Title: Patient Flow Unplugged:
1Patient Flow Unplugged
- JCAHO Guidelines and the Flexible Unit
Tim Gee, Principal Medical Connectivity Consulting
Cheryl Batchelor, Executive Director Clinical
Operations FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital
2Learning Objectives
- Understand the elements of performance for the
new JCAHO LD.3.15 standard - Learn four categories of potential patient flow
optimization solutions - Understand the Flexible Unit care model, elements
required success, and outcomes
3JCAHO LD.3.15
- Leaders assess patient flow issues within the
hospital, the impact on patient safety, and plan
to mitigate that impact. - Planning encompasses the delivery of appropriate
and adequate care to admitted patients who must
be held in temporary bed locations, e.g. Post
Anesthesia Care Unit and Emergency Department
areas. - Leaders and Medical Staff share accountability to
develop processes that support efficient patient
flow. - Planning includes the delivery of adequate care,
treatment, and services to those patients who are
placed in overflow locations, such as corridors. - Specific indicators are used to measure
components of the patient flow process and
address the following Available
supply of patient bed space
Efficiency of patient care, treatment, and
service areas Safety of patient care,
treatment and service areas Support
service processes that impact patient flow - Indicator results are available to those
individuals who are accountable for processes
that support patient flow. - Indicator results are reported to leadership on a
regular basis to support planning. - The hospital improves processes related to
patient flow identified as inefficient or unsafe.
- Criteria are defined to guide decisions about
initiating diversion.
4Meeting the Standard
- Take a leadership position on patient flow,
making a resource commitment to study, plan and
execute patient flow solutions - Make a serious effort to understand the root
causes impacting patient flow in their hospitals - Map out a strategy and plan to address the root
causes (don't forget measuring results) - Be able to demonstrate resulting flow improvement
changes and their results - Any issues of patient safety must be addressed
immediately
5Four Categories of Change
- Organizational and procedural changes
- Team rounding bed briefing, discharge rounds
- Dedicated admissions nurse
- Facility changes
- Extended short-stay recovery unit
- Observation unit
- Capacity management software applications
- Provides patient/bed status and automates
workflow between staff and departments - Tele-Tracking, Hill-Rom (Navicare), StatCom,
Premise, Awarix - Acuity Adaptable care model
6The Flexible Unit Care Model
- Other terms universal bed/unit, variable acuity,
acuity adaptable, flex bed/unit, flexible
monitoring, house-wide monitoring - Definition Reduce ICU utilization and patient
transfers by keeping the patient in the same room
from admission through discharge, adjusting
staffing, therapy and surveillance based on the
level of care and patient acuity. - Result Caring for patients in the most
appropriate, lowest cost setting.
7Benefits
- Avoid ICU admissions
- Reduce off-service admissions
- Reduce ICU readmissions
8Requirements
- Flexible monitoring
- Monitor any patient anywhere on the unit
- Devices appropriate for bedside, transport and
ambulatory patients - Policy and procedure changes
- Admissions criteria and enforcement
- Update for new meds
- Surveillance and alarm notification policy
- Monitoring criteria, alarm response
9Flexible Unit Requirements
- Staff impact
- Training for monitoring, alarms and meds
- Implementation planning
- Communications with medical staff
- Survey staff and patients before and after
implementation - Measure results using LOS by DRG and reduction in
transfers
10FirstHealth of the Carolinas Working
TogetherFirst in Quality, First in Health
- Private, non-governmental, not-for profit health
care network serving 15 counties in the
mid-Carolinas - 611 Licensed Beds (3 Hospitals)
- Rehabilitation Center
- Skilled Nursing Facility
- Clinics (dental, pain, sleep disorders)
11FirstHealth of the Carolinas Working
TogetherFirst in Quality, First in Health
- Family Care Centers
- Fitness Centers
- Laundry
- Hospice
- Home Care
- Charitable foundations
- CCT/EMS Services
- Health Care Plan
122004-2005 Hospital Outcomes
- Solucient Top 100 Hospital (2004, 2005)
- Distinguished Hospital Award Patient Safety
(2004, 2005) - Distinguished Hospital Award Clinical
Excellence (2005) - Rated 1 in North Carolina for following
services Cardiovascular, Cardiology and PCI
132004-2005 Hospital Outcomes
