Title: Measuring EPrescribing to Sustain Adoption and Support P4P
1Measuring E-Prescribing to Sustain Adoption and
Support P4P
AMGA October 1, 2009
- R. David Allard, MD - Henry Ford Health System
2Disclosure
- Member - DrFirst Inc. Physician Advisory Board
- Unpaid
- Position taken over 1 year after vendor chosen
3Medical IT
- Technology is not the destination,
- it is the transportation.
Dr. Safron American Medical Informatics
Association
4Goals
- Describe experience
- Discuss steps for successful roll out of
ePrescribing - List obstacles to adoption
- Understand motivating factors to adoption
- Understand Metrics for tracking quality and
success - Look at methods of measurement
- Review PQRI ePrescribing incentive
- Discuss collection of PQRI data
5The Industrial Revolution in Healthcare
- Medicine must push out its performance envelope
- Technology is a natural direction for an
information industry - ePrescribing is an achievable first step
6Henry Ford Health System Key Facts
- Henry Ford Health System includes
- Henry Ford Hospital and six owned hospitals
- Henry Ford Medical Group with 800 employed
physicians/scientists - 24 ambulatory centers located in Southeastern
Michigan - Health Alliance Plan, a 530,000 member managed
care organization serving 2,800 employers
7Henry Ford Health System Key Facts
- Ambulatory Clinic Organization
- Each clinic has a Physician In Charge (PIC), an
administrative manager, and a nursing supervisor - Key roles impacted by ePrescribing included
physician, nurse, medical assistant, and customer
service representative - Technology
- Electronic medical record (EMR, called CarePlus)
used throughout HFMG (clinics and hospital) - All primary care exam rooms have PCs with network
access used to connect to the EMR
8HFHS ePrescribing Initiative History
- September 2004 GM asked HAP HFMG to partner
with auto companies to test ePrescribing via the
Southeast Michigan ePrescribing Initiative
(SEMI). HFMG agreed to be the incubator for
testing ePrescribing and eight HFMG primary care
clinics launch ePrescribing - January 2005 HFMG/HAP launched first 4 HFMG
primary care clinics on ePrescribing - January 2006 HFMG completed implementation at
all primary care clinics - January 2007 HFMG completed implementation in
all outpatient specialty care clinics - February 2007 Michigan is recognized for moving
from the 10th highest ePrescribing state to the
6th for 2006 - April 2007 HFMG launches 3 Emergency
departments on ePrescribing - February 2008 Michigan is recognized for moving
from the 6th highest ePrescribing state to the
5th for 2007 - June 2009 Michigan is recognized for moving
from the 5th highest ePrescribing state to the
3rd for 2008
9ePrescribing Solution Scope
- Users can write prescriptions on a PC using the
web or on a wireless device (smart phone, tablet
PC) and send them directly to the retail pharmacy
or mail order pharmacy for filling - Application has real time access to
- Patients eligibility
- Formulary
- Drug fill history
- Drug allergies
10Fostering Change
- Creating Readiness
- Overcome resistance
- Articulate the vision
- Generate Commitment to the vision
- Institutionalize the change
11Setting the Stage
- Vendor selection
- Get the equipment
- Data preload
- Articulate a vision and position the event
12ePrescribing Value Proposition - Quality
- IOM Dimension of quality
- Safety
- Reduce the rate of drug/drug interactions
- Reduce errors due to allergy
- Reduce error due to legibility
- Patient centered
- Allows patients to select their preferred
pharmacy - Reduces process time for patients
- Provides patients with a printed list of meds
- Allow easy use of mail order pharmacies
- Efficient
- Reduce paper based processes
- Reduce Staff time for renewals
- Reduce Pharmacy call backs to offices
13ePrescribing Value Proposition - Quality
- IOM Dimension of quality
- Effective
- Improve ability to track compliance
- Increase formulary adherance
- Increase generic use rate
14Go Live Strategy
- Trainers on site
- Training in groups by function
- A given clinic was closed in the AM for training
with go live in the afternoon - Trainers stayed on site for 3-5 days
- During hands on training sessions, rapid adopters
were called upon to help others
15Five Stages of Medical Technology Acceptance
- Abject horror
- Swift denunciation
- Profound skepticism
- Clinical evaluation
- Acceptance as standard of care
Frederick Knoll, Medical Imaging in the Age of
Informatics Stanford University, 11/15/2005
16Adoption Measures
- Currently over 39,000 prescriptions generated
