Title: Community Care Coordination Scorecard
1Community Care Coordination ScorecardRaising
the Bar for Measuring Improvements in Access to
Care Across Communities
Building and supporting community capacity
Measuring the Success and Barriers to Medical
Home Placement for Our Most Vulnerable Community
Members
- Sherry E. Gray, Director
- Rural and Urban Access to Health-St. Vincent
Health
AHRQ 2010 Annual ConferenceMonday, September 27,
2010
2WHO is RUAH?
10 Health Access Workers (HAW) in 8
communities Hospital associates community
focused 7 Medication Access Coordinators
(MAC) Hospital and Community Agency
Associates System Administrative Support
Health Access Manager Operations Facilitator
Language Access Staff System Director
- What does it mean?
- The word ruah, in yiddish means Breath of
Life. The Goal? - to breathe new life into a health care system
that serves our most vulnerable community members
3 What is the Work of RUAH?
- Client Advocacy and System Navigation via Health
Access Workers - Pharmacy Assistance access to low or no cost
drugs connecting through Medication Access
Coordinators (MACs) - Creation of Medical Homes for the underserved
- Access to Specialty Care for the underserved
- Program enrollment (financial resource review and
application - assistance public AND private)
- Reduction of inappropriate Emergency Room
utilization - Reduction of hospital re-admissions for chronic
diseases - Assistance with supportive social services (wrap
around) - Outcome Based Measurement
- Pathway Model
- Community Care Coordination Hub
- Language Access Medical interpretation and
translation of vital documents - System Change
4Why?
- To provide increase access for
uninsured/underinsured community members - Right Care
- Right Time
- Right Place
- Right Provider
- Right Payer
5So That
- Un/underinsured community members can receive
care sooner vs. later - Consistent and familiar care is provided along
with follow up follow through treatment is
across time and not episodic - Resources are used as effectively as possible,
including - Human
- Providers, Practitioners, Care Coordinators,
Administrative support, etc. - Financial
- Reimbursement, Funding, Cost-Avoidance,
Write-Offs - Technological
- Connecting Information in a timely, meaningful
way - Support (wrap-a-round) Services
- Connecting medical treatment, public health
practices, psychosocial principles - Vital connections are made
- Integrate and coordinate care not duplicate and
replicate care - Best Practice Learning's are shared and
solutions are not re-created
6How RUAH got HERE
- Realization increased access, services
provided, and reimbursement was intuitively a
good thing, but proved NOTHING! -
- Resolved to find out if a positive difference
was made in the lives of those we are seeking to
serve. If so, how could that be demonstrated and
or verified? If not, what needed to change? -
- Researched Best Practice models in OUTCOME
- MEASUREMENT, specific to community care
- coordination.
-
7One thing leads to another
8Program Community Benefits
- Best Practices are shared
- Theres no charge for advice/consultation
- Moves individual, community programs out of an
isolated vacuum - Increases credibility
- Creates momentum
- Improves chances of sustainability
- Demonstrates that in the healthcare delivery
system change can and does happen
9Challenges
- Balance between differences similarities for
each community involved - How to design a structure that also respects the
inherent need for flexibility? - How to explain, define, communicate the
structure? - Outcome Measurement
- Agreed upon
- Definitions?
- Operations/Practices?
- Parameters?
- Reporting Structure?
10Lessons Learned
- Theres a reason most communities dont gravitate
to this work - The work has to be communicated in different ways
for different audiences and stakeholders - Integration and coordination of care goes against
the grain of how the health system has evolved
11Medical Home Assessing the Effectiveness of
Access Initiatives
- Scorecard group formed through the Community Care
Coordination Learning Network - Initiatives/measures developed
- RUAH data submission initiated Spring, 2010
- Developed the Required Data Points for the
Medical Home Scorecard Measure, for all
participants
12Required Data Points for the Medical Home
Scorecard Measure
- Clients demographic data during 1 month time
frame - Insurance Status
- Source of Ongoing primary care
- Was a referral started to achieve an ongoing
source of primary care? - Barriers to completing that referral
- Date the connection to ongoing primary care was
made - Supportive (wrap around) social service
referrals - Barriers
- Date connection was made to resolve identified
social service need
13Where RUAH is at in the Process
- Able to submit most of the required data
- Beginning stages of implementing Pathways
- RUAH Eight different communities
- Piloting Pathways in one site currently sole
data reporting community - Challenge reporting outcomes for ongoing source
of primary care and social service referrals - Participation in the Scorecard Measure process is
accelerating the goal of appointment verification
and follow-up coordination and verification. - Adopting the Pathways model Report on outcomes
vs. counting referrals/activities - Adds accountability, credibility and rationale
for system change and sustainability
14So What Gains Have been Made?
- Five Pathways have been developed for the
Anderson Site - Medical Home
- CCCLN Scorecard Measure Project Also
- Pregnancy Care
- Childhood Immunizations
- Government Funded Program Enrollment
- Government Funded Program Re-Enrollment
15Now What?
- Agreements for HUB being signed
- Common ROI developed for HUB members
- Common Care Coordination check in line
developed to start a Pathway - Process being implemented for monthly Pathway
process checks and outcome measurement - Well be able to tell you next year!