional caterpillars.Butterflies are
created through transformation.
- Stephanie Pace Marshall
16Human Resources for Safe Care
- The entire healthcare workforce must be educated
to - Provide patient-centered care
- Work as a member of interdisciplinary teams
- Apply evidence to practice
- Adopt continuous improvement of quality and
performance as baseline workplace behavior - Use informatics effectively
17Lets talk about leadership The heart of the
matter.
- Its action
- Its real (data, evidence)
- Its situational
- It sees how the future should be
- Its about getting from here to there
- Its about partnering and convening
- Its about communication
- Its about building systems that work
- Its our responsibility
- It has many facets
18 The highest quality care is the only care
anyone can now afford.
Quality Improvement Roadmap CMS
19dhiesterman_at_mtqio.sdps.org406 457-5878800
497-8232 ext. 5878
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21How Can Rural Hospitals Improve Quality?
- Share information, expertise and resources
- Networks of rural providers
- Participation in statewide improvement
initiatives
22How Can Rural Hospitals Improve Quality?
- Collect, analyze, and report data
- Must identify the problems before they can be
fixed - Allows for comparison to peers
- Information available to consumers
23How Can Rural Hospitals Improve Quality?
- Focus on measures of quality that are important
in the rural setting
24Next steps
- Local facility protocols for Chest Pain
- Local facility data evaluation and planning
what barriers to overcome - Chest Pain Kit
- Training, Equipment
- Feedback Training
- How can we all help remove the barriers?
25Underlying the Recommendations, ACCESS Plus
- Rural communities should focus greater attention
on improving population health in addition to
meeting personal health care needs. - When care cannot be delivered locally, links
should be established to services in other
locales. - The services available in rural communities
should be based on the population health needs of
the local community. - The provision of rural health care services
should be shaped and guided by local community
and rural organizations and institutions.
26Underlying the Recommendations (continued).
- Rural health care requires a team of well-trained
health care clinicians, managers, and leaders
working together. - Health care financing should explicitly address
the special circumstances of rural areas. - Efforts to develop local and national health
information technology infrastructure should
focus specific attention on rural communities.
27How do we adapt our personnel management
approaches?
- Continuous improvement the way we do our work,
learning all the time - Participatory, with delegation of authority and
responsibility to the working level - Team based
- Decisions at all levels based on real information
and data - Use decision support technology
28The ultimate goal is never simply to treat to a
prescribed number, but rather to achieve
excellence by perfecting the care of each
individual.
ACC/AHA/AHRQ/CMS/JCAHO Practice Advisory
29Getting from Here to There some
characteristics of transformation
- Collaboration across the continuum
- Quality and Safety are Job 1
- Interdisciplinary care teams apply evidence and
informatics - Transparency
- Decision-making
- Evidence based (real data, information,
technology) - Delegated to level of care team
- Accountable to community and employees
- For use of resources
- For effectiveness of processes