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CMS Hospital Quality Leadership Summit

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Five years after the IOM's Crossing the Quality Chasm, ... Strategize deployment of Self Assessment Tool for 9th SOW. 12. Communicate Results to partners ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CMS Hospital Quality Leadership Summit


1
CMS Hospital Quality Leadership Summit
  • Transforming Leadership
  • Transforming Culture

Dale W. Bratzler, DO, MPH QIOSC Medical
Director Oklahoma Foundation for Medical Quality
2
The Problem
Five years after the IOMs Crossing the Quality
Chasm, hospitals have not shown adequate
improvement in the most basic measures of
quality. Furthermore, governing board, executive
and physician engagement in the quality arena
needs significant attention.
3
  • Four key themes
  • Improvement pace is modest
  • Improvement is variable
  • Quality has improved but much remains to be done
  • Sustained improvement is possible

http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhqr05/nhqr05.pdf
4
Medicare QIO Program
  • Created by statute in 1982 to improve quality and
    efficiency of services delivered to Medicare
    beneficiaries
  • Specific roles to address quality of care in
  • Hospitals
  • Nursing homes
  • Home health agencies
  • Physician offices

5
Medicare QIO Program
  • contracted to CMS to .assist providers in
    measuring and reporting quality, producing and
    using electronic clinical information,
    redesigning care processes, and transforming
    organizational cultures so as to accelerate the
    rate of quality improvement..

6
Medicare QIO Program
  • Two key requirements in the contract
  • to assist providers in developing the capacity
    for and achieving excellence in care
  • To protect beneficiaries and the Medicare Program

7
Quality Improvement Landscape
  • Recognition of the need to fundamentally change
    health care processes and systems to deliver
    consistent high-quality care
  • The need to incorporate the IOMs six aims for
    health care

8
We cannot save lives or fix the problems in
todays healthcare without making a commitment to
rapid transformational change. CMS
Administrator Mark B. McClellan, M.D., PhD
9
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10
Need for New Metrics for Quality
  • Leadership and culture
  • Patient outcomes
  • Care coordination and transitions
  • Costs and efficiency
  • Adverse events
  • Patient experience and satisfaction

11
Why Focus on Hospital Leadership?
  • Research suggests that more engagement of of
    hospital leadership (C-suite, boards, and
    physicians), in cooperation with other health
    care professionals in QI, is associated with
    higher performance in clinical care.
  • The active involvement and collaborative
    participation of top level leaders is essential
  • Hospital leaders must be given the knowledge and
    tools to address the issue

12
The Developing Evidence Base
  • Studies that have looked at high performing
    hospitals in relation to governance and
    leadership
  • Solucients /Governance100 Top Hospitals
  • Yale/AHRQ
  • Commonwealth Fund
  • Vanderbilt
  • Mathematica/Delmarva
  • HSAG- Health Services Advisory Group
  • Iowa Field Study
  • CMS/Iowa/CareScience
  • Estes Park/NPSG

13
Current CMS Activities addressing
Transformational Change
  • CMS Current Scope of Work SIOC
  • Hospital Interventions QIOSC/OFMQ is tasked with
    providing QIOs and hospitals with information
    and tools to facilitate work on the CMS quality
    improvement projects
  • QIOs are contracted to help hospitals implement
    system changes and organizational culture change.

14
What are the barriers to transformation?
15
Barriers to Transformation
  • Challenges
  • Culture of quality not promoted
  • Inadequate tools to drive quality improvement
    efforts
  • Lack of perceived leadership and prioritization
    of quality

Quality cannot be delegated to a department.
16
Barriers to Transformation
  • Feeling of being overwhelmed by the process
  • Challenges
  • Stretched resources, limited personnel, competing
    priorities
  • Perception that medical staff priorities are not
    aligned with hospital measurement and reporting
    requirements
  • Physician autonomy
  • Inadequate training for members of Boards about
    hospital quality and performance measurement and
    improvement

17
Barriers to Transformation
  • Must be able to focus on more than the short-term
    including financial instability
  • Need for Board members to understand their
    responsibility for hospital quality just as well
    as they understand their fiduciary responsibility
  • Overcome the lack of personnel, skills, and
    experience
  • Challenges
  • Lack of training in performance improvement
  • Need to better describe the business case for
    quality

18
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19
  • There are still plenty of opportunities to
    improve even for the limited measures that we
    currently focus on.

