Title: Improving Patient Experience Ratings
1Improving Patient Experience Ratings
- Diane Stewart
- Director, Performance Improvement
- Pacific Business Group on Health
- IHA Steering Committee
- October, 2008
2Agenda
- Overview of the California Quality Collaborative
- Improving Patient Experience Scores
- Results from 2006 Patient Experience
Collaborative - Changes that improved patient ratings of care at
the practice site - Changes that improved patient ratings at the
group - CQCs program to support improvement in PAS
scores
3Common Measures IHA and CCHRI
- Clinical Outcomes
- Patient Experience
- Efficiency/Total Cost
- Improvement Support
- CQC
- What/Best Practices
- How/Execution
- Incentives
- Plans and State of CA
- Public Reporting
- P4P Financial Incentives
4CQC Offerings
- Implementation Collaboratives 12 month programs
to deliver measurable improvement at practice and
group - Improving Patient Satisfaction Scores (PAS)
- Improving Clinical metrics
- Improving Efficiency/Total Cost
- Coordinating disease management between health
plans and physician groups and IPAs - Disease-specific learning exchanges
- Regional Learning Networks
- Inland, Los Angeles Co., Orange Co.
- Training Sessions for Group Leaders
- Engaging Physicians in Change
- Data Analysis and Project Management
5- Engage Groups
- Thru Health Plan Reps and CAPG
- Link to IHA P4P
- Regional Learning Networks (Inland, LA, OC)
- Clinical Outcomes
- Patient Experience
- Efficiency/Total Cost
- Increase Readiness for Change
- 1-Day Conferences
- Teleconferences (i.e Medication adherence,
advanced access) - Management skills training
- Implement System Change
- 1-year Collaboratives
6On-site participation from Physician Groups
outside Kaiser
7Who Steering Committee
Lance Lang, MD Co-Chair Vice President, Senior
Medical Director, Health Net Nancy Oswald,
PhDExecutive Director, Redwood Community Health
Coalition Susan Payan-Lopez California Diabetes
Program Linda Sawyer, PhD, APRN , BC Chief
Operating Officer, Lumetra Wells Shoemaker, MD
Co-Chair Medical Director, California
Association of Physician Groups Michael Van
Duren, MD Medical Director Sutter Connect
- Mike Belman, MD, MPH
- Staff VP Medical Director Quality Management,
Blue Cross of California - Michael-Anne Brown, MD
- Sr. Medical Director of Quality ,
- Blue Shield of California
- Hattie Hanley
- Department of Managed Health Care
- State of California
- Elizabeth Haughton
- Chief Counsel, NAMM
- Halsted Holman, MDProfessor of Medicine,
Stanford University - David Hopkins, PhDDirector of Quality
Management, Pacific Business Group on Health/CCHRI
8Improving Patient Experience
9Where We StandCalifornia v. National
CA Ave 68.3
10Where we Stand Modest Positive Gains Statewide
on PAS
11Three-Year Trend by Performance Quartile
Overall Rating of Care
4th quartile saw a 1.1 point change compare to
0.9 point gain for 2nd and 3rd quartiles, and no
gain for 1st
12Result for Groups in 2006CQC Collaborative
Participants Affinity, Greater Newport, Muir
Medical Group, Monarch. (Completed training
program January 2007)
13Improvement Framework
Strategic
Tactical
- Leadership Actions
- Communications Systems
- Rewards and Recognition
- Technical Support and Training
- Systematic monitoring and feedback
- Practice
- Doctor-patient communication
- Access to care
- Coordination of care
- Staff-patient communication
With Group Support
Implementation
Sustainability
14Tactical Key Changes at the Practice
- Communication Techniques
- Negotiate the agenda with the patient at the
start of each visit - Make a personal connection through eye contact
and demonstrate empathy through empathic
statements - Provide closure to the visit by summarizing next
steps and action plan - Coordination of Care
- Notify patients of all test results, whether
positive or negative - Review patients chart prior to starting the
visit - Regular Feedback
- Conduct regular practice team meetings and/or
daily brief check-ins (huddles) and measure
practice site satisfaction at least quarterly
15Results at the Practice Study funded by
Commonwealth Fund
- 12 physicians drawn from 4 large IPAs
- 8 PCPs, 1 DERM, 2 OBGYN, 1 PEDS
- Matched control physicians within same IPA
- Matched for Age, gender, specialty type, practice
size and performance (in MD/PT comp and
recommends MD) - Commercially insured HMO and POS enrollees PPO
patients added to supplement samples - Adjusted for regression to the mean effect
- PAS instrument used for baseline and post
collaborative measurements - Study Design and Analysis Bill Rodgers, PhD, New
