Title: Wyoming County Nurse Wellness Coach Program Evaluation
1Wyoming County Nurse Wellness Coach Program
Evaluation
- Wyoming County Department of Mental Health
- Stephen Snell, LCSW
- Wyoming County Mental Health Clinic
- Joyce Barker, RN
- Well-Balanced Program, University of Rochester,
Consultants - Eva Bellis, RN, BSN, CCM
- Donna Tortoretti, RNC, MS, CMAC
- Patricia Lindley, PhD, RN
2Program Design 2006
- Embedded nurse wellness coach (clinic employee)
works in tandem with mental health clinicians and
care coordinators on client-determined physical
health issues - Caseload 20 slots, revolving enrollment, attends
SPOA - Not time limited pace/frequency of contacts vary
- Eligibility Care coordination enrollees with
moderate to high risk physical health problems,
by referral - Program dovetails with Monroes Well Balanced
Program, using same assessment, documentation and
planning tools - Not disease-specific interventions customized to
individual health problems, client wishes,
capacities and readiness - Maximize internet, disease-management protocols
best practices for education
3Assessment and Enrollment
- Client interview
- Comprehensive Health Risk Assessment (HRA) yields
numerical score and suggested areas for
intervention (see sample) - Home visit
- Laboratory
42006 Client Participation 20 client caseload
Referred and Assessed Total N32
- Did not enroll n 6
- 3/6 completed HRA
- Dropped Out n 7
- Decided to pursue on own 1
- Moved out of county 2
- To nursing home 1
- Client chose not to pursue 3
Enrolled, completed HRA, bloodwork and
individualized plan N26
Completed Pre-to- Post Analysis N15
10 direct contacts plus all tests and information
5Client Demographics
6Client Demographics
7Client Demographics
8Client Demographics
9Client Psychiatric Diagnoses Axis I
Wyoming County N 15 n Monroe County N 77 n
Substance Abuse 1 7 51 66
Episodic Mood Disorders Depressive Disorder NOS 7 47 4 27 38 49
Schizophrenic Disorders 4 27 38 49
Anxiety, Dissociative, Somatoform Disorders 1 7 9 12
Stress Disorder 1 7 3 4
Anorexia, Hyperkinetic Disorder, Non-Organic Psychosis 2 14 1 1
adds to gt 100 clients may have more than 1
diagnosis
10Client Psychiatric Diagnoses Axis II
Diagnosis Wyoming County N 15 n Monroe County N 77 n
Personality Disorder 2 13 18 23
Mental Retardation 4 5
Borderline Intellectual Functioning 1 7 3 4
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder 3 3
Developmental Delay (Reading) 2 3
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder 1 1
11Client Medical Diagnoses Axis III Wyoming
County N 15
adds to gt 100 clients may have more than 1
diagnosis
12Health Status Wyoming County
13Health Status Wyoming County N 15
14Consumer Health Status Wyoming County N 15
15Health Status Wyoming County
16Health Status Wyoming County
17Health Status Wyoming County N 15
18Contacts LocationsWyoming County N 15
Total Contacts 222
19Nursing Interventions Health GoalsWyoming
County N 15
Total Health Interventions 346
Behavior, communication, relationships,
development
Function of life sustaining processes
Maintain and promote wellness, recovery, and/or
rehabilitation
20Direct Indirect Contact Times Wyoming County
N 15
Note. Mean is average mode is most frequent.
21Client Service Utilization Wyoming County N 15
Service Use Before Program During Program
Psychiatric Inpatient Hospitalizations 3 (n 14) 4 (n 15)
Medical Inpatient Hospitalizations 2 (n 11) 2 (n 11)
Psychiatric Emergency Room Visits 0 (n 3) 0 (n 3)
Medical Emergency Room Visits 4 (n 12) 7 (n 12)
Note Pre-program data may be less reliable
because it is recall data.
22Consumer Health Status Wyoming County N 15
Entering 1.25 packs/20 years (average)Completing
0.78 packs1 Quit 4 months, 4 reduced gt1/2 ppd
23Higher the score, lower the risk
Consumer Health Status Wyoming County N 15
24Consumer Satisfaction Wyoming County N 15
Rating 1 4 (1 lowest to 4 highest)
1 Quality Service 2 Got Service
3 Met Goals 4 Recommend 5
Satisfied Help 6 Helped Problems 7
Satisfied Overall 8 Come Back
25Client Goals Recommended and Selected
- HRA Recommended Goals Client Selected Goals
-
- Blood Pressure 3 2
- Exercise 10 7
- Cholesterol 7 5
- Mammogram 2 0
- Smoking 10 6
- Weight 10 8
26Wellness Areas of Change
- SOCIALIZATION
- Two clients began attending Social Club
regularly. - DIABETES MANAGEMENT
- Two clients with diabetes who were not testing
or using insulin began testing regularly and
using insulin regularly - Three clients with diabetes who had not attended
medical appointments began seeing their physical
care provider.
27Wellness Areas of Change (contd)
- NUTRITION
- - Eight clients made significant improvements in
their diets, such as eating more fruits and
vegetables, increasing low fat dairy products and
lean meats, and decreasing sweets. - - Three clients met with a dietitian for
additional help in improving their diets. - EXERCISE
- - Eight clients increased their level of
exercise by walking more or riding a bicycle more.
28Wellness Areas of Change (contd)
- MEDICAL CARE
- -Five clients were accompanied to medical care
appointments resulting in improved communication
with the provider, and additional diagnostic
testing and treatment options. - -Three clients medical care was adjusted based
on information provided by the Nurse Wellness
Coach
29Other findings and lessons learned
- Wellness coach P-C approach reduces client
wariness of nurse involvement - Obtaining laboratory data is often difficult and
time-consuming - HRA is a very useful tool for client, nurse and
program gives useful patient-friendly
information key to starting change behaviors,
tracks progress, encourages positive lifestyle
shifts, provides aggregate data - Interventions must be adjusted to client
situation, considering current mental status,
learning styles, literacy - Time, patience relationship-building often
required changes often start slowly, build on
earlier steps individual readiness often
surprises - Individual support usually most effective formal
disease management protocols, written materials
often minimally effective many take well to
charting progress (e.g. weight or exercise
charts) especially if gains are being made - Medical practitioners build confidence in nurse
over time, welcome help from useful data (lab,
etc.), better follow-up, enhanced client
education and support improves medical attention
to health problems - Health assessment and referral are required,
Medicaid-reimbursable services under 14 NYCRR
Parts 587 and 588