Title: ReACH National Demonstration Collaborative Reducing Acute Care Hospitalization
1ReACH NationalDemonstration CollaborativeReducin
g Acute Care Hospitalization
- Overview
- Penny H. Feldman, PhD
- ReACH Principal Investigator
- Visiting Nurse Service of New York
- Center for Home Care Policy and Research
The project team gratefully acknowledges the
support from AHRQ (1 U18 HS 13694) and the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation (042588)
2ReACH Structure and Objectives
- Partnership to advance home health care quality
- VNSNY Center for Home Care Policy and Research
(CHCPR) - Home care QIOSC Quality Insights of PA
- 16 QIOs
- 169 home health agencies (HHAs) from 20 states
- Objectives
- Test a collaborative model for HHA practice
improvement - Reduce acute care hospitalization rates
3ReACH Partnership Model
4Background
2002 Partnership for Achieving Quality Homecare
(PAQH) - Funded by AHRQ and RWJ 2004 PAQH
Diabetes Learning Collaborative - 8
HHAs - Significant improvement in 8 of 9
measures -- 30 percentage point
increase in rate of patients with glucose
in target range 2005 Acute Care Hospitalization
(ACH) Pilot Project - QIOSC and CHCPR
evidence review and best practices 2005-2007
ReACH 2 seven-month waves
5Context
- 8100 Medicare-certified HHAs 3.4m discharges
- Mandated OASIS assessments publicly reported
outcomes - Impending pay for performance
- lt20 agencies accredited
- Variable quality/weak quality infrastructure
- Dispersed work force/poor support for frontline
managers - No history of voluntary industry partnerships
- CMS-funded Home Health Quality Improvement
Campaign (HHQI) 2007-2008
6ReACH Project Goal
Reduce acute care hospitalizations of home
health patients and make substantial progress
toward CMS target of 23 risk-adjusted rate
(already achieved by 25 of all HHAs nationwide)
For those agencies with rates at 23 or lower
sustain the rate, and identify ways to reduce it
further
7ReACH Best Practices
- Target group selection (e.g.,region, office,
dx) - Risk Assessment
- Emergency Plans and Risk-Appropriate Care Plans
- Front load visits and increase contacts (phone
calls telemedicine) for high risk patients - Medication reconciliation
- Improved MD communication (Situation-Background-As
sessment-Recommendation (SBAR))
8ReACH Evaluation
- Level 1 Perceptions
- Participant satisfaction, challenges, lessons
learned - Level 2 Care processes
- Core measures, strategies and actions
- Level 3 Results
- Percentage of episodes ending with
hospitalization - Data sources
- On-line surveys phone interviews
- Monthly record reviews data entered on line
- OASIS reports (Home Healthcare Compare)
9ReACH Process Results
Total patients in target group identified at
risk
Target patients with completed risk assessments
17.0
-8.3
46.0
40.6
10ReACH Process Results
Target patients with risk-specific care plans
50.0
44.4
11ReACH Process Results
Average home care visits in first two weeks for
patients at-risk of hospitalization in target
group
12ReACH Hospitalization Results
- Home care episodes resulting in acute care
hospitalization for target group
13HHQI National ACH Campaign Results
- Comparison of 7,452 Medicare-certified HHAs
- 4,352 Early Participating (EP) Agencies
- 972 Later Participating (LP) Agencies
- 2,128 Non Participating (NP) Agencies
- ACH rate over a 12-month period
- March 2007 February 2008
- EP 30.73 30.48
- LP 32.06 32.33
- NP 34.61 35.39
- HHAs achieving at least 5 improvement
- EP (38.4) LP (37.9) NP (34.6)
14Challenges to ReACH Implementation
- QIOs
- Varied expertise and skills
- Varied agency selection processes
- HHAs
- Varied QI experiences and skills
- Competing priorities
- Staff changes
- ReACH mechanism
- Long-distance faculty
- Reliance on QIOs to transmit skills/knowledge
- Technical issues related to virtual communication
- Evaluation
- Varied target groups
- Varied implementation of varied strategies and
tools
15Lessons Learned
- QIOs need/demand for TA, tools, support
- HHAs positive response to Collaborative Learning
model - Importance of face-to-face information transfer
(local learning sessions) and TA - Efficiencies from leveraging QIO resources
- Recruitment, TA, Data
- Value of
- Peer to peer reinforcement, shared experiences
- Web-based data collection
- Central resources
- Leadership involvement key
16Collaboration Next Steps
- Geriatric CHAMP Program
- Promote National Framework to Advance Geriatric
Home Care Excellence - Build geriatric capacity in significant number of
HHAs - Achieve significant, measurable improvement in
home care for older persons through - E-learning programs
- A National Community of Practice to support
quality improvement and share the Framework
findings - Corollary activities and products
- Collaborations (e.g., NAHC, VNAA, state
associations QIOSCs accrediting bodies
consumer groups) - Funding Atlantic Philanthropies, John A.
Hartford Foundation, California Health Care
Foundation, New York State Health Foundation,
others -