Title: Palliative Care Benchmarking: Timing is Everything
1Palliative Care Benchmarking Timing is
Everything
- Mary Ann Gill, RNMA
- Executive Director, Palliative Care Services
- Project Manager, Palliative Care Leadership
Center - mgill_at_mchs.com
2Presented at Recovering Our Traditions
II Journey to Excellence A Catholic Health
Care Perspective On End-of-Life Care January
26-28, 2006 San Antonio, Texas
3Sponsored by Supportive Care Coalition Pursuing
Excellence in Palliative Care Catholic Health
Association of the United States The George
Washington Institute for Spirituality and Health
4Outline
- Palliative Care Mount Carmels history and
evolution - Infrastructure, Models
- Strategies to achieve Quality
- Establishing Benchmarks
5 Mount Carmel Multi-Hospital System with
Vertical Integration
- Serving Columbus, Ohio, for gt125 years
- Three hospitals -- 53,000 inpatient admissions
- Care Continuum-- Hospice, Homehealth,
- College of Nursing, Medical Education
- ASCs and UCCs
- Owned Physician Practices
- Medicare Choice Product
- Member, Trinity Health System
6Mount Carmel Health System Table of Organization
and APCS
7The Mount Carmel Hospice
- Operating since 1985
- Established presence in health system
- Initiated collaboration re system-wide pain
management program in 1994 - Historic presence in hospital ethics committees
- Focus of Hospice care at home
8 Mount Carmel Palliative Care Services
- Palliative Care
- Hospice Acute Palliative
Care - Consult Service APC
Units
9Mount Carmel Acute Palliative Care Initial
Vision
- Optimal pain and symptom management (physical,
emotional, spiritual) for hospitalized patients
with chronic advanced diseases - Competent response to patient directives, choices
- Timely transfers from ICU, ED, SNF
- Concurrent disease focused treatment palliative
care - Effective Continuum to Hospice
10 Strategy Understand Chronic Disease
- Chronic disease is continuous with episodic
acuity - Chronic disease consumes 78 of healthcare
expenditures - Characterized by shifting severity, pace,
setting, and treatment - So multifaceted must involve IDT, care
coordination - Must be able to weave the care of specialists
into the overall plan
11 Background Hospitals Current Challenges
- More chronically ill patients often spending 10
or more days in ICU - Many DRGs cover 50 cost of ICU, yet market
presses for more ICUs - Boutique hospitals attracting patients
- Hospitalists replacing Primary Care physicians
- Increasing numbers of uninsured or Medicaid
12 Background Hospital Survival Strategies
- Reduce variable costs
- Reduce LOS (especially ICU)
- Increase Physician Satisfaction
- Increase Patient Satisfaction
- Meet Healthcare report card benchmarks and become
best hospital
13Background Hospice and Homehealth Realities and
Survival Strategies
- Earlier referral
- Appropriate Hospital Discharge Plan
- Access to patients in hospital to plan admission
- Increase LOS to provide care and spread costs
- Advance Care Planning process in place
- Adherence to formulary
14Background Sources of Evidence
- SUPPORT Study
- Dartmouth Studies
- National Concensus Project,
- JCAHO
15Background SUPPORT Recommendations
- Create palliative care in hospitals
- interdisciplinary team process
- patient and family focus
- pain and symptom management focus
- ready access to Palliative Professionals
16Background Why Palliative Care Is Needed in
Hospitals
- Chronically ill patient volume projections
- Hospitals struggling with how to manage this
population re LOS, resource utilization - gt50 patients die in hospitals hospitals
should be greatest source of Hospice referrals - Hospitals need to import Hospice paradigm to
create effective management of chronic disease
and in-hospital mortality.
17 Strategy Articulate a Vision
- Optimal pain and symptom management (physical,
emotional, spiritual) for hospitalized patients
with chronic advanced diseases - Competent response to patient directives and
choices - Timely transfers from ICU, ED, SNF
- Concurrent oncology treatment and palliative care
- Seamless continuum to community
18Strategy Clearly Define Terms
- Hospice Care Interdisciplinary care for dying
patient with predictable prognosis also for
family spiritual, emotional support--primarily
in home setting including bereavement support - MC Acute Palliative Care Interdisciplinary care
for seriously ill patient with unpredictable
prognosis during acute hospitalization
spiritual/emotional support for patient/family
concurrently preparing for improvement or
decline/death
19Strategy Use Hospital data to determine Need
- 5 Hospital Admissions annually
- Top 20 DRGs resulting in death
- Readmission rates within 6 months
- Number of SNF patients entering ED
- ICU deaths post 5 day LOS
20Strategy Define Program
- In-Patient or Out-pt Consult Service? Units?
