Title: Population Health Principles in Medical
1Population Health Principles in Medical Public
Health PracticePublic Health Grand RoundsMarch
2, 2010
- Lucy Savitz, Ph.D., MBA
- Senior Scientist, IHCDR
- Intermountain Healthcare
- Associate Professor, Clinical Epidemiology
- Director, CCTS Community Engagement Core
- University of Utah
- Lucy.savitz_at_imail.org
-
2Population Health Management
- The coordination of care delivery across a
population to improve clinical financial
outcomes via disease management, care management,
and demand management.
3Primary Challenges
- The tools we have available.
- The way we train clinicians.
- Legal barriers that limit information exchange
HIPAA. - Goal alignment of stakeholdersa story about
Managing the Health of the Community.
4Changing Paradigm in Considering Health Wellness
- The time has finally come for population-based
health principles, philosophy, and methods to be
applied in medical education and practice.
Ibrahim, Savitz, Carey, Wagner 2001
Ibrahim et al. Population-Based Health
Principles in Medical and Public Health Practice,
J. Public Health Management Practice, 7(3)75-81,
2001.
5Changing Paradigm (continued)
- Diagnostic journey focuses on an n of 1
- Population health focuses on a community or
specific population - ?requires training clinicians to think of and to
learn about the experience of groups in addition
to that of individuals
6The Goal
- To maximize the health outcomes of a defined
population, such as diabetic patients, at the
lowest cost possible
7The Quality Challenge
What Is Quality?
The Right Care
For The Right Person
At The Right Time
A Quality Disconnect
Health care costs up 8 per year
Health care quality up 3.1 in 2006
8Requisite Five Principles
- Community perspective
- Clinical epidemiology perspective
- Evidence-based practice
- Emphasis on outcomes
- Emphasis on prevention
9Community Perspective Merging Public Health
Medical Practice
- Ready examples come from threats to the
community - Contagious disease epidemics?H1N1
- Emphasis on outcomes and prevention will have a
profound impact on the publics health.
10IOM Definition of Quality
- The Institute of Medicine has defined quality as
the degree to which health services for
individuals and populations increase the
likelihood of desired health outcomes and are
consistent with current professional knowledge - the difference between the care we deliver and
the care we could deliver
11The Quality Gap Avoidable Deaths
- Condition Deaths/Year
- Beta Blocker Treatment 800 - 2,600
- Breast Cancer Screening 100 - 600
- Controlling High blood pressure 12,100 - 32,100
- Cervical cancer screening 600 - 800
- Cholesterol control 3,400 - 7,200
- Diabetes (HbA1c control) 5,200 - 11,700
- Smoking cessation 6,400 - 9,300
- Prenatal Care 1,100 - 1,700
- Colorectal cancer screening 4,100 - 6,200
- Flu Shots 3,500 - 7,500
- TOTAL 37,000 - 80,000
-
12The Quality Chasm
The Gap Between Knowing and Doing
Adults receive recommendedappropriate care 54
of the time (McGlynn)
Children receive recommendedappropriate
care 46.5 of the time (Mangione-Smith)
13Emphasis on Prevention at Multiple Levels
- One-on-one clinical level (screening tests,
patient counseling) - Population community level (education, support
groups) - Government policy/regulatory level (social,
economic, environmental interventions)
14EBM Defined
- Evidence based medicine (EBM) is a set of
principles and methods intended to ensure that to
the greatest extent possible, clinical practice
guidelines and medical decisions are consistent
with evidence of effectiveness and benefit.
15How do we generate evidence?
- Research
- Expert Opinion
- Lead to
- Guidelines, protocols, standards of care
16New York Times, Evidence Gap Series
- http//topics.nytimes.com/top/news/health/series/t
he_evidence_gap/index.html - A Call for a Warning System on Artificial Joints
By B MEIER - If American patients who ended up with agonizing
hip replacements lived in certain other
industrialized countries, many might have been
spared the risk. July 29, 2008 - Costly Cancer Drug Offers Hope, but Also a
Dilemma By GI KOLATA A POLLACK - Avastin, which can cost as much as 100,000 a
year, has become one of the most popular cancer
drugs, but studies show it prolongs life by only
a few months. July 6, 2008 - Weighing the Costs of a CT Scans Look Inside the
Heart By ALEX BERENSON and REED ABELSON - Driven by financial incentives, many doctors are
adopting CT scans, but there is scant evidence
they benefit most patients. June 29, 2008
17Additional Resources
- Institute of Medicine Reports www.nap.org
- Evidence-Based Medicine and Changing Nature of
Healthcare Workshop Summary - Knowing Whats Right
18Clinical Epidemiology
- Focuses on a medically defined population
(patients), applying epidemiological principles
to assess causes, understand the distribution of
disease, and formulate measures of risk - Germ Watch (Dr. Per Gesteland)
- https//intermountainphysician.org/portal/site/mdv
si/
19(No Transcript)
20Flow of Information into the System
Use of EMR
Clinical Decision
Registry (EDW)
Physician Report
MHI Depression Registry (2000-2007) 247,237
patients (20 pediatric) 65 female 58 private
insurance 20,887 patients with PHQ9 38,584 PHQ9
(2 PHQ9 per pt)
Clinical Decision
21Measuring Outcomes of Care Donabedian, 1985
- Outcomes are those changes, either favorable or
adverse, in the actual or potential health status
of persons, groups, or communities that can be
attributed to prior or concurrent care. What is
included in the category of outcomes depends on
how narrowly or broadly one defines health and
the corresponding responsibilities of
practitioners or the health care system as a
whole.
