Title: Frontier Extended Stay Clinic Demonstration Project
1Frontier Extended Stay ClinicDemonstration
Project
- Report on 12 Months Data
- Presented by
- Alaska Center for Rural Health
- Alaskas AHEC
- December 2006
2General Observations
- Data collection period for ARMC, CRMC, and IFHS
3/15/05 3/14/06. - Data collection period for IIMC 9/15/05-9/14/06
(due to later start in project). - Years data captures seasonal variations (fishing
season, tourist season). - Data submitted by clinics of very high quality
required minimal data cleaning. - Clinics reported a remarkably similar number of
FESC encounters no need to weight/adjust the
data.
3Key Findings
- Each clinic is a distinct blend of geographical
challenges, material human resources, and
community/culture. - Consequently, the data show that there is no
typical participating FESC clinic. - Overall project means/averages hide these
distinctions. - However, there is considerable common ground.
4Key Differences and Common Ground
- Key differences
- Mon Ob/Transfer patient breakdown
- Patient disposition breakdown
- Length of encounters
- Percentage of Medicare-reimbursable encounters
- Key common ground
- High percentage of after hours encounters
- FESC-related staff stress (esp. after hours)
- Clinics ability to quickly diagnose, stabilize
and - medevac Transfer patients (weather permitting).
5Number of FESC Encounters
- Clinics reported very similar numbers of FESC
encounters. - Consequently no need to weight/adjust data.
6Type of FESC Encounter
- FESC encounter type breakdown is highly variable
from clinic to clinic a key indicator of the
conditions unique to that clinic.
7Disposition of FESC Patients
- Disposition of patients is highly variable from
clinic to clinic - closely tracks Mon Ob/Transfer
breakdown (most Mon Obs are discharged home,
nearly all Transfers are medevaced).
8Disposition of Mon Ob Patients
- In all clinics, large majority of Mon Ob patients
are discharged home. - Similar smaller percentages are referred for
non-urgent follow-up care.
9Mean FESC Encounter Length
- Mean encounter length extremely variable (range
1.42 17.07). - Transfer encounters generally shorter than Mon
Obs (exception IFHS, due to weather-caused
medevac delays).
10Median FESC Encounter Length
- Median encounter lengths also highly variable
(range 1.25 10.25). - Median reduces effect (statistical noise) of
very long outliers. - Relatively short Transfer median lengths show
clinics ability to quickly diagnose, classify,
and medevac Transfer patients.
11Maximum/Minimum FESC Encounter Length
- Minimum encounters were all Transfers clinics
can accomplish medevacs extremely rapidly under
right conditions. - Maximum encounters nearly all Mon Obs exception
IFHS, due to a prolonged weather delay.
12Maximum Encounter Length Mon Obs vs. Transfers
- Maximum encounters highly variable range 4.00
to 99.50. - Transfer maximums quantify longest medevac delays
(due to bad weather, lack of daylight, waiting
for transport, stabilizing patient).
13Distribution of Encounter Length All Encounters
- No clinic with typical distribution matching
overall project. - Few encounters gt12 hours, very few gt24 hours
exception CRMC.
14Distribution of Encounter Length Mon Obs
- No clinic with typical Mon Ob distribution
matching overall project. - Few encounters gt12 hours or gt24 hours
exception CRMC.
15Distribution of Encounter Length Transfers
- No clinic with typical Transfer distribution
matching overall project. - Very few Transfer encounters gt12 hours or gt24
hours exception IFHS, due to medevac weather
delays.
16After Hours Encounters
- More common ground similar percentages of
encounters occurring outside of normal clinic
hours (after hours) project mean 47. - Represents FESC work and stress loads of after
hours/on call staff.
17Frequency of Project Top 5 Diagnoses at Discharge
- No typical clinic (IFHS close) diagnoses
vary significantly. - Common ground - incidence of top 2 injury and
cardiovascular.
18Frequency of Project Top 5 Mon Ob Diagnoses
- Again, no typical clinic ARMC is close
diagnoses vary. - IFHS substance abuse most common IIMC injury
most common CRMC renal-urinary high incidence. - Common ground high incidence of
gastrointestinal (esp. CRMC).
19Frequency of Project Top 5 Transfer Diagnoses
- Highly variable only IIMC approaches overall
project pattern. - Common ground injury and cardiovascular top 2
for all clinics.
20Top 10 Diagnoses at Discharge for Each Clinic
- Highly variable only IFHS approaches overall
project pattern. - Common ground injury, cardiovascular,
gastrointestinal.
21Medicare/aid Eligibility for Reimbursement
- Medicare/aid-eligible FESC patients range from 7
(IFHS) to 55 (IIMC). - High percentage filtered out by 4 hour
encounter length criteria (esp. IIMC). - Net Medicare reimbursable encounters range from
4 (IFHS) to 19 (CRMC). - Most clinics will receive minimal financial boost
from CMS reimbursements.
22Time Distribution Medicare/aid-Eligible Encounters
- Time distribution of Medicare/aid eligible FESC
encounters highly variable - Total numbers of eligible patients also highly
variable - Potential reimbursements thus variable, from high
(CRMC) to very low (IIMC)
23Time Distribution Medicare-Eligible Encounters
- Time distribution of Medicare eligible FESC
encounters highly variable - Total numbers of eligible patients also highly
variable - Potential reimbursements thus variable, from high
(CRMC) to very low (IIMC)
24Clinic Thumbnails
- ARMC Short encounters (all types) rapid
medevacs low percentage medevaced high
percentage discharged home many Medicare
eligible patients but few Medicare-reimbursable
encounters. - CRMC Very long Mon Ob encounters rapid
medevacs low percentage medevaced high
percentage discharged home many
Medicare-eligible patients and many Medicare
reimbursable encounters.
25Clinic Thumbnails
- IFHS Long encounters otherwise rapid medevacs
prolonged by distance/bad weather median
percentages medevaced and discharged home very
few Medicare eligible patients and very few
reimbursable encounters. - IIMC Very short encounters (all types) very
rapid medevacs high percentage medevaced few
discharged home many Medicare-eligible patients
but very few Medicare-eligible encounters.
26Key Variables
ARMC CRMC IFHS IIMC
Medevaced 32 31 49 74
Transfer mean length (hrs) 4.00 4.00 8.64 1.42
Mon Obs 66 67 50 22
Mon Ob mean length (hrs) 4.19 17.07 5.83 3.14
After hours 40 55 42 54
Top 3 Diagnoses at Discharge Injury Gastro Cardio Gastro Pneum/bronch Cardio Cardio Injury Gastro Injury Cardio Gastro
Medicare reimbursable 7 19 5 5
27Key Qualitative Findings
- Staff cite stress and turnover due to both
FESC-related and unrelated causes (or causes
beyond clinic control). - Main FESC-related causes cited
- - Stress of after hours/on-call FESC
encounters - - Disruption of daytime routine
- - Lack of space for FESC patients
- - Demands on skills (urgent care)
- - Sporadic nature of encounters
(anticipatory stress) - - Community expectations for after
hours/urgent care
28Key Qualitative Findings
- Unrelated/uncontrollable causes cited
- - Medevac weather delays
- - Personal/family/spousal issues
- - Professional isolation/lack of educational
opportunities - - Call schedule/sleep loss/call remuneration
- - Administrative issues
- - Staff issues staff turnover/poor hires
- Clinics that added after hours staff/providers
reduced staff stress. New/additional equipment
also helped. - Most staff positive and optimistic about FESC
project, and recommend project participation.