Title: Quality Improvement in Behavioral Health Care:
1Quality Improvement in Behavioral Health
Care Concepts and Tools
In preparation for the New Jersey Statewide
Behavioral Health Care Quality Improvement Fair
Shula Minsky, Director, Quality Improvement, UBHC
minsky_at_umdnj.edu
2Training Objectives
- Review quality improvement (QI) principles
- Describe, and walk through the quality
improvement process - Examine QI tools and how when to use them
- Practice the development and presentation of a QI
project for the inaugural QI Fair of 2010
3WHAT IS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT ?
What should BE
What IS
- AND
- designing, testing and monitoring interventions
that bridge the gap
4A FEW IMPORTANT PRINCIPLES
- Continuous improvement must be high priority for
all - Quality improvement is a team effort
- Focus of improvement is on process, not
individuals - Quality improvement must be data-driven
- The QI Process is best when based on an
established, accepted model. - The QI Process information must be communicable
(documentation is essential).
5A GENERAL MODEL FOR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
6Data Collection
- Collecting data is much like collecting
garbage.. - You must know in advance what you are gonna do
with the stuff. - Mark Twain
7Collecting Data
Consider
- What really needs to be measured?
- Whats the best way to measure it?
- How much data needs to be collected, for how
long, and how often? - How will the data be used?
- if you cannot answer this question, dont collect
this information
8Collecting Data
Practical suggestions
- Use (if possible) currently collected data, it
will - help pinpoint your problem and the purpose of
your QI team - provide ready-made baseline and outcome measures
- If you have to use other measures, choose a
tested and proven instrument - If you cant find what you need, develop your own
measure (very carefully) - Look for simple, concrete counts of things and
events
9QI Tools
10Overview of useful QI tools
What they are. When and How to do them.
- Process tools
- Brainstorming
- Multi-voting
- Pareto Charts
- Cause Effect Diagrams (Fishbone)
- Flow Charts
- Data display tools
- Run Charts and Control Charts
- Work Plans and project tracking
11Process Tools
12Brainstorming Select a problem
WHAT A formalized way to generate ideas
efficiently and creatively and get all team
members involved in the process.
UTILITY/PURPOSE
Used to identify topic/problem for improvement at
the planning stage, generate ideas about
possible/probable causes of problems, or ideas
for interventions.
13Brainstorming (cont.)
HOW
- Structured each team member gives an idea in
turn - A variant members write ideas on cards
- Unstructured team members give ideas as they
come to mind - Use flipchart/large paper, write all ideas
- Do not discuss. Do not agree/disagree. Do not
criticize (only allow clarification questions) - When new ideas are exhausted, stop
14Multi-Voting Prioritize
WHAT A way to build team consensus by
incorporating individual preferences/ratings into
the overall team decision
WHEN When you need to reach consensus, but team
members seem torn between competing options. Can
be done to finalize priority issues after
brainstorming (topics/problems, causes,
interventions, etc.)
15Multi-Voting Prioritize
HOW
- List all the options on a flipchart
- Eliminate duplicates, or group similar items,
clarify meanings where/if necessary - Give each statement an identifier (a, b, c,
etc.) - Decide how many votes each member would have (3-5
is usual) - Each team member (independently) places his/her
votes on an index card - Cards are collected, votes tallied on
flipchart/large paper
16Pareto Chart Display Priorities
WHAT A way to display the magnitude/importance
of some problems/issues or to prioritize
potential causes of identified problems
- WHEN When you wish to
- focus efforts on tasks that have the greatest
potential impact - shift focus away from someones pet peeve to
the real issues - provide a simple picture, easy to understand and
communicate, regarding the relative importance
of specific issues/solutions - display the results of multi-voting ( on your
poster)
17Pareto Chart (cont.)
HOW
- Determine the categories related to your issue
(e.g., different QI topics, probable causes) - Determine your unit of measurement (e.g., number
of votes, percent of votes, etc.) - Collect the data (if you dont already have it)
- Count the units of measurement per category, and
plot the highest one first, the second highest
second, etc. (use PPT)
18Use the Process Tools to Identify Probable
Causes of Your Problem
- Brainstorm the probable causes of the problem you
identified - Prioritize the causes using multi-voting
- Display your results in a Pareto chart
(you have 10 minutes to do it)
19Cause Effect AnalysisFishbone Diagram
- WHEN When you need
- a simple, graphical way to explore and
communicate possible causes for an identified
problem - to facilitate focusing on the main issues that
need corrective action
20Cause Effect AnalysisFishbone Diagram
- HOW
- Work as a team
- Use a skeleton of a fishbone diagram (see
handout) - Place the identified problem in the box on the
right - Decide on the major cause categories, and place
them at the top of the main bones (dont plan
on more than six) - Brainstorm possible causes and place them all on
the draft
21A Fishbone Diagram
Environment
Staff
Process
The problem
High no-show rates
Equipment
Training
Patient
22Flow Charts
What A formalized way to describe a process or
an event
- WHEN When you need to
- understand what happened
- streamline a process
- design an intervention (in the right place)
- show change from past to the present
- share understanding about a specific event or
process
23Flow Chart Symbols
Alert possible breakpoint
24Flow Chart
Start you want to cook special dinner
An example
Look for recipe book
Scream in frustration
Have all ingredients?