22Approaches for Monitoring Performance
- Outcomes Comparison process for comparing
measures for relevant peer comparison groups in
an industry - Benchmarking process of establishing operating
targets based on leading performance standards
23Rationale
- You cant manage what you cant measure.
- Juran Prescription Clinical Quality Management
24AHRQ Quality Indicator Moduleshttp//www.qualityi
ndicators.gov
- Prevention Quality Indicators (PQI)
- Inpatient Quality Indicators (IQI)
- Patient Safety Indicators (PSI)
- Ambulatory care sensitive conditions
- Mortality following procedures
- Mortality for medical conditions
- Utilization of procedures
- Volume of procedures
- Postoperative complications
- Iatrogenic conditions
25PQI Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
Admission Rate (PQI 5)
Numerator Discharges with ICD-9-CM principal diagnosis code for COPD (see below). All non-maternal/non-neonatal discharges of age 18 years and older. Exclude Transfer from other institution, MDC 14 (pregnancy, childbirth, and puerperium) and MDC 15 (newborns and other neonates). Include ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes Numerator Discharges with ICD-9-CM principal diagnosis code for COPD (see below). All non-maternal/non-neonatal discharges of age 18 years and older. Exclude Transfer from other institution, MDC 14 (pregnancy, childbirth, and puerperium) and MDC 15 (newborns and other neonates). Include ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes Numerator Discharges with ICD-9-CM principal diagnosis code for COPD (see below). All non-maternal/non-neonatal discharges of age 18 years and older. Exclude Transfer from other institution, MDC 14 (pregnancy, childbirth, and puerperium) and MDC 15 (newborns and other neonates). Include ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes Numerator Discharges with ICD-9-CM principal diagnosis code for COPD (see below). All non-maternal/non-neonatal discharges of age 18 years and older. Exclude Transfer from other institution, MDC 14 (pregnancy, childbirth, and puerperium) and MDC 15 (newborns and other neonates). Include ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes
490 BRONCHITIS NOS 4919 CHRONIC BRONCHITIS NOS
4660 AC BRONCHITIS 4920 EMPHYSEMATOUS BLEB
4910 SIMPLE CHR BRONCHITIS 4928 EMPHYSEMA NEC
4911 MUCOPURUL CHR BRONCHITIS 494 BRONCHIECTASIS OCT00-
49120 OBS CHR BRNC W/O ACT EXA 4940 BRONCHIECTAS W/O AC EXAC OCT00-
49121 OBS CHR BRNC W ACT EXA 4941 BRONCHIECTASIS W AC EXAC OCT00-
4918 CHRONIC BRONCHITIS NEC 496 CHR AIRWAY OBSTRUCT NEC
Qualifies only if accompanied by secondary diagnosis of 491.xx, 492.x, 494.x or 496 (i.e., any other code on this list). Qualifies only if accompanied by secondary diagnosis of 491.xx, 492.x, 494.x or 496 (i.e., any other code on this list). Qualifies only if accompanied by secondary diagnosis of 491.xx, 492.x, 494.x or 496 (i.e., any other code on this list). Qualifies only if accompanied by secondary diagnosis of 491.xx, 492.x, 494.x or 496 (i.e., any other code on this list).
Denominator Population in MSA or county, age 18 years and older. Denominator Population in MSA or county, age 18 years and older. Denominator Population in MSA or county, age 18 years and older. Denominator Population in MSA or county, age 18 years and older.
26AHRQ QI Resources
- QI Fact sheets
- Inpatient Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/in
patqifact.htm - Patient Safety Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/p
sifact.htm - Prevention Quality Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/p
revqifact.htm - QI Software and Software Documentation Modules
- Inpatient Quality Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/i
npatqi.htm - Patient Safety Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/p
si.htm - Prevention Quality Indicators
- http//www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/p
revqi.htm - AHRQ National Quality Measures Clearinghouse
- A public repository for evidence-based quality
measures and measure sets. - http//www.qualitymeasures.ahrq.gov/
- HCUP
- Information about Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project (HCUP)
27- Questions, comments, observations
- Thank you.