Title: The Dilemma of Healthcare: More Quality with Less
1The Dilemma of Healthcare More Quality with
Less?!
- HFMA State Meeting
- June 2008
- Joy King, RHIA, CCS
2Wrong E-mail Address
- My Dearest Wife,
- Just got checked in. A lot of turbulence during
the trip! Looking forward to your arrival
tomorrow. - Signed,
- Your loving husband
- P.S. It sure is hot down here!
3Top 10 Compliance Challenges
- RACs
- MS-DRGs
- Quality
- POA
- Data Mining
- Special Certification Supplemental Payments,
e.g. GME, Outliers, etc. - Medicaid Compliance
- Stark Self-Referral Ban
- Clinical Trial Billing
- Board Involvement
4RACs Demonstration Project
- IP OP Incorrectly coded 131 m
- Excisional Debridement
- Respiratory Failure
- Wrong units billed
- Claims w/ single secondary dx (CC)
- DRG 72 hour payment window
- Medically unnecessary services 120 m
- 1-Day stays, especially through ED
- IRF
- No/Insufficient Documentation 30 m
- Other Reasons 50 m
5RACs Potential New Areas
- MS-DRGs
- POA Indicators
- Readmissions
- LTCH Admissions
6RACs Provider Implications
- Timely interdepartmental communication critical
- Detailed records of RAC requests, MR release,
reimbursement activity, time frames - Appeal processvery labor intensive, expensive
and lengthycan take up to 2 yearsshould be
based on cases involved to justify expense - Review of operations
- Root cause analysis of valid takebacks
- Additional FTEs to handle volume of requests
- Involvement of clinical, financial legal
expertise
7 8Final Rule FY 2008 MS-DRGs
- 2-year transition to coincide w/ transition to
cost-based relative weights - 1st year, r.w. a blend of 50 current DRG and 50
MS-DRG r.w. -
- 2/3 cost-based/ 1/3 charge-based r.w.
- FY 2009, 100 cost-based, 100 MS-DRG relative
weights
9Pneumonia MS-DRGsFY 09
- Simple Pneumonia (DRG 89, r.w. 1.0376)
- 193 w/ MCC 1.2505 1.4303 7,867
- 194 w/ CC 1.0235 1.0041 5,523
- 192 w/o CC 0.8398 0.7301 4,016
- Complex Pneumonia (DRG 79, r.w. 1.6268)
- 177 w/ MCC 1.8444 2.0391 11,215
- 178 w/ CC 1.5636 1.4979 8,238
- 179 w/o CC 1.2754 1.0409 5,725
10Post-Acute Transfer PolicyProposed FY 2009
- FY 2007, 190 DRGs subject to policy
- FY 2008, 273 of 745 DRGs subject to policy (see
Table 5 of Final Rule) - If one DRG meets criteria, all severity levels of
that DRG are subject to policy - Change to transfer to HH policy extend the 3-day
window to 7 days. If HH not related to IP
admission, condition code 42, if related, use
condition code 43 along w/ d/c status code 06
11Impact on CMI
- Off-setting adjustment to allow for increases in
Case Mix that are due to improved documentation
coding, rather than real case mix changes - 1st year, -1.2--reduced to 0.6
- 2nd year, -1.8--reduced to 0.9
- Cumulative0.6 0.9 -1.5
- Adjustment for 2010 of -1.8 will be adjusted
based on data
12Case Mix IndexWhy Should MDs Care?
- Low CMI low severity
- Low CMI impression of low quality
- Low quality high cost contract loss patient
loss - High CMI high expected cost LOS
- Being used in credentialing/re-credentialing
process - P4Pwhich MDs bring Quality (core measures)
and/or Value (Quality/Cost) to your patients
your healthcare system?
13Impact on Severity/Reimbursement
- Patient admitted w/ dysphagia slurred speech.
