Best Practices in Transitions to Post
Transcription
Best Practices in Transitions to Post
Best Practices in Transitions to Post-Acute Care Facilities Hospital Medicine 2013 May 19 Heather Zinzella Cox MD, CMD Director Post Acute Services IPC Delaware Robert Young MD, MS Division of Hospital Medicine Northwestern University Speaker Disclosures: Dr. Heather Zinzella-Cox: Novartis Pharmaceuticals Speakers Bureau Dr. Robert Young: Nothing to disclose. Post Acute Care Partnerships • • • • Improve Patient Safety Reduce Readmissions Decrease LOS Hospitalists outside hospital • Bundled Payments/ACO • Good Business model: referrals/hospital leverage Areas of Post Acute Care • • • • • • Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRF) Long-Term Acute Care Hospitals (LTACH) Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNF) Long Term Care Facilities (LTC) Assisted Living Communities (AL) Continued Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs): Independent Living (IL), AL,SNF, LTC • Outpatient Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRF) • 3 Medicare Qualifying Criteria – Reasonable expectation that pt will get significant functional improvement over reasonable time – Pt can tolerate and participate in a minimum of 3 hrs of daily PT/OT – Patient is medically stable • PPS 60% Rule • • • • • • • • • • • Spinal Cord Injury Congenital Deformity Amputation Major multiple trauma Hip fracture Brain Injury Neurological disorders ( e.g. Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s) Burns 3 arthritis conditions which failed outpatient therapy Stroke Joint replacement for both knees or hips when surgery immediately preceds admission, when BMI >50 or age >85 IRF PATIENTS • 80% medicare/medicaid • 80% d/c home • 10% d/c to hospital • 10% d/c to SNF IRF Models of Practice • Physiatrist led • Hospitalist led IRF Units • Orthopedic • Traumatic Brain Injury • Neurologic • Spinal Cord • General Long Term Acute Care Hospital (LTACH) • Acute Care hospitals treats medically complex pts with prolonged LOS • Freestanding vs Hospital based • Same licensing, certification as STACHs • Organized bylaws, rules, and regulations like STACH but unlike SNF LTACH Patients • Medical complex, “chronic critical illness” or “post intensive care syndrome” • Longer LOS : 30 vs. 6 days • LTACH, must have average LOS >25 days to receive medicare payments. LTACH stats • • • • 20% discharges on Mechanical Ventiliation 33% had pulmonary dx 40% prevalence of skin/wound dx 90% admitted from ACH, 10% wound care clinic Source: MedPac Datapack June 2011 LTACH Providers • Must be privileged and credentialed. • Most bylaws require daily attending physician evaluation. • Consultants on staff and available. • NO limitation or expectation of visit frequency Advantages of LTACH practice • Admissions are elective and predictable. • Slower throughput and LOS than STACH. • High severity but stable, requiring single daily visits. • Small hospitals which allow for much interactions with leadership and committee participation. Challenges of LTACH practice • • • • Small with small medical staffs Limited consultant choices Less and slower ancillary resources Fewer diagnostic and surgical capabilities compared with STACHs Nursing Facilities “In a hospital they throw you out before you are half cured, but in a nursing home they don’t let you out till you are dead.” – George Bernard Shaw Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) • Skilled Nursing is defined “ the treatment and continuing observation and assessment of the medically stable and unstable chronically ill patient.” • Free standing vs. unit in NF • Wide range of services for diverse patient population SNFs • Payor Medicare Part A/Managed Care/Private Pay • Medicare (10%) – Max of 100 days. 20 days no copay. 80 with copay. – 3 day hospital stay (within 30 days) – PPS: covers room, medications, diet, nursing services, medical supplies, DME, medications – Pt must meet skilled service requirements Medicare Qualifying Skilled Services • PT/OT/Speech one hour a day • Wound Care • PEG feedings • Chronic Oxygen therapy • Dialysis Patients • Diabetes monitoring Nursing Facility Residents • Short Stay: 1-6 mos – Terminally ill (respite) – Short term rehab – Subacute • Long Term – Cognitively impaired – Cognitively + physically impaired – Physically impaired – Medicaid 50% SNF/LTC patients • • • • • Medically complex but “stable” Do not require daily physician visits. Most with completed diagnostic work up 45% patients are >85 yo 10% are under 65 SNF provider Models • • • • Facility Employed or Closed Model Independent Physician Model Mid level provider based Model Skilled in regulatory issues, wounds, dementia, nutrition, palliative care Practice Challenges • Regulatory issues – Narcotic prescriptions, Psychotropics, foley • Limited IT resources/no EHR • Limited Access to Diagnostic Testing • Pharmacy limitations • Nursing Training and Experience • PPS/Utilization Costs Nursing Facilities Assisted Living • Non Medical/Self Directed Care • No requirements for medical director • Typical Services – – – – – 3 meals a day 24 hr security Med reminders only ADL assistance Transportation/appt assistance Home Health Care • Patient must meet criteria – Medicare beneficiary – Requires a covered service – Homebound – Physician F2F form – Plan of Care for patient reviewed by MD Homebound Definition • Home Absences – Infrequent – Short duration – Taxing Effort • Taxing Effort – Cane, walker, WC – Help to get into car – Help of another to leave house Intermittent Services Required • • • • Skilled nursing PT OT Speech Intermittent: <21 days,<8hrs/day<7 days a wk Trends in HHC in 2011 • Increased utilization of HHC • Increased number of visits per home health patient to 36 visits per episode. • Skilled and therapy visits account for >80% of visits vs. Home Health aide 16% – – – – Skilled Nursing 52% Therapy 33% Home Health Aide 16% Medical Social Services 1% Source: MedPAC 2012 data Hospice • Home based • Inpatient based • SNF’s and Hospice – Med A services – Hospice does not pay for SNF room and board Discharges From an Acute Care Hospital 46% 32% 16% 2% Long Term Acute Care Hospital 5% Hospice Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Skilled Nursing Facility Home Health Source: Medpac Databook June 2012 Federal Spending in Billions $35.0 $31.8 $30.0 $25.0 $20.0 $19.6 $13.0 $15.0 $10.0 $5.4 $6.7 $5.0 $Long Term Acute Care Hospital Hospice Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Skilled Nursing Facility Home Health 46% 50% 42% 45% 40% 32% 35% 30% 26% Spending 25% 15% 10% 5% Discharges 17% 16% 20% 9% 7% 5% 2% 0% Long Term Acute Care Hospital Hospice Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility Skilled Nursing Facility Home Health Choosing the appropriate level of service • Who should choose? • What factors affect the decision? • Where is most appropriate post discharge setting? All not created equal. • When should patient be discharged? • Why…now you know… Transitions for Acute Care Hospitals to Skilled Nursing Facilities Future PAC Environment • Patient, not setting • Common assessment instrument • Bundled payments/ACOs • New quality metrics • Expanded readmissions policies MEDPAC, March 2013 Factors Driving Transition Efforts • Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and other ACA programs • High SNF margins vs. LTC margins (Medpac 2012): – SNF average margins over last 10 yrs = – LTC margins (2008-2010)= -1.2% – Median margin = 3.3% >10% • Anticipation of population accountability SNF Transitions in General Our hospital wants its SNF readmission rate down… Where do I start? • Very little, if any, rigorous process/outcomes data • Types of interventions are reaching saturation • Most are multi-component interventions (similar to inpatient strategies) • The keystone to these efforts are cross setting- collaborative teams (including ED representatives) • Practice rigorous process improvement Define Measure Analyze Improve Control Define Know your SNF Environment Large amount of variation between SNFs • Capabilities (meds, IV, therapies) • Location (freestanding vs. TCU/SNU) • Ownership • Specialty units (joint replacement, CHF, behavioral units) • Staffing (RNs, LPNs, CNAs, SNFists, PCPs, Geriatricians ) Define Know your SNF environment Variation in state regulations • Communication documentation • Staffing Communication Infrastructure • Health Information Exchange • Hospital’s systems to transmit information • ? Access to your EMR Define Who is in your neighborhood? Social Network Analysis: National Coordinating Center (ICPC) Provides: • A visual representation of the PAC transitions within a community • Examine the transitions with a desired level of volume. • Readmission data • Determine which are the influential institutions (nodes) to prioritize efforts • Cross influences from other hospitals in your market? Define Who is in your neighborhood? Case Management Referral Software: • Most widely used is: Allscripts Post Acute Solutions- Formerly ECIN • Used to send referrals to SNFs (assessments, demographics, communication system) • Can be used to determine where patients are going, readmissions back to your facilities • Can be used to track communication (follow up phone calls) with PAC sites Define Who is in your neighborhood? Other Interesting Data Fields Available through ECIN: • DRG • DRG CMI • Payment Source • By Service • Assessment Summary • LOS • Time of referrals • Date and time of Discharge • Readmission/Report • Avoidable days • Delay report Define Sample Reports Courtesy of Allscripts Measure Community