San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project

Description:

In the Video from the World Institute on Disability, You Heard... living is not doing things by yourself; it is being in control of how things are done. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 48
Provided by: Agi96
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project


1
San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project
  • LTCIP Planning Committee
  • September 23, 2008

2
LTCIP Vision Today
  • Improve care for elderly and disabled persons in
    San Diego
  • Utilize existing funding better, more effectively
  • Change culture of care from symptom response to
    whole person care
  • Organize health and social service providers to
    support effort

3
Stakeholders
  • Health social service providers, consumers,
    caregivers, advocates
  • With interest in promoting and supporting the
    vision
  • Have informed the process with 30,000 hours over
    10 years!
  • Input needed today!

4
(No Transcript)
5
LTCIP Strategies Developed to Support Vision
  • Communication Strategy (Aging Disability
    Resource Connection)
  • Physician Strategy (TEAM SAN DIEGO)
  • Fully Integrated Health Care Strategy

6
TEAM SAN DIEGO!
  • Building supports for better chronic care across
    providers, settings, and funding by
  • Community development of team dynamic through
    education practice
  • Empowerment of patients to better manage their
    own care
  • Formal feedback loops to close the circle for
    improved patient outcomes

7
TEAM SAN DIEGO TODAY
  • 8 on-line modules developed
  • With experts/Advisory Group
  • Loaded onto UCSD Blackboard
  • Combined with resources
  • Serving as basis for development of virtual
    teams
  • To be followed by in-class training

8
TSD In-Class Training
  • Focus is review and team-building
  • 5 hours to include working lunch
  • Aiming for geographic focus
  • Demo of Network of Care
  • Exhibit of tools for patient empowerment
  • Development of basis for formal feedback loops

9
Now
  • Highlights from on-line modules
  • Discussion, questions
  • Stakeholder groups to simulate teams
  • Teams to discuss case scenario
  • Teams to report out on development of feedback
    loop in groups

10
For more information
  • See website for background info
    www.sdltcip.org
  • Call or e-mail brenda.schmitthenner_at_sdcounty.ca.g
    ov
  • 858-495-5853

11
TEAM SAN DIEGO
  • Highlights from Review and Discussion of
  • On-line Modules

12
Medical social service coordination for chronic
care needs to improve
  • Chronic care is now the major reason for care
  • 1 in 2 Americans have 1 or more chronic illnesses
  • Increased diversity challenges medical practice
  • Physicians were not trained in chronic care
  • Systems are currently filled w/gaps overlaps

13
San Diego Physicians Perspective Key Issues
in Caring for the Chronically Ill
  • Multiple chronic problems
  • Drug-drug interactions
  • Physical disability
  • Functional Impairment
  • Environmental / Cultural Diversity
  • Economic Stressors

13
14
TEAM SAN DIEGO Solutions
  • Helps physicians and their patients other
    providers do a better job.
  • Provides array of after office support services
    that go beyond the immediate doctors office
    visit.
  • Improves systems to serve complicated and costly
    patients and improve satisfaction and outcomes.
  • Helps the physicians office deal more
    efficiently with the complexity of using social
    supports along with medical services.
  • Results in efficiencies in practice management
    and patient safety.

15
Why Change?
  • Risk Management (improved patient safety)
  • More efficient patient visits due to patient
    activation
  • Fewer missed appointments through planned visits
    facilitated by community supports
  • More effective office staff support for patient
    access to and use of after office supportive
    services
  • Improved patient outcomes and satisfaction

16
How Do We Change?
  • Learn evidence-based models teaming
  • Learn tools and techniques to activate patients
  • Learn to respond to the needs and preferences of
    the whole patient
  • Learn about aging and disability
  • Learn the basics of legal-ethical issues
  • Learn how to find resources for your mutual
    patients
  • Apply on a day-to-day basis

17
The Importance of Interdisciplinary Teaming
  • Primary care for chronic illness requires team
    approach
  • Primary care offices do not often work as teams
  • Lack of communication with other disciplines
    involved in patient care is the norm
  • Even if a team existed, it would be impractical
    to
  • meet at the same time and place