Upstream or End of Life? - Administrative Responsibility
- Location
- Staffing
- Routine, Standard Processes
- Continuum Partners
21 Strategy Describe Tools Needed
- Standard admission orders and criteria
- Rounds Worksheet
- Procedures e.g. Palliative Extubation
- Educational materials
- Staff/Students/physicians
- Patient/family
- Data Base
22Strategy Define Routine Processes
- Interdisciplinary Team Functionality (team
rounds, IDT conferences) - Palliative Consultation- physician, nurse
clinician roles in coordination, mentoring - Intensive pain/symptom management /protocols
- IDT education, competency development
- Data collection, analysis, feedback
- Continuum interface
23Strategy Employ processes for Palliative Chronic
Disease Management
- Care Coordination across settings
- Education of patient to interpret symptoms to
team and to provide self management - Adaptation by all to changing role of physician
(cardiologist to palliative physician and team) - Emphasis on behavioral techniques to understand
impact of chronic disease - Problem None of this is norm in chronic disease
management - Holman,H. JAMA September 1, 2004,
vol 292, no. 9
24Strategy Differentiate PatientTypes
- Patients with exacerbation of chronic illness who
choose palliative life-extending treatment - Patients receiving disease-directed treatment who
may benefit from palliation of sx arising from
disease or treatment - Patients with serious, life-limiting illnesses
for whom hospitalization often segue into
Hospice - Patients with acute event such as CVA
25Strategy Determine Referral Source, Criteria,
Process, and Management
- ICU Physicians and Staff
- ED Physicians and Staff
- Oncology Physicians and Staff
- Nephrology Physicians and Staff
- Case Management Staff
- Hospitalists Physicians
26Strategy Create a Palliative Care Continuum
- Presence / collaboration-- hospital Ethics
committees and consultations - Develop tools which support continuum--
- Develop processes to identify continuum patients
who enter hospital through Emergency Department - Explain/ Understand Reimbursement ramifications
fo all partners -
27Strategy Build Rapid Cycle, Organic Quality
Processes Importance of Timing
- Patient, family, physician, PC Team determine
care plan concurrently - Plan checked daily for validity by the palliative
care team - Benefits/burdens of treatment weighed daily
- Plan Changed rapidly if indicated
- Family support ongoing and into bereavement
- Discharge planning initiated on entry
28Strategy Define Relevant Data
- Patient demographics
- Clinical Characteristics
- Functional status
- Diagnosis
- Advance directive status at time of consult
- Presence and timing of DNR orders
- Pain and other symptoms
- Evidence-based Interventions
- In-hospital and ICU death rate and length of
stay - Discharge destinations, -- hospice, homehealth,
SNF, home referrals - Readmission Rates
-
29 Outcomes
- New patients, all patients served
- Total Admissions to APCUs
- Most Frequent Symptoms
- Cancer/Non Cancer
- ALOS on APCU or Consultation
- from ICU, IMCU
- ALOS in prior unit
- P/F Satisfaction (HCAHPS) Would you
recommend?