Outcomes Institution/Community level metrics to consider: • Transition rates • Readmission rates (including PAC settings) • Admission rates • ED visit rates Your State QIO can help you get this data • Observation stay rates for Medicare Patients • Mortality rates • Disease specific readmission rates Measure ACO and Bundled Payment Metrics Accountable Care Organization 33 metrics • NQF 5-6: 7 from HCAPS • CMS: Risk Standardized Readmission Measure (all cause) • NQF 97: Medication reconciliation • NQF 101: Falls risk assessment Bundled Payment BPCI: For models 2 and 3 • Medication reconciliation after discharge • Staffing hours per day per beneficiary • Others – negotiated with CMS Analyze Figuring out the cause • Process mapping & failure modes effects analysis • Root cause analysis People/Staff D/C summary completed by CCHS/MD Process Identify accept MD/Provider MD Communication RX in timely fashion RN Communication Quality of RN report Timeliness of D/C Chart Copy Improving Discharge process for CHF/COPD Patients Transitioning from 5C to SNF: How does Improved Communication Impact Readmission Rates: Internal Knowledge of PCOC/ handoff (RN) Ofc phone call Key: Streamline of D/C info Communication Process Patient Patient Admitted to 5C Dx: CHF/COPD Treatment Plan/ Plan of Care initiated PCF, RN, SW, CM Collaboration Inpt. Vs. Obs. ? SNF Placement probability Order for PT Eval Skill Level Needed (IV Abx, Wound Care) MD complete Interagency & Med. Rec. forms MD dictate D/C Summary Patient Identified for SNF (if Pt. from home needs 3 night stay to qualify for Medicare) Med Rec Nursing Referrals placed to SNF SW discusses eligibility w/Pt. & Family CM coordinates Insurance Ins. Coverage Qualify Med Rec Updated Patient Admitted from HOME Social Work REFERRAL Social Work Referral for SNF Placement Patient Admitted from SNF SNF review chart and patient for placement SNF acceptance/declination Actual Facility/Provider determined Med. Rec not updated - delegate More User-friendly Interagency Decision Entire Chart Resources/Staff “Choice” MD CHART COPY (24* TIME) Chart too much info (Streamline) Quality of Documents Copied prematurely New Packet SS/CM RN Report Communication Packet 5C tool, InterAg., Med Rec, Scripts, D/C Summary PCF/RN communicates SNF determination w/MD Lack Clinical Guidelines HIMS Process MD orders DISCHARGE MD:MD Communication RN REPORT BM w/3 days Interagency form Report to receive RN SW coordinates with existing SNF for bed hold/ status Regulatory forms Interagency Completion/accuracy of D/C form Form Completion Initiate CHF/ COPD Checklist ?Quality & timing of Report Include PLOC Verify Dx. Specific Checklist is completed SS arranges transportation PATIENT D/C TO SNF D/C phone call 24 - 48 hours post d/c Policy Clinical Guidelines Analyze Figuring out the cause Others the factors: • Timing of referrals, acceptance, transfer, and readmissions • Staffing ratios • Acute care case characteristics (LOS, diagnosis, severity, unaddressed terminal illness) • Provider (physician, nursing, staff) • Completeness of documentation Improve Taxonomy of Hospital and SNF Transitions Interventions Acute Care Skilled Nursing Facility Discharge paperwork Disease specific order sets Post discharge follow up Nursing warm handoffs NP and PAs to follow patients @ SNF Acute care transfer paperwork Contact information from sending SNF provider Inventory of SNF services INTERACT, eSNF Bridging Interventions Collaborative Teams: •Root Cause Analysis •Aggregate data analysis (Community Level) •Coordinate joint quality improvement efforts ED engagement- protocols regarding the return of patient to SNF Medication reconciliation Goals of care Physician warm handoffs (Bi-directional) Health Information Exchanges/RHIOs Improve Discharge Paperwork • Discharge checklist • Medical record: H&P, progress, consult notes, labs, test results- treatment plan • Clear orders for next setting • Contact information • Interagency, universal transfer forms • Narcotics and schedule drug scripts • Nursing screens • Health care directives: POLST/MOLST • Discharge summary Improve Other interventions Education regarding SNF transitions • Family and patients (priming expectations) • Acute care physicians, nurses, and social workers (making sure pt needs match facilities capabilities) Post discharge phone follow up • Calls made to make sure of complete transfer of documentation and orders • Disease specific orders implemented • See if additional info is needed • Get feedback on communication Improve Other Interventions Medication Reconciliation • Marquis • Need to include original medication list • Other suggestions? Warm Physician Handoffs • Directories of SNF providers • NU method- have SNF/NH admissions staff page our hospitalist with phone # to reach accepting SNF provider