18
How to Implement Virtual Team Care Strategies
  • Practice management self assessment
  • Identify current community partners
  • Identify possible improvements
  • Implement workable improvements
  • Measure progress, adjust
  • Feedback loop with partners
  • Repeat this sequence

19
Chronic Care Model
Health System
Community
Health Care Organization
Resources and Policies
ClinicalInformationSystems
DeliverySystem Design
Self-Management Support
Decision Support
Prepared, Proactive Practice Team
Informed, Activated Patient
Productive Interactions
Improved Outcomes
Figure 1 from Wagner, E.H. Chronic Disease
Management What Will It Take to Improve Care for
Chronic Illness? Effective Clinical Practice,
1998 12-4
20
Remember the Feedback Loop!
  1. Keep in touch regularly (phone, FAX, e-mail)
  2. Alert the others of specific mutual patient
    problems
  3. Educate patients on self-care management
  4. Encourage patients to follow treatment plan
  5. Assist patients in linking with support services

21
What is Patient Empowerment?
  • Empowerment as described by June Isaacson
    Kailes
  • is self-perceived, personal power
  • occurs on an internal, psychological level
  • is a state of mind and a belief system
  • is a developmental and ongoing process occurs
    at each individuals own pace
  • cannot be given, BUT can be helped by
    providing information, tools, and skills.

21
22
Better Patients Better Care
  • Encourage patient to bring current medical
    history and medication list to appointments
  • Encourage patient to bring list of issues to
    discuss, acknowledging some may have to be dealt
    with later
  • Encourage patients to ask questions, seek
    clarification, offer preferences and feedback

22
23
How TSD Can Empower Patients
  • Listening to the patient
  • Offering opportunities to choose
  • Involving patients as partners in their own care
    by encouraging them to prepare for the visit.
  • Providing information and support in finding
    services.
  • Providing education in skills for self-management
  • Providing tools to support self-management, such
    as a personal health record, discharge checklist

23
24
Patients as Team Members
  • By default, patients and caregivers sometimes
    function as their own care coordinators
  • Patients are the first line of defense for
    transition related errors
  • In TEAM SAN DIEGO, patient is in central role as
    educated, activated, empowered team member

24
25
The Four Pillars
25
26
Dr. Colemans Four Pillars
  • 1. Medication self-management
  • a) reinforcing knowing each medication when,
    why, and how to take it
  • b) developing an effective medication management
    system
  • 2. Personal Health Record
  • a) providing healthcare management guide
  • b) patient tracks own care plan and goals

27
Four Pillars (continued)
  • 3. Primary Care Provider/Specialist Follow-Up
  • a) involving patient in scheduling
    appointments
  • b) scheduling ASAP post discharge/transition
  • 4. Knowledge of Red Flags
  • a) teaching patient indicators that
    condition is worsening
  • b) teaching patient how to respond

28
Working with Diverse Patients
28
29
Diversity Enriches Us All
  • Need to recognize the values and strengths of
    ethnic persons and their communities
  • Understand and respect their cultures
  • Question personal stereotypes, attitudes and
    behaviors
  • Move beyond fear to find value in improving
    current situations and benefit from the richness
    of diversity

30
Communication Is The Key
  • Good communication, the key to good medicine
  • recognizes the individual as unique,
  • helps prevent medical errors,
  • strengthens the patient-physician relationship,
  • makes the most of limited interaction time
  • leads to improved health outcomes
  • assists in discovering additional health-related
    concerns

30
31
Communication Approaches
  • What do you think caused the problem?
  • What have you done to deal with this problem?
  • Have you asked anyone to help you?
  • Do you have traditional ways of treating this?
  • What do you want the treatment/service to do for
    you?
  • How does your faith/religion help you to be well?