England Medical Center and Cheryl Damberg, PhD,
RAND
16Results at the Practice - cont
- Quantitative Results
- Greater improvements in all communication and
care coordination measures compared to controls
(2-3 points versus .6 points) - Gains sustained after 6 months
- Statistically significant gains for the following
survey questions - Recommends doctor
- Clear instructions,
- Respect for patient,
- Can tell the doctor anything, and
- Helpful staff
- Physicians with Largest Gains
- Started with lower scores at baseline
- Demonstrated greater engagement as compared to
controls (6 point gain)
17Results at the Practice - cont
- Qualitative Results
- Semi-structured interviews with 10 of 12
practices - 100 believe they can sustain changes
- 80 believe staff satisfaction improved
- 80 believe practice culture improved
- 80 report improved personal job satisfaction
- 72 report improved relationship with IPA
- 71 reported that their practice is a better
place to work than 12 months ago compared to 58
pre-intervention
18Strategic Key Changes at the Group
- Leadership Actions
- Strategic initiative, part of planning process
- Part of personnel evaluations and hiring
decisions - Develop physician champions
- Rewards and Recognition
- Significant part of practice incentives
- Technical Support and Training
- Sponsor initial training sessions
- Provide on-going coaching and training
- Systematic monitoring and feedback
- At least quarterly feedback to practices
19Program Outline
Spread to Target Sites
Implement at Demonstrator Sites
Months 9 -18
Diagnosis
From Months 3 to 10
From Months 1 - 3
10 - 20 Practices
Identify which practices and which interventions
required to improve groups scores
- Generate practice results
- Develop internal champions
- Test practice
- support systems
- Boost group-level results
- Build systems for sustainability
20Improving Patient Experience Collaborative
- Analyze Group Scores Identify domains
- Analyze Doctor-level scores and select at least
one-third of practices for improvement - Select Demonstrator Practices (up to 20) from
targets - Implement fully at Demonstrator practices and
measure results - Required Communication Techniques (2 Clinician
training sessions) - Optional Access, Coordination of care, Office
staff communication
21Improving Patient Experience Collaborative
- 4. Decide which changes to spread across network,
and how.. - 5. At the same time.. build for sustainability
- Leadership actions to support patient-centered
care - Build measurement and feedback systems
- Build capacity for improvement
- Develop Physician champions
- Improvement skills for managers
- Adjust Incentives
22Example Group in Round 2
- Aim X strives to improve our overall rating of
health care by 2 points on 2010 PAS from 81.6
(20th Percentile) to 83.6 (50th percentile) - Spread plan
- May Dec 13 Demonstrator Sites
- Oct. Mar. 09 76 sites and 60,000 patients
- Feb. 09 Dec 09 148 sites and 120,000 patients
23Improving Patient Experience Collaborative Summary
- 2006 Participants (Round 1)
- Affinity, Greater Newport, Muir Medical Group,
Monarch - 2008 Participants (Round 2)
- Beaver, Bristol Park, Facey, Mercy Physicians MG
Primecare, PMG Santa Cruz, St. Joseph Heritage - 2009 Program (Round 3) Currently Recruiting
- Starts March 2009
- Physician Group Commitment
- 8,000 13,000 per group (based on enrollment)
- Project Team attends all sessions
- CQC Commitment
- Training for first round of physicians in
Doctor-Patient Communication techniques locally
(10,000 value) - Quarterly on-site sessions
- One-on-one coaching
24From Current Participants..
- Why did your organization decide to join the
Collaborative 2008? - We thought this was a cost effective program
to provide proven strategies for improving
patient satisfaction scores. - What did your team find most valuable?
- The most valuable part of the collaborative was
working with other groups that are working
towards the same goal. The sharing of ideas, what
worked, what didn't, was very effective. - This program provides a systematic process to
analyze your data, determine areas of
opportunity, plan not just your strategies but
also your "spread", and track your work in a way
that was new to me. The tools we were provided to
support taking on a project like this is was
useful not just to this project, but will be
useful in many others as well.
25AimImprove the average patient experience
ratings statewide over three years by 25Target
MY2009 Mean for Overall Rating of Care rises by
1.7 points over MY2006
Goal
Baseline