HP noted patient also has renal insufficiency - PDx CVA
- Secondary Dx Renal Insufficiency
- MS DRG 66 CVA w/o CC/MCC r.w. 0.8426 4,634
- If MD documents Stage 4 CKD
- MS DRG 65 CVA w/ CC r.w. 1.1748 6,461
- 1,827 additional reimbursement
14Impact on Severity/Reimbursement
- Adm for COPD exacerbation w/ acute bronchitis.
Stools occult EGD confirmed gastritis. - PDX COPD exacerbation
- Secondary Dx Gastritis
- MS DRG 192 COPD w/o CC/MCC r.w. 0.7239 3981
- Secondary Dx Gastritis, GI bleed
- MS DRG 191 COPD w/ CC r.w. 0.9734 5354 (1,373)
- Secondary Dx GI bleed due to gastritis
- MS DRG 190 COPD w/ MCC r.w. 1.3004 7152 (3,171)
15Analyze Financial Impact
- Need for concurrent documentation personnel
- Potential need for additional coders
- Increased software service costs
- Training costs
- Less markup for ancillary charges
- Decreased productivity
- Impact on DNFB, AR days
- Potential decreased reimbursement w/o effective
CDIP program
16Quality of Care
- Consumers demand information quality
- Move toward positive outcomes and evidence-based
medicine - Scorecards used by consumers to make choices
about providers
17Quality of Care
- Dominant Theme in Payment Compliance
- There is a quality chasm between healthcare
entities which operate as silos and the needs of
patients w/ chronic conditions. Factors
contributing to patient-focused shift include
consumerism and P4P. Quality Measures utilize
evidence-based medicine approach to help level
the playing field among providers give
consumers consistently measures results. (IOM,
2001)
18Quality of Care
- gt 90 million Americans suffer from chronic
illnesses - gt75 of the 1.4 trillion per year medical costs
according to the CDC - Studies show 60 of diabetic patients did not
take their ACE inhibitors or ARBs as prescribed - 48 of CAD patients did not comply w/ their
statin meds.
19Patient Safety
- One of the most important initiatives in the last
50 years - Everyone involved w/ patient care shares
responsibility - A new way to look at quality
20Safety Quality
- Thomson Healthcare Study names top 100 hospitals
on Patient Safety - Measured 8 patient safety measures for 2001
2005 Medicare patients - Measures on risk-adjusted mortality
complications, core measure scores,
severity-adjusted LOS, expense per adjusted d/c,
profit, and cash-to-debt ratio - If all hospitals performed at level of the top
100, it would have saved 253 million and 7,914
lives during that time period
21Safety Quality
- HealthGrades 4th Annual Patient Safety Report
- Safety incidents increased to 3 from 2003 2005
- gt40 million Medicare hospital records showed 1.16
m preventable incidents at an excess cost of 8.6
billion. - Highest-performing hospitals had 40 lower rate
of medical errors - 2,200 hospital deaths would be avoided each year
if lowest-performing hospitals would catch up w/
top performers on quality measures
22Quality of Care
- VBP to link hospital payments to performance on
quality measures - Premier Hospital Quality Incentive Demonstration
Project - Reporting Hospital Quality Data for Annual
Payment Update (RHQDAPU) - Leapfrog Groups 3 Leapsstructural measures
23Quality Measures Examples--IP
- Heart Failure
- Assessment of heart function done?
- ACE inhibitor given?
- Pneumonia
- Initial antibiotic timing? Revised from within 4
hrs to 6 hours of arrival (proposed rule) - Pneumococcal vaccine given?