each week - Over 6 Million sent as of June 2009
17Results Safer Care
- Over 1.1 million total warnings have been
delivered as of early 2008 - Over 400,000 prescriptions have been changed or
cancelled due to warnings
18Results
- For HFMG capitated membership
- HAP/HFMG initial capital investment of 1.6
million plus annual operating costs averaging
590,000 reaps total savings of more than 1.9
million in total for 2005 and 2006 - Future estimated savings through 2009 will
average 4 million per year - Based on the 2005 and 2006 realized improvement
in generic use rate, the five year Return On
Investment is now estimated to be over 14M
19Results
- Key sources of cost reduction benefit are
- GUR Improvement totaling 1.5 million for 2005
2006 and estimated at 3 million/year for
2007-2009 - Administrative savings totaling 700,000 for
2005 2006 and estimated at 560,000/year for
2007-2009 - Estimated impact of reduced adverse drug events
(ADEs) totaling 540,000 for 2005 and 2006 and
540,000/year for 2007-2009
20Adoption Measures
- HFMG primary care physician feedback after 1 year
- 85 agree that ePrescribing has improved the
practice of medicine at their clinic - 77 agree that ePrescribing improves the safety
of the care that patients received - 75 agree that ePrescribing improves the quality
of the care that patients receive - 70 agree that ePrescribing improves patient
satisfaction
21Adoption Measures
- Strong patient preference for ePrescribing
- Saves time at pharmacy
- Simplifies process for mail order pharmacies
- Improves medication reconciliation procedures
giving increased patient confidence
22Adoption Measures
- Support staff love it
- Old process time/renewal 7 minutes, 12 seconds
- ePrescribing 3 minutes 50 seconds/renewal and got
better with time - Time savings did not result in headcount
reduction but enables other activities by support
staff
23Measuring Use
- Need to assess continued use
- Look for pockets of resistance
24Measuring Use
- Retrospective Study Comparing Insurance claims
data to prescription - Advantages
- Shows the percentage of scripts written
electronically - Ignores differences between specialties
- Difficult to dispute
- Disadvantages
- Very time consuming and labor intensive
- Requires claims data from insurance company (or
possibly RxHub)
25Measuring Use
Patients with Health Insurance Plan with
prescription drug riders Match patient, Doctor
and Medication
26Prescription Distribution
- Prescription Distribution
- Based on insurance claim data 81 of all
prescriptions during the 12 months study period
were written by primary care. 13 were written
by medical subspecialties and 6 by surgical
specialties - Approximately 2/3 of all prescriptions are
filled. This does not change across specialty
27Measuring Claims and ERx
28Claim vs. ERx Data
29RVU vs. ERx
- Advantages
- Does not require insurance information
- Fairly easy to count
- Disadvantages
- Does not reliably account for case acuity between
providers - Still requires data from more than one source
30ERx vs. RVU generation
31Measuring with Prescription Volume Only
- Easy data to collect
- Matches well with Other methods
- Non-users defined as creating less than 15
prescriptions/week - The other data collection methods were still
worthwhile as they validated the volume method
32Analysis
- In contrast to primary care, medical and surgical
specialties were trained by specialty not
location. - This greatly decreased the on-site post go-live
support - Fewer opportunity for super users to help out
- Specialties write far fewer prescriptions
essentially practicing less. This is
particularly true regarding refills (the area of
greatest efficiency)
33Reported Problems
- Too much time logging in and out
- Answer, integrate with single sign-on
- It takes too long to write a script
- Answer, Use favorites, single sing-on, have
support staff verify pharmacies - I have to much to do
- Answer Nurse refill process for maintenance
medications
34Overcoming Resistance
- Data Collected from more than one source is
harder to refute - Sell the process
- Build on the Process
- Target ongoing training to areas of slowest
adoption
35ePrescribing from the Physician Prospective
Sources of Error
- Patient gives wrong information or doesnt have
information (I,E,R) - CSR incorrectly copies information (E,R)
- Written information is misplaced and not seen by
doctor (R) - Chart misplaced or slow to be located/retrieved
(I,R) - Review time in chart (I)
- Correct phone number for pharmacy needed (E,R)
- Time spent on phone with pharmacy (I)
