Title: ED Operations: How YOU fit into the Big Picture
1ED OperationsHow YOU fit into the Big Picture
- Brent Asplin, MD, MPH
- Head, Department of Emergency Medicine
- Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN
- Associate Professor Vice Chair
- University of Minnesota Dept of Emergency
Medicine - E-Mail Brent.R.Asplin_at_HealthPartners.com
2Four Areas to Consider
- People
- The Business of Emergency Medicine
- Patient Experience
- Quality and Variation
3Perspectives
- Member of your group
- Educator
- Where will most of your residency graduates
practice? - What factors will be the major determinants of
their career satisfaction? - What behaviors are you modeling for your
residents and students?
4What Drives our Behaviors?
- How we think
-
- How we feel
-
- How we act
5Life Takes Place Between the Ears
- We rehearse our negative emotional states 100
1,000 times more often than we rehearse our
positive emotional states
6People
- True or False?
- Conflict requires cooperation.
7Functional vs. Dysfunctional Conflict
- Functional Conflicts
- Dysfunctional Conflict
- Any conflict that does not serve your values
8The Choreography of Conflict
- Behaviors
- Perceptions
- Values
9Options to Avoid Conflict
- Influence the behavior of others
- Alter the way you perceive the behavior of others
- I wonder what pain gives rise to that behavior?
- Choose not to respond with behaviors that will
threaten the values of others - Under what conditions would it make sense for
you to do __X__?
10Perspective
- Its strange, but wherever I take my eyes, they
always seem to see things from my point of view.
11You are 100 Responsible for Your Effectiveness
- Get clear on what you want from people
- Get clear on what is important to them
- I.e. what values do they need to serve?
- Change your behavior to alter their perceptions
in a way that links the two
12Listening
- One advantage of talking to yourself is that you
know at least one person is listening. - -Franklin P. Jones
- We dont assume that just because someone can
see, they can read so why do we assume that just
because someone can hear, they can listen?
13Increasing your Influence
- Understand your personal values
- What are you passionate about?
- Remember that you are the only one who will take
care of your values - Nobody is on the face of the earth to take care
of you. - People will react to you based on their
perceptions of your actions - Take their values into consideration
- Search for value-rich alternatives
14People Take Home Points
- Know your values
- Dysfunctional conflict has the potential to be
the single greatest career dissatisfier for you
and your trainees - Model influence and cooperation rather than
dysfunctional conflict - Take 100 responsibility for your effectiveness
when interacting with others - Cultivate and practice listening skills
- Consider getting a personal coach who is informed
by anonymous 360 feedback data
15The Business of Emergency Medicine
- Were here to take care of patients, not worry
about what level were charging. - Sheltering students/residents from the business
aspects of emergency medicine is a great
disservice for their training
16Key Business Questions for Your Practice
- What is your payer mix?
- What is your total RVU/patient?
- What is your average collection rate (i.e.
/RVU)? - Does your hospital subsidize the practice, and if
so, are there performance criteria involved?
17Key Business Questions for Your Practice
- Where am I in relation to my colleagues
regarding - Average patients/hour
- Average RVUs/patient
- Percentage of patients with critical care charges
- Total throughput time for discharged patients
18Patient Experience
- KEY POINTS
- Patients substitute experience for quality
- Patient satisfaction surveys are not science, so
dont evaluate them with the same tools - You can know whether a difference is
statistically significant without saying (or
knowing) anything about whether the data are
representative (non-response bias) - Variable compensation based on patient
satisfaction data will be commonplace - It isnt going away, so get used to it
19Quality and Variation
- The quality movement represents both our
biggest opportunity for fulfillment and our
second biggest potential for dissatisfaction
(behind dysfunctional interpersonal conflict)
20Emergency Physicians as Systems Experts
- We continue to get the best medical students
- We make decisions with incomplete data
- We communicate quickly with a wide range of
stakeholders - We rely on teams
- We practice in the best laboratory in healthcare
- Patients come with both system barriers and
clinical problems - We are responsible for the most expensive routine
decision in healthcare (going home or coming in)
21IOM - The Urgent Need to Improve Health Care
Quality
- Serious and widespread quality problems exist
throughout American medicine. These problems,
which may be classified as underuse, overuse, or
misuse, occur in small and large communities
alike, in all parts of the country, and with
approximately equal frequency in managed care and
fee-for-service systems of care.