Yes
Is it on the shelf?
No
Yes
No
Scream in frustration
Find the book!
Yes
Get your spouse to buy what you need
Are stores open?
No
Yes
Did he get all?
Cook dinner
Smile, The End
No
Scream in frustration
Cry, The End
25Flow Chart Guidelines
- Dont be concerned about defining the
process/event completely in the first draft - Involve people who are familiar with the
process/event - Review the flow chart for accuracy and
completeness (several times) - It is useful to create the as is before you
attempt to do the as it should be
26Improvement Planning Milestones
- Before implementing the intervention, the team
should have
- Clarified/specified the problem in need of
improvement - Established a baseline measurement
- Identified at least one probable significant
cause - Considered several possible interventions that
address the identified cause - Selected a small set of interventions to start
with
27Implementing Improvement
- Your interventions do not have to address ALL
problems everywhere to be effective - Implement in small doses
- Monitor, measure and share even small performance
improvements with peers, build acceptance and
alliances - Sustainable improvement takes time
28Data Display Tools
29Displaying Outcomes Run Chart
WHAT Charting a specific measure over time.
For example, number of no-shows or restraints
by quarter, number of falls by month, number of
phone calls per day, number of BMI (BP)
documented by month.
- WHEN When you want to
- monitor performance to detect trends or shifts,
over time - compare a measure before and after an
intervention - focus attention on changes in the process under
scrutiny
30Displaying Outcomes Run Chart
- HOW
- Select a performance measure
- Gather enough data points (at least 20-30)
- Create a graph with timeline on the horizontal
axis (x axis) and the measure on the vertical (y
axis) - Plot the data points and connect them with a line
(or use PowerPoint to do it for you) - Calculate the mean for the measure and draw the
line in your graph
31Run Chart Example
Seclusion rates in Adolescent Inpatient settings
July 98-December 02
32Control Chart
WHAT A way to look at run charts and facilitate
recognition of meaningful variation.
WHEN When you monitor ongoing performance
measures and need to have a quick way to
recognize trends or shifts that are meaningful or
significant.
33Control Chart
Seclusion rates in Adolescent Inpatient settings
July 98-December 02
High upper control limit (2SD)
Upper control limit (1SD)
Mean
Lower control limit (1SD)
34Work Plans and Project Tracking
35Document your QI team Process
( if it was not documented, it was not done)
- Have a clear and consensual definition of your
purpose (write it down) - Develop a work plan, with specific tasks,
responsibilities, and timeline (modify and revise
as you go along) - Have designated minutes-taker (you can rotate the
honor) and facilitator (should be two different
people)
36Document your QI team process (cont.)
- Circulate minutes to members within a day or two
(keep it fresh) - Keep all drafts used in your deliberations
(brainstorming lists, fishbone diagrams, flow
charts, Pareto charts, multi-voting results,
baseline data, etc.)
37WORK PLANS Two Examples
38(No Transcript)
39Guidelines for Your Poster Presentation
- Use fewer words, more pictures if you use words,
use large print - Make the presentation colorful, vivid,
interesting (but dont go overboard...) - Include enough detail to tell the story, but not
too much (you will have a handout with details
for those who are interested) - Plan your space well
40Guidelines for Poster Presentation (cont.)
- The purpose of your project
- Team members and their affiliation
- Steps of the QI model you have used
- Methods used to select topic, and achieve
consensus on causes and interventions - A (short) description of your interventions
- Baseline and outcome data
- Conclusion/status/plans for the future
41Guidelines for your Oral Presentation
- Do not read from your summary page (everyone
knows how to read) - Keep it short, and stick to the main points
- Keep eye contact with the audience, dont
hesitate to express your enthusiasm - Consider your presentation an infomercial, a
marketing tool to whet audience appetite for more
42Now is your chance To critique someone elses QI
process
Each table will receive one actual case,
presented in past QI Fairs
Your task
- First, review the poster presentation and summary
page according to the criteria we discussed (10
minutes) - Second, have one member provide a 2-minute
oral presentation of your groups findings.
43The Third Statewide QI Fair of 2013
June 20, 2013
- Letter-of-intent due on March 30, 2013 (fax to
QI Department, 732.235.3922) - If you have questions or need consultation
regarding general issues or statistics, please
e-mail qiquestions_at_umdnj.edu - Final project Poster and one-page summary due
to QI at UBHC on May 28, 2013 - Guidelines for the one-page summary and the
project judging criteria on the next slide.
44The Third Statewide QI Fair of 2013
June 20, 2013
45Questions? Comments?