20
The Pace of Improvement is ModestMeasure Trends
Surgical Infection Prevention
21
Quality from the Patients PerspectiveNational
ACM Rate, Qtr. 4, 2005
The Appropriate Care Measure reflects the
percentage of hospital patients that receive all
indicated care (all-or-none).
22
How do we achieve transformation?
23
What do the QIOs need?
  • New metrics
  • Reliable and valid measurement tools to assess
    organizational culture
  • Focus on governance and leadership structure and
    processes
  • New interventions
  • How do we use the information obtained to assist
    a low-performing institution to transform culture
    and leadership?

24
Shannon ArcherHospital Interventions QIOSC
Educator
Hospital Leadership Activities of the
Collaborative Workgroup
25
Leadership CollaborativeWork Group
  • CMS
  • Strategic direction and project coordination
  • Oklahoma Foundation for Medical Quality/HI QIOSC
  • --Collaboration in development and deployment
    process for assessment instrument and possibly
    other tools
  • University of Iowa / CareScience
  • Development of assessment instrument and
    sampling strategies. Analysis of feedback and
    data following testing. Refinement of tool.

26
Broad Objectives of the Workgroup
  • To identify specific structures and
    administrative processes related to leadership
    engagement in QI that are most closely correlated
    to high performance in clinical quality .
  • Compile leadership and organizational attributes,
    functions, and processes shown to be associated
    with high-reliability organizations into an
    organizational self-assessment tool.
  • Share findings and tool with CMS, the QIO
    community and the hospital industry at large in
    order to facilitate transformational improvements
    in quality.

27
Workgroup Project Plan
  • Development of a standardized hospital assessment
    tool based on a systematic investigation of the
    relationship between key organizational
    attributes and performance in clinical quality.
  • Field testing of the tool with voluntary hospital
    participants to get input for maximum value to
    user.
  • Deployment of a CMS-endorsed assessment to QIOs,
    hospitals and other stakeholders.

28
Proposed Approach Summary View
CMS/CareScience/HI QIOSC
Aggregate Knowledge
Assess Current State
Relate Practice to Performance
Prepare for Action
March-August 2006
Feb - May 2007
May April 2007
October Feb. 2007
10
7
3
Develop Framework, sampling strategy, and Draft
Assessment Tool
7 Relate hospital assessment results to
Performance on clinical indicators
Based on participant feedback and
comparative findings, Refine Self Assessment Tool
1
Synthesize Research
8
Validate Findings with external SMEs
Stratify Recruit hospital participants for
field testing
4
11
Administer revised tool to same cohort.
5
Administer Draft Assessment Tool to test hospitals
12
Strategize deployment of Self Assessment Tool for
9th SOW
.
29
Twelve common findings
A. Leadership
  • CEO dedication to quality as job 1
  • Direct board involvement
  • Leadership both understands and articulates the
    business case for quality
  • Support for a culture of quality
  • Support for EBM beyond mere lip service

30
Twelve common findings (contd)
B. Structure Process
  • Medical and nursing leadership engagement at all
    levels
  • Attraction and retention of the right people
  • Development of effective in-house processes
  • Monitoring and use of benchmarks
  • Exploitation of the power of IT

31
Twelve common findings (contd)
C. External Resources
  • Engagement with consumers
  • Access to external support and assistance from
    peers

32
DimensionCEO Dedication to Quality as Job 1
  • Action CEO demonstrates commitment to quality.
  • 1. CEO doesnt participate in PI activities,
    adequate funds are not allocated for necessary PI
    activities.
  • 2. CEO addresses PI and patient safety in staff
    meetings, but doesnt allocate sufficient
    resources to support quality initiatives,
    improvement efforts, and necessary FTEs to
    achieve PI goals.
  • 3. CEO speaks enthusiastically to board,
    management and staff about PI activities, but
    doesnt allocate adequate resources. Not
    perceived as main driver within organization.
  • 4. CEO ensures adequate resources for PI are made
    available, but doesnt personally champion
    activities.
  • 5. CEO demonstrates knowledge of, passion for,
    and financial commitment to securing adequate
    resources for PI. Is perceived by all levels of
    organization as the main driver for quality
    improvement and patient safety.

33
CEO Dedication to Quality is Job 1
34
Benchmarks are used to set quality Improvement
goals for organization
35
Central Plan for Leadership Collaborative
Activities
  • Development of organizational self-assessment
    tool
  • Testing the tool
  • Refining the assessment
  • Deploying the assessment
  • Future activities
  • Extending the research
  • Creation of additional tools and resources

36

They always say time changes things, but you
actually have to change them yourself.
ANDY WARHOL
  • The future ain't what it used to be. YOGI
    BERRA
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