24Quality Measures
- IPPS Final Rule for FY 2008
- 6 additional measures (27 total)
- HCAHPS Survey (patient satisfaction data)
- VTE prophylaxis ordered for surgery patients
- VTE prophylaxis w/in 24 hrs pre/post surgery
- Prophylactic abx for surgical patients
- AMI 30-day mortality (based on claims data)
- Heart Failure 30-day mortality (based on claims)
- 4 measures for FY 2009 already approved
- 7 measures approved for OP reimbursemt
25Quality Measures for FY 2009
- 30-day mortality Pneumonia (claims data)
- Cardiac surgery patients w/ controlled 6 am
postop serum glucose - Surgery patients w/ appropriate hair removal
- Data for these start w/ 1st Qtr CY 2008
discharges - Total measures for FY 2009 would be 30
26Surgical Care Improvement Project
- Elevated BS decreases WBC functionparalyzes
cells so they cant fight infection - WBC may be OK, but cells dont function properly
- BS gt 126 can increase risk, regardless of whether
patient is diabetic - Postop glucose gt 220 in General Surgery increased
infection rate by 6 times
27Proposed Quality Measures for FY 2010
- SCIP measure CVS patients on beta blocker prior
to arrival who received one during perioperative
period - 4 nursing measures 1) failure to rescue, 2)
pressure ulcer prevalence incidence by
severity, 3) patient falls prevention, 4) patient
falls w/ injury - 3 readmission measures 30-day readmission for
AMI, heart failure, pneumonia (claims data)
28Proposed Quality Measures for FY 2010
- 6 VTE measures
- 5 Stroke measures
- 9 AHRQ Patient Safety (PSI) Inpatient Quality
Indicators (IQI) measures claims-based outcome
measures proposing submission of all-payer
claims data - 15 Cardiac Surgery measures proposing to accept
data from Cardiac Surgery Clinical Data
Registry43 additional measures
29Proposed Quality Measures
- FY 2009 30 measures
- FY 2010 72 measures, retire 1 measure
- FY 2011 table of 59 measures and 4 measure sets
from which to select future quality measures for
RHQDAPU program - Include increased outcome, efficiency
experience of care measures - Expand scope of services to which applied
- Seek alternative sources of data
30Public Reporting of Infections
- 20 states w/ laws requiring public reporting
- 2 states require public reporting of infection
info, but not rates (CA, RI) - 2 states require confidential reporting of
infection rates (NE, NV) - 1 state has voluntary law requiring public
reporting infection rates (AR) - All other states except WY, AZ, MT, ND have
considered laws, but have not yet passed
legislation
31- Jim Bullock had surgery to repair and place
internal hardware on his heel broken while doing
roof repair on his house. The surgical site and
hardware placed in his heel were infected with
hospital-acquired infections that ended up almost
costing him the foot. According to Jim, "I picked
up 6 different infections (Super-bug Staph
Strep, E-Coli, yeast and a couple others) between
the hospital and doctor office visits during the
course of 5 surgeries." His treatments to fight
the infections included being placed on a VAC
(Vacuum Assisted Closure) machine, 120 day IV
treatment with a PICC line IV treatment. It took
multiple surgeries to finally clear up the
infection, and today he still walks with a limp. - Read more _at_ Share your Hospital Infection Story.
- Have you or your loved one contracted a hospital
infection when you went in for surgery or other
illness? Over 1000 people have shared their
hospital infection experiences. We would like to
hear your story. Read their stories
32Value-Based Purchasing (P4P)
- Reimbursement based on Quality of Care (Quality
Measures Hospital-Acquired Conditions) - Proposed Rule indicates potential application to
OP Depts, SNFs, ESRD facilities MD practices - Proposed modification of Medicare secondary payer
policy provider that failed to prevent a HAC
would pay for all or part of necessary followup
care in a second setting - Payers starting to refuse payment for NQFs
never events
33Hospital-Acquired Conditions
- 98,000 Americans die each year due to medical
errorscosts are 17 - 29 billion - In 2000, CDC estimated hospital-acquired
infections added nearly 5 b to US healthcare