- Specialty Excellence Award Cardiac Services
(2005) - Specialty Excellence Award Orthopedic Services
(2005) - AA Credit Rating by all rating agencies
14Define The Problem
- Discharges exceed 24,000
- Visits to FirstHealth Family Care Centers exceed
72,000 - Emergency Department visits exceed 87,000
- EMS serve more than 27,000 patients
Volume, Volume, Volume
15Measure
- Demographics
- Admissions (Direct, ED)
- Service-line placements
- LOS (hospital, ICU, medical DRGs)
16ED Visits
17Current Patient Flow Strategies
- Flexible monitoring system (1992)
- Increased monitoring demands
- Significant manpower (location of monitors,
patient transfers) - System capacity
- Patient Placement Coordinator
- Service-line patient placements
18Current Patient Flow Strategies
- Communication patterns
- Contingency plan / high census policy
- No history ED diversion
- LOS
19Continued Improvements
- Flexible telemetry surveillance wireless
house-wide flexible monitoring (2000) - Increased number of monitors
- Extended monitoring capability to ancillary
services - Extended monitoring capability to hallways and
elevators - Extended monitoring capability to Women
Children Services
20Continued Improvements
- Extended monitoring capability to Behavioral
Services - Extend monitoring capability to Emergency
Department Observation Unit - Improved information/history to physicians
- Potential for multi parameter monitoring
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23Continued Improvements
- Patient Placement Coordinator/Communication
- Electronic network-wide communication regarding
high census - Pertinent signage
- Daily Interdisciplinary Bed Task Force
- Interventional Cardiology Unit/Cardiac Cath bed
board - Rapid Admission Unit (2003)
- IT improvements (Electronic Medical Record,
PDAs, FirstView)
24Continued Improvements
- Length of stay
- Implementation of Hospitalist Service (2003)
- ED LOS
- Average medical discharges per day
- Medical DRG average LOS
25Consult Requested ? Removed From Track
26Average Medical Discharge/Day
27Medical DRG Length of Stay
28Outcomes
- Improved monitoring capacity
- Pre-admissions delays average 34 patients / month
- Post-admission delays average 0 patients / month
- Decreased time spent locating monitoring
equipment - Pre-implementation 30 minutes
- Post-implementation 0 minutes
- Monitored patients LOS from 5 days to 3
29Outcomes
- Improved patient safety
- Expansion of monitoring to nontraditional areas
- Decreased inappropriate ICU placements
- Post partum patients
- Behavioral Services patients
- Sleep apnea post operative patients
30Control
- Sleep apnea post operative patients (2003-2005)
- Algorithm for patient placement
- Multi-parameter monitoring
- Rapid Response Team (2005)
- ICU nurse, respiratory therapist, hospitalist
- Multi-parameter monitoring
- Maintain philosophy of No ED Diversions
31Creating Beds Through Shorter LOS
200 beds 300 beds 400 beds 500 beds 600 beds
0.25 days 8 12 16 20 25
0.50 days 16 26 33 41 49
0.75 days 25 37 49 61 74
1.0 days 33 49 65 82 98
Assumptions 85 occupancy, 5.2 days LOS
Reference 2002 Maximizing Hospital Capacity,
Health Care Advisory Board, Washington DC
32Effective RNs Gained
200 beds 300 beds 400 beds 500 beds 600 beds
0.25 days 6 9 12 15 18
0.50 days 12 18 24 30 36
0.75 days 18 27 36 45 55
1.0 days 24 36 48 61 73
Assumptions 85 occupancy, 5.2 days LOS
Reference 2002 Maximizing Hospital Capacity,
Health Care Advisory Board, Washington DC
33Substantial Financial Improvements
Beds Gained 38 70 125
Patient Days Gained 13,977 25,269 45,664
Admissions Gained 2,688 4,859 8,781
Contribution Income 4,976,634 8,997,304 16,258,878
Assumptions 85 occupancy, 5.2 days LOS, freed
beds filled with national average case mix
Reference 2002 Maximizing Hospital Capacity,
Health Care Advisory Board, Washington DC
34Results
- Improved monitoring capacity
- Decreased admissions delays
- Decreased LOS in Emergency Department
- Decreased LOS on monitor
- Decreased ICU admissions
35Results
- Improved patient safety
- Expansion of monitoring capabilities into
non-traditional patient care areas
36Results
- Improved equipment efficiency
- Decreased time spent locating telemetry monitors
- System expansion using SpO2 monitoring
- Sleep apnea patients
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38Bibliography
- JCAHO Patient flow standard
- JCAHO Official Comments on New Patient Flow
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40Contacts
- Tim Gee
- tim_at_medicalconnectivity.com
- Cheryl Batchelor
- cbatchelor_at_firsthealth.org
- Download presentation
- www.medicalconnectivity.com/stories/NTI2005
- www.medicalconnectivity.com/categories/patientflow