- Transcription error at pharmacy (E,R)
- Transcription error in medical record or not
recorded (E,R) - Patient fails to get prescription (I,R)
- Patient fails to notice error (E)
- IInefficiency, RRework, EError
Patient calls for medication refill
Customer Service Rep (CSR) writes information for
nurse/doctor review and action
Doctor or doctors agent (nurse) reviews
prescription and makes decision for fill or not
Doctor or agent calls pharmacy with prescription
information, information documented in the
medical record
Pharmacy fills prescription and patient picks it
up
36ePrescribing from the Physician Perspective
Sources of improved efficiency and decreased error
1
2
Pharmacy sends refill request electronically
Patient calls for medication refill
- Greatly reduced time and no transcription errors
- Information on patient available as prescription
created - Requests not lost
- Information available as decision made
- Enormous time savings
- No transcription error
- Reliable documentation
Electronic request sent to a clinic in box for
review by doctor or doctors agent and decision
on action
3 4
Prescription automatically sent to pharmacy and
documented
5 6 7
Pharmacy fills prescription and patient picks it
up
37Overcoming Resistance Obstacles
- Learning curve
- Training needed to be ongoing
- Time study
- Resistance to change itself
- Congratulate past success and then change
38Overcoming Resistance
- Depends heavily on setting the stage
- Listen to feedback
- Discuss and contrast with paper/phone process
- Share successes (data from adopters)
- GUR improvement,
- Changed scripts due to warnings
- Elicit testimonials
- Enlist participation in users group
39Overcoming Resistance Users Group
- Users group with wide range of technical ability
- Ongoing review of bugs and enhancement requests
- Over 320 Software enhancements and fixes to date
40Generate Commitment
- Celebrate Successes
- Foster involvement
- Users group
- Train the trainer
- Solicit ideas
- Communication!
41Institutionalize the Process
- Users become trainers
- Process becomes the foundation of the next aspect
- Specify the metrics
42Institutionalize the Process Building On the
Foundation
- Nurse medication renewal policy started with
standing orders for nurse - Uses ePrescribing process
- Medication Reconciliation with ePrescribing as
source of truth - A JCAHO compliant medication note can be created
with one click provided the user has kept the
medication list up to date. The best way to do
this is to write the prescriptions in the
software! - PQRI makes ePrescribing a requirement
43Adoption Measures
44Next Steps
- Continue metrics
- Scripts by Volume (varies per specialty)
- warnings
- Offer retraining/refresher for low utilizers
- Continued integration into EMR
- Continued improvement and feedback
45PQRI ePrescribing Incentive
- For those physicians using ePrescribing, payment
will be made at a higher rate
46CMS Electronic Prescribing Incentive
47CMS Electronic Prescribing Incentive
- Current requirement is to submit G-code with each
claim - CMS has to date not accepted aggregate reporting
from medical groups - G8443 - All prescriptions generated during the
office visit were created electronically - G8445 - No prescriptions were generated during
the encounter. - G8446 - Some or all prescriptions generated
during the encounter were handwritten, faxed, or
called in. (This does not include prescriptions
created electronically and handed to patient or
then faxed, which would be reported using G8443.)
48Attaching G Codes
- Currently attaching G Code at the point of care
based on provider reporting. - Billing is captured from an optical scanning
scheet - G Codes were added as an optional field (at
first) - Clinicians bubble a choice of all e-Rx,
Paper Rx, or no Rx this visit - Looking at attaching code based on ePrescription
generation but this only returns a numerator.
This does not differentiate visits which had no
prescriptions from those with paper prescriptions.
49PQRI reporting success
In June, a hard stop was introduced in the
billing process, not allowing the billing sheet
to be processed unless a G Code was added.
50Summary
- ePrescribing was not only financially sound but
resulted in safer, more patient centered care - Our ePrescribing success was due to several
factors - Goals consistent with mission and culture of
organization - Planning to make adoption easier
- Ongoing improvement
- Enthusiasm
- Training and monitoring becomes a continual
process which will not end
51Questions/Discussion