costs - A 2007 study indicated that 1.7 m hospital
acquired infections occurred in 2002 resulting
in 99,000 deaths - 2007 Leapfrog Group survey of 1,256 hospitals
found 87 do not follow prevention guidelines to
prevent most common infections
34Value-Based Purchasing (P4P)
- Approved hospital-acquired conditions
- Catheter-associated UTI (44,043/stay)
- Pressure (decubitus) ulcers (Stage 3 or 4)
(43,180/stay) - (Object left in during surgery (63,631/stay)
- Air embolism (71,636/stay)
- Blood incompatibility (50,455/stay)
- Vascular catheter-associated infections
(103,027/stay) - Mediastinitis following CABG (299,237/stay)
- Falls, fractures, intracranial injuries, crushing
injury, burns (33,894/stay)
35Value-Based Purchasing (P4P)
- In Proposed Rule for FY 2009
- Staph aureus septicemia (84,976/stay)
- Vent-associated pneumonia (new code 997.31)
(135,795/stay) - DVT and PE (50,937/stay)
- C. difficile associated diseases (CDAD)
(59,153) - Surgical Site Infection for Total Knee, Lap
Gastric Bypass Gastroenterostomy,
Ligation/Stripping Varicose Veins (63,000
180,000//stay) - Legionnaires Disease (86,014/stay)
- Diabetic Ketoacidosis, Nonketotic Hyperosmolar
Coma, Diabetic coma, Hypoglycemic Coma (35,000
- 45,000/stay) - Iatrogenic Pneumothorax (75,089/stay)
- Delirium (23,290/stay)
- If approved, effective 10/1/08, along with the
original 8 conditions
36Evidence-Based Guidelines
- Surgical Site Infections prophylactic abx, using
clippers rather than razors, tight control of
postop glucose - Delirium reducing certain meds, reorienting
patient, assuring sensory input sleep, avoid
malnutrition dehydration - VAP educating staff, hand washing, gowns
gloves, proper patient positioning, elevating
head of bed, changing vent tubing, sterilizing
reusable equipment, monitor sedation daily, etc
37Hospital-Acquired Conditions
- 2007 Leapfrog Group survey of 1,256 hospitals
found 87 do not follow prevention guidelines to
prevent most common infections - Can hospitals afford NOT to follow the prevention
guidelines??
38Impact on ReimbursementFY 09
- Patient admitted w/ Pneumonia due to Candidiasis
- Secondary Dx Decubitus ulcer Stage III (MCC),
COPD, CHF, A fib, Anemia - MS DRG 177 Resp Inf w/ MCC r.w. 2.0391
11,215 - Decubitus not POA, case regrouped to
- MS DRG 179 Resp inf w/o MCC/CC r.w. 1.0409
- 5,725
- 5,490 difference average cost to tx decubitus
of 43,180
39Liability Implications
- Were prevention guidelines followed?
- Public reporting of infections, hospital-acquired
conditions (HACs) - MD-specific data on HACs
- Increase in lawsuits against hospitals/MDs
- Some hospital-acquired conditions or infections
are expected - How can hospitals/MDs defend against
hospital-acquired conditions?
40 41Uses of POA Indicator
- Analysis of Factors to prevent HACs
- Calculate incidence of HACs by hospital
- Monitoring Complication Rates
- Quality Reporting
42Data Quality
- Data integrity of POA indicators is VERY
important - Impact on public report cards--once the data is
out there for public review, it cant be taken
back - Impact on reimbursementValue-Based Purchasing
Program
43Using POA Indicator to Monitor Complications
- In-hospital complications may indicate problems
w/ quality of care - Complications are inevitable
- Hospitals w/ higher complication rates are more
likely to have quality problems - Complications are more likely in sicker patients
- POA identifies possible complications (from dx
that occur after admission) - POA helps assess severity of illness on admission
(based on only dx POA)
44Post-Admission Patient Complications (PPCs)
- 12,988 ICD-9-CM dx code were reviewed 1,534
identified as PPC dx - Each PPC dx assigned to 1 of 64 PPC Groups
- Dx assigned to a group were similar in clinical
presentation and clinical impact - Risk adjustment is essentialbased on reason for
adm, SOI, comorbid conditions - PPCs developed by 3M
45PPC Reports Examples
- Rates of pneumonia among GI surgery groups
- Overall rates of major PPCs
- Major PPCs by service lines
- Major PPCs by General Surgery service lines
46Use of PPCs
- Assist hospitals in identifying possible quality
problems - Allow health systems, govt agencies, etc. to