Chassin and Gavin Institute of Medicine National
Roundtable on Health Care Quality JAMA.
19982801000-1005
22IOM - The Challenge of Improving Quality
- Meeting this challenge demands a readiness to
think in radically new ways about how to deliver
health care services and how to assess and
improve their quality. Our present efforts
resemble a team of engineers trying to break the
sound barrier by tinkering with a Model T Ford.
We need a new vehicle or perhaps, many new
vehicles. The only unacceptable alternative is
not to change.
Chassin and Gavin Institute of Medicine National
Roundtable on Health Care Quality JAMA.
19982801000-1005
23Central Truth
- Every system is perfectly designed to get the
results that it gets - If we want different performance, we must change
the system - To fundamentally change the system, we must think
in different ways
24Quality of Care Problems
- Underuse -- The failure to provide a health care
service when it would have produced a favorable
outcome - Overuse -- Occurs in the circumstances in which
its potential for harm exceeds the possible
benefit - Misuse -- Occurs when an appropriate service has
been selected but a preventable complication
occurs and the patient does not receive the full
potential benefit of the service
25Quality of Care Underuse
- Failure to use effective treatments for acute
M.I. --gt 18,000 preventable deaths each year - 79 of eligible elderly M.I. Patients did not
receive B-blockers --gt subsequent mortality at 2
years was 75 greater - 59 of hypertensive patients did not have
controlled blood pressure in FFS compared with
45 in managed care - Those without health insurance had a 25 greater
chance of dying within 12 years
26Quality of Care Overuse
- 21 of all antibiotic prescriptions (23.8m) in
1992 were for colds, URIs, or bronchitis - 17 of coronary angiographies, 32 of carotid
endarterectomies, and 17 of UGI endoscopies were
for inappropriate indications - 23 of children for ear tubes were inappropriate
- 20 of cardiac pacemakers were inserted for
inappropriate indications
27Quality of Care Misuse
- Patient injuries resulting from the
administration of medications occur at the rate
of about 2000 per year in each large teaching
hospital -- 28 preventable -- each adds 5,000
to the hospital stay - Medicare patients receiving poor care while
hospitalized experienced 74 greater mortality at
30 days
28The Checklist
- Three research functions funded by NIH
- Understand the biology of disease/injury
- Designing effective therapies
- Ensuring that therapies are delivered reliably
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31A Call To Action
- A highly respected Minnesota labor leader
Looking at care utilization levels of the
insurance plans said, Whats costing us right
now is an epidemic of care. If this keeps up,
this epidemic of care will bankrupt us We want
the best care but we need to figure out how to
get it for less money.
Halvorson Isham, Epidemic of Care, Jossey-Bass
2003, ch 18 pg 241
32The Future of the Quality Movement
- What will it take to make healthcare more
patient-centered and value-driven? - What opportunities do we have as emergency
physicians to help transform the way hospitals
work?
33Zen and the Art of Physician Autonomy Maintenance
- This paper calls for physicians to practice the
science of medicine as a profession so that
society will allow physicians to continue
practicing the art of medicine as individual
professionals. In a Zen-like paradox, physicians
must give up autonomy in order to regain it. - -Jim Reinertsen, MD
34References
- Chassin and Gavin Institute of Medicine National
Roundtable on Health Care Quality JAMA.
19982801000-1005 - Reinertsen JL Zen and the Art of Physician
Autonomy Maintenance Ann Intern Med.
2003138992-995.
35References
- Gawande Atul The Checklist The New Yorker.
December 10, 2007. - Institute of Medicine Crossing the Quality
Chasm National Academies Press. Washington, D.C.
2001.
36References
- Dwyer CE Taking positive steps Physician Exec.
2004 Nov-Dec30(6)6-9. - Dwyer CE The Use of Power and Influence
Managing without Authority J Am Pharm Assoc.
2003 Sep-Oct43(5 Suppl 1)S40-1.