Title: Optimizing Primary Care through AIM Access. Improvement. Measures.
1Optimizing Primary Care through AIMAccess.
Improvement. Measures.
Clinic Team Orientation See your own
patients and dont make them wait Dr. Mark
Murray
2Overview
- Overview
- What is AIM?
- Why AIM?
- Components
- Expectations of Participation
- Getting Started
- Facilitation
- Desired Results
- Actual Results
3Canadian Context
- 25 of Canadians wait 6 days or more to see a
physician, compared with - New Zealand 2
- Australia 7
- UK 13
- US 19
- When the Clock Starts Ticking, 2006
- The College of Family Physicians of Canada
4What is the Canadian Public saying?
- Canadians want a personal physician, one that
knows their history and that of their family, and
one with whom they can build a relationship over
time - Macleans poll 2003 - Every citizen should be able to name their
family doctor - - World Health Organization
- Every Canadian should be able to name their own
family doctor and Nurse and/or NP - - CFPC/CNA, Oct 2007
5Were running a little behind, so Id like each
of you to ask yourself Am I really that sick,
or would I just be wasting the doctors time?
61. Overview
- Improved access reduce waits for appointments
- Improved office flow and efficiency less chaos
- Increased staff, provider and pt satisfaction
you enjoy coming to work your patients notice - Improved clinical outcomes better care
- Improved financial outcomes lower cost
- Better use of teams practice full scope
72. What is AIM?
- Access, Improvement, Measurement
- Improvement process built on existing practice
- Facilitated learning process over a period of 14
months - Learning that is based on a set of principles
that have been tested and have resulted in
positive outcomes
83. Why AIM Patients The Canadian health
system is not healthy!(Health Council of Canada,
Dec 2007)
- Hypertension
- One of four adults has HTN, 1/3 dont know it,
and lt1/3 are controlled - Diabetes
- 60 of diabetics have gone gt1yr without an
examination - Asthma
- Third leading cause of presentation to ER
- Screening
- 38 of eligible women in Alberta get Pap
screening - lt10 of those with indications for colon
screening are screened (CMAJ, 2007)
93. Why AIM Clinic Access The Canadian
health system is not healthy!(Health Council of
Canada, Dec 2007)
- The single most important issue for Canadians was
poor access to health care services. - 79 said the health system in urgently in need of
fundamental change. - Delay in seeing a doctor and getting treatment is
the highest among the seven developed countries.
- 25 of Canadians waited gt6 days to see a doctor
last time they were sick, compared with - US 19
- UK 13
- Australia 7
- New Zealand 2
When the Clock Starts Ticking, CFPC,
2006 Editorial, Edmonton Journal, Nov 1, 2007.
103. Why AIM?
- Positive patient/physician/team relationship
results in better clinical care/outcomes - Patients who do not wait for care are healthier
- Reliable and predictable delivery results in
higher quality care - Team approach yields improved patient outcomes
- Culture of improvement creates and sustains
exceptional clinical care
114. Components
- Six facilitated learning sessions spread out over
a 14 month period. - Action periods following learning sessions to
test new changes/improvements - Collection of a series of measures that will
assist the clinic to make improvement decisions
based on their individual needs - Participation in a monthly facilitated call
- Submission of a monthly report to faculty for
feedback and recommendations
125. Expectations/Commitment
- Clinic team members will commit to
- Identifying team leaders to support participation
- Being prepared for and attending learning
sessions - Having and attending regular improvement team
meetings - Participating in monthly teleconference calls
- Collecting data and testing changes
- Contributing to and posting monthly reports
- Communicating with others in the clinic
136. Getting Started
- Forming your core improvement team
- Those who do the work, need to transform the
work Dr. Mark Murray - - Clinic Manager
- - Physician representative(s)
- - Nursing and/or allied health professional
- - Reception representative
- - Medical office assistant(s)
- - Designated improvement lead
146. Getting Started
- Complete a clinic walk through
- Call in to pre-work teleconferences
- -2 calls 1 ½ hours approximately
- -content on process and measurement
- -scheduled for June, 2009
- Complete clinic profile and submit
- Complete consent for panel request
- Review computer capability
- Prepare storyboard for first Learning Session
156. Getting Started
- Begin data collection following pre-work call
- - Time to available appointments (TTN)
- - of requests for appointments daily
- (demand)
- - of appointments available daily
- (supply)
- - Time for patient to complete an appt
- through the clinic (cycle time)
- - of patients who fail to keep their appt
- daily (no-shows)
- - of appts. physician actually used
- daily (activity)
- - of patients I would identify as only my
patients - (panel)
-
166. Getting Started
- Set aims for improvement (goals)
- - Access for an appointment
- How many days should our patients wait
for an appt ? - - Efficiency at the appointment
- How long should it take for our patients
to complete - a clinic visit?
- - Clinical care outcomes
- Based on the demographics of our
patients, what - should our clinical outcomes be?
176. Getting Started
- Determining roles in process
- -Who attends learning sessions?
- -Who will complete monthly reports?
- -Who will collect and enter data?
187. Facilitation
- Facilitators will be assigned to each
participating clinic - Roles
- - Attend team meetings and learning sessions
- - Assist with pre-work i.e. Clinic walk
through - - Participate in monthly calls
- - Assist teams in understanding data
collection and - tests of change
- - Provide guidance in monthly report
content and - improvement activities
- - Facilitate teamwork
197. Facilitation
- While facilitators will be a useful resource, the
following will be the teams responsibility - - Completing monthly reports
- - Collecting and entering data
- - Presenting team reports at learning
- sessions
- - Making team decisions
208. Desired Results
- Patient satisfaction improved
- Staff satisfaction improved
- Provider satisfaction improved
- Delays reduced
- Continuity improved
- Quality improved
- Unnecessary visits reduced
- Financial improvement
219. Actual Results What has been the experience
of others?
- Over 500 physicians and their teams have
participated so far in AIM - There have been improvements seen in
- - access for an appointment
- - efficiencies within the clinic that
- have resulted in positive outcomes
- - decrease in overhead costs
- - increase in revenue
-
22Participant Quotes
- Our clinic is more efficient than it has ever
been thanks to the great measurement tools and
support. But the big winner is that we are truly
a "team" now. Morale is at an all time high. - - Roxanne Bergheim, Clinic Manager, St. Paul
Medical Clinic, St. Paul, AB
23Participant Quotes
- My patients now have better access to see me my
delay measures have been cut in half and that is
the general clinic trend since we've been
implementing these strategies. - - Dr. Rob Wedel, Associate Medical Centre,
Taber, AB
24Participant Quotes
- Health care is a large and complex system and
change may often seem overwhelming. AIM provides
the physician office team with a step-by-step
approach that can result in significant change
for the health care team and system, and most
importantly improves the health of our patients. - - Sheri Fielding, Nurse Practitioner, Heritage
Medical Clinic, Edmonton, AB
25For more information or to bepart of Alberta
AIM, contactJulie ShemanchukProgram
Planner1-780-413-5091 (phone)1-780-413-5094
(fax)