monitor hospital performance - A possible basis for adjusting hospital
reimbursement under P4P
47Use of POA for Quality Reporting
- Venous Thromboembolism (VTE) included in new
quality measures for FY 2009 - Venous thrombosis is formation of a clot in the
veinsan embolism occurs when the clot travels to
a different site of the body through the blood
vessels - The clot can travel to the lungs block a
pulmonary artery, resulting in a pulmonary
embolism (PE)
48Use of POA for Quality Reporting
- PE resulting from DVT is the most common cause of
preventable hospital deaths - Over 200,000 new cases of VTE occur annually
- 30 die within 3 days
- 20 suffer sudden death due to PE
- 30 develop recurrent VTE within 10 years
- Average charges per stay 50,937
49Use of POA for Quality Reporting
- Solucient developed complication methodology w/
following criteria - VTE must be secondary dx
- VTE, embolism, thrombophlebitis cannot be PDx
- Interruption of vena cava not performed
- Record review of hospital data to identify
cases POA - Clinical analysis of non-POA VTE cases
50Use of POA for Quality Reporting
- Risks communicated to MDs
- Appropriate prophylaxis standards developed
- Re-review of non-POA VTE cases using root cause
analysis - Coding guideline created for VTE to differentiate
current VTE (453.40-453.42) vs. hx of VTE
(V12.51) - Coding Clinic review Coder education
51Use of POA for Quality Reporting
- Estimates vary about the impact of POA indicators
in assessing quality - One Canadian study on CABG patients estimates
that 13-35 of identified complications were POA - POA has high impact on public measures,
including - AHRQ PS Indicators HAC measures
- VBP program SCIP measures
52Some Quality Concerns
- ED triage, ED wait times
- Bed assignment/utilization
- LOS
- Medication administration
- Site marking for surgical other procedures
- Patient falls
- Patient restraints
53Quality Analysis
- Postop Days for Open Heart Surgery
- Diagram of entire process
- Increased LOS due to A fib, lack of consistent
ambulation - Correct the problems w/ better tx A fib
consistent ambulation - Reduction of 53 to 22 that fell outside LOS
benchmark for the procedure--400,000 savings - Reduction of blood borne infections--450,000
savings - Supplies, Meds, gt ICU beds available, decreased
LOS, labor
54Quality Management Systems
55Anything Less Not Acceptable
- Even with 99.977 accuracy (Five Sigma)
- 70,000 patients/year w/ surgery performed on
wrong part of the body - 5000 adverse surgical cases per week
- 4,000 families would leave w/ the wrong baby per
year - Six Sigma 99.999 accuracy or 3.4 errors/million
56Process Issues
- Integration of Case Management, Quality
Management, UR, Coding/Reimbursement - Medical Staff Infrastructure
- Using TQM, Six Sigma, Rapid Cycle Improvement
Process activities to improve clinical
processes/quality - Documentation--Revised Forms
57- EFFECTIVE MANAGEMENT OF RESOURCES
58Resource Management
- Most costly resource to manage
- An MD w/ a pen in his hand
59Resource Management
- Move from educating clinicians and staff about
DRGs to facilitation of changes in patient care
practices - Multi-disciplinary approach
- Look at patterns to improve clinical outcomes,
patient satisfaction, and cost of providing care
60Data Mining
- This process is data driven
- MDs are key to modifying clinical processes--they
respond to data - Medical record information is pivotal in patient
care, accreditation surveys, hospital stats and
finances - Crucial to collect, store, and process health
info and apply evidence-based knowledge in real
time
61Data Mining
- Look for patterns of care resource use from
highest to lowest charges/case - One hospital looking at top 6 DRGs
- CMI was tracking upward overall about 4.7 4.8
- However, analyzing data on paid claims showed
hospital is - 193,743 since 10/1/07
62Data Mining
63Data Mining
64Data Mining
- Data on Simple Pneumonia MS-DRGsLoss of 38,540
so far - Several patients who presented w/ AMS and had CTs
ordered in ED - 2 patients had heart cath performed during
Pneumonia stay - 2 patients in lowest severity level had ICU days
billed - 1300-1800 billed per case on Lab Chem
65 66Strategic Plan
- Multidisciplinary Team