31
32
Teach Back Method of Communication
  • Well documented patient-provider communication
    strategy
  • Health literacy approach Communication loop
    that supports patient understanding of provider
    instructions

32
33
Different Types of Seniors
  • The oldest-old 85 year olds
  • The old-old 75 to 84 year olds
  • The young-old 65 to 74 year olds
  • The Baby Boomers born between 1946 and 1964
    (44 to 62 year olds today)
  • Boomers create the age wave estimated to triple
    percentage of seniors by 2020

34
Normal Change vs. Red Flags
  • Normal aging of major physical systems can be
    reviewed in the on-line training
  • A red flag is a sign or symptom of a new or
    worsening condition
  • Red flags are important for all members of the
    team to observe and report
  • Red flags are important to teach your patient to
    help manage chronic care

35
Response to Red Flags
  • Define level of urgency
  • Speak with individuals primary care physician or
    office staff based on urgency
  • Speak with individuals caregiver about your
    observation
  • Offer assistance in finding resources for
    assessment and treatment/services
  • Document your activities

36
What We Can Do Everyday with TEAM SAN DIEGO
  • Prevention routine visits, reminders to patients
  • Patient education on self-care, healthy choices
  • Referrals for support services and equipment
  • housing, public programs, transportation,
    personal assistance, home adaptation, etc.

37
TSD Can Promote Healthy Aging
  • Staying engaged and having social contact
  • Being active and keeping a healthy weight
  • Having activities that are mentally stimulating
  • Volunteering to have significance in life
  • Engaging in caregiving with family and/or friends
    or on a paid basis

38
In the Video from the World Institute on
Disability, You Heard
  • That individuals in the video want providers to
    know
  • They want quality in their life
  • They are doing what they need to do with
    assistance
  • They are not sick and in need of a cure
  • They want you to talk with/to them, not their
    assistant
  • That health is not their main occupation or
    concern
  • ADA accommodations can be hard to find but anyone
    can call a rehab center for help, and

39
Persons in the Video Said
  • What they want most is for the provider to listen
    to them
  • They are often experts on the care of their
    disability and a resource to you and others
  • They have diverse needs within the same group
    (deaf example)
  • You dont have to be perfectdont stress over
    developing a relationship
  • Make no assumptions!!

40
We Need to Look Beyond Disability
  • Health is not the absence of disability or
    disease
  • Health is maximizing our potential physical,
    social, emotional, spiritual, and intellectual
    wellbeing
  • Health and disability can and do co-exist
  • Health is the ability to function effectively in
    different environs, to get ones needs met, and
    to adapt to stressors

41
Independent Living
  • Independent living is not doing things by
    yourself it is being in control of how things
    are done.
  • Independent living is the conscious choice that
    individuals make to be responsible for managing
    significant issues in their lives.
  • From June Isaacson-Kailes

42
Privacy and Confidentiality HIPAA
  • Health Insurance Portability Accountability
    Act
  • Establishes safeguards to protect the privacy and
    security of protected health information (PHI)
  • Improves efficiency and effectiveness of health
    care systems by standardizing electronic
    transactions
  • Gives consumers more control over their health
    information, use and disclosure

43
HIPAA Patients Rights
  • To see and obtain copies of their health records
  • Have corrections or amendments added to their
    health info
  • Be notified of how their health info may be
    shared or disclosed
  • Decide to give permission before used or shared
    for certain purposes, such as for marketing
  • Get a report on when and why it was shared
  • Have a copy of the organizations Notice of
    Privacy Practice
  • File a complaint if they believe their rights are
    denied or their info is not protected

44
What HIPAA Means for You
  • Protect patient info as if it were your own
  • Have patient as team member agree to referrals
  • Have patient sign Consent for Release of PHI
  • Provide minimum necessary limited info for
    success of referral and continuum of care
  • Develop feedback loop with referral agency and
    get approval of patient
  • Document referrals and appointments

45
Major Ethical Principles
  • Self determination respect patient right to make
    informed decisions
  • Duty to benefit others educate patient so
    decision can be informed
  • Duty to protect others from harm
  • Justice and fairness to all parties regardless
    of who they are or ability to pay
  • Honesty and trustworthiness

46
Patient Self-Determination Act of 1990
  • Highlights of the law include
  • Providing all adult patients with written
    information concerning care decisions
  • Asking patients whether they have an Advanced
    Directive (AD) where to find it in emergency
  • Maintaining policies regarding discussions of an
    AD
  • Honoring Advanced Directives
  • Educating patients about Advanced Directives

47
Finding Resources
  • Aging and Disability Resource Connection
  • Network of Care
  • AIS Call Center
  • a2i Independent Living Center
  • Document referrals
  • Implement feedback loop as virtual team
  • Improve patient outcomes
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com