30Data Contd
- PPS
- CMI
- Variable Cost Savings
- Contribution to Overhead
- transferred to hospices
- Hospice ALOS
31Delineate Clinical Benchmarks
- Accessible, expert Advance Care Planning begins
at initial consult - Assessment of patients needs for effective
pain/symptom management at each encounter - Provision of Interdisciplinary palliation for
patients and families within explicit time frames
- - Timely transfer of patients from ICU and ED into
APCS from APCUs to Hospice to other providers
32Sample Diagnosis Types
- Primary Diagnosis
- Cancer 38.6
- Non Cancer 61.4
- Cardiac 17.0
- Pulmonary 15.3
- CVA 9.6
-
-
33Sample Discharge Destinations
- Continuum (48 Discharged)
- Hospice
- Home Hospice
25.2 - ECF Hospice
8.8 - ECF-Skilled
7.1 - Homehealth 3.7
- Other 3.9
34Hospital Reimbursement Basics
- Medicare Prospective Payment System
- Major Disease Categories
- Diagnosis Related Groups
- Case Mix Index
- Comorbidities and complications
- Expected Costs and Expected Payments
- Based on Bell Shaped Curve Utilization
35Hospital Reimbursement Variables
- Principal Diagnoses mapping to DRG
- Co-morbidities Complications effect payment
- Impact of Palliative Consultant and Attending
Physician Documentation on DRG - MedPac Report to the Congress Medicare
Payment Policy March, 2002
36Hospital Costs Rev vs LOS
ICU _at_ 750 /day Cost
LOSSES!
Cost per day
LOS (Days in acute care bed)
37Strategy Palliative Financial Management
- LOS ReductionICU Palliative Consultation at day
X - Variable Cost Reduction Earlier Transfer from
ICU - Direct Admissions Avoiding ICU, Control LOS
- Consultation Team Productivity Standards
38Financial Benchmark Processes
- Permeable relationship between Clinical and
Financial components - Commitment to Financial Data Collection
- Using Data to demonstrate cost savings
- Effective Care Coordination impact on variable
costs - Early Identification Criteria impact on LOS
management - Effective Payer strategies
39Strategy Manage Payers
- Education of Commercial Payers
- Coordination with Provider Relations
- Challenge denials
40 Challenges
- Just getting to the data
- Understanding it
- Interpreting it so as to project volumes and
revenues
41How APCS Controls Costs
- Coordination of Services
- Reduce LOS (Early Discharge)
- Change of setting (Transition from ICU)
- Change of Payer (Transition to HMB)
42Strategy Financial Management
- Reduce variable costs and LOS by transferring ?
ICU patients earlier - Create net income contribution ?direct admissions
to APCUs freeing ICU beds and ending ED
diversion - Reduce variable costs through improved
coordination of care and discharge planning - Meet payer requirements by documenting need for
inpatient care and DRG coding - Maintain efficient, properly documented billing
by palliative physicians
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- Palliative Care Benchmarks
45Minimum Standard Acute Palliative Care
- Consult service regularly available in hospital
to facilitate palliative evaluation and
management of symptom burden -
- Supported by Interdisciplinary Process
46Stepwise Approach toward achieving Palliative
Benchmarks
- Minimum Standard
- Increased Presence, Breadth and Depth of Services
- Routine Identification of Appropriate Patients in
ED, ICU - Routine Advance Care Planning from hospital
admission through inpatient course - Coherent System of Palliative Care from primary
care through hospitalization, to discharge
destination
47Sharpening the SawExample ACP
- Preliminary Discussion
- Formal ACP session by trained professionals
- Use of Valid, Reliable, Standardized Tool
- System in place to process/ accomodate choices
- Repository for storing and updating Directives
-
- L Bierbach. St Vincent Health System, Billings
Montana ,
48 Benchmark Processes and Timing
- Timing/frequency of rounding assessment
- Timing of post assessment intervention
- Timing of ICU Intervention and Transfer
- Timing of ED Palliative Triage and Intervention
- Timing of Initial Advance Care Planning
Assessment and follow-up discussions - Extent to which Family is involved
- Valid, Reliable Measurement of Symptoms
49- Patient/Proxy/Family Satisfaction
- Timing/ frequency of Hospice Transfers
- Timing Palliative Care Recommendations Implemented
50Palliative Care Benchmarks/Timing
- Patient status assessed within x days of
admission - Pain and Symptoms measured numerically
- Pain and Symptoms reduced within 48 hours
- Discharge Planning by day x
- Psychosocial Assessment by SW by day x
- Family Meeting by day x
- University Health Systems Palliative Care
Benchmark Field Book 2004 Unpublished
51 Predictors of Success
- Strong Advocate for System Change
- Physician buy in
- Partnership with accessible and flexible Hospice
- Consistent presence of Palliative Physicians,
Nurse experts to mentor, teach - Commitment to Data collection/analysis
- Commitment to Quality Improvement
- Commitment to Financial Management
- Openness to learning hospital culture
52Questions