- Educational Efforts
- Clinical Documentation Improvement Program
- Process Issues (monitoring/feedback)
- Financial Impact
- Administrative Support critical
- Medical Staff buy-in critical
67CDI Program Addresses Quality Reimbursement
Issues
- Potential adverse effects of incomplete data
- Public perception of your hospital
- Medicare Quality Indicators
- P4P Implications
- Performance on Report Cards
68Documentation Improvement Strategies
- Streamline forms
- Revise standing orders/Cath Lab, GI Lab forms,
ED, Nursing Admission Assessment, Wound Care
forms to include documentation specificity needed
for both severity POA - Perform documentation audits w/ scorecards
- Develop minimum documentation standards necessary
to maintain medical staff privileges - Incorporate poor documentation ratings into
credentialing process
69Education on Documentation
- Start w/ Major Players
- Cardiology, CV Surgery
- ED physicians
- Hospitalists
- Orthopedic Surgeons
- MD extenders (NPs, PAs, etc)
- NOTE Board of Trustees also needs to be well
aware of financial/liability implications
70MD Education
- If you consumed a resource to manage a
Complication/Comorbidity (CC), DOCUMENT it - CCs impact Severity/Complexity Scorecards
support E/M codes billed - CCs impact P4P
- CCs provide data for true severity of
illnessimproves severity-adjusted quality
outcomes, mortality rates, costs, LOS, etc. - CCs provide medical necessity for
tests/admissions - CCs impact hospitals blended rate for DRGs
71Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- Aviation Healthcare
- Healthcare is a decade or more behind other
high-risk industries in its attention to ensure
basic safety. - establish team training programs for personnel
in critical care areas (e.g. ED, ICU, OR) using
proven methods such as Crew Resource Management
training techniques employed in aviation. (IOM
2000)
72Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- United Flight 173led to institution of CRM
training in 1980used throughout the world - also known as Cockpit Resource Management
- Eastern Flight 401
73Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- Based on NASA research into causes of transport
accidents - Human error failures in communication,
decision-making, leadership - Reduce pilot error through better use of human
resources on the flight deck (crew) - Team training approach being applied to patient
safety in healthcare areas such as ICU, OR, LD
74Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- 3 Elements of Human Effectiveness
- Safety
- Efficiency
- Morale
75Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- Situational Awareness
- (88 of Human Error Accidents)
- Perception of elements in environment
- Comprehension of their meaning
- Projection of the near future
- Should lead to a decision performance of actions
76 77Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- Studies on Practitioner Intimidation in the
Workplace - Intimidation pervasive in the workplacemore
frequently, but not limited to, MDs - Impact on Safety
- 49 said intimidation altered their handling of
order clarifications - 75 used avoidance techniques to clarify orders
- 31 allowed MD to give med despite concerns
- 49 felt pressure to accept, dispense, or
administer a medication despite concerns
78Crew Resource Management (CRM) Training
- Normalization of errorstrategies to manage error
- Cognitive errors slips
- Deleterious effects of stressors
- Non-punitive approach
- Team-Building Training
- Educates people on cognitive errors and how
stressors like fatigue, work overload, etc.
contribute to errors
79Crew Resource Management (CRM)
80CRM Success Story 2008
- Nebraska Medical Center
- Implemented sustained CRM
- OR, ER, LD, Cardiac Cath Lab
- Housewide (all units)
- CMO-CEO-CNO-Key Leaders-Board
- Training/Dealing w/ non-compliance
- AHRQ Patient Safety Culture Survey
81- 80 of medical error is system derived
- Every system is perfectly designed to achieve
the results it gets. - Donald Berwick
- Institute for Healthcare Improvement
- Identify the human factors
- Fix the system
82Questions?
- Contact Information
- Joy King Consulting, LLC
- jkinginc_at_charter.net
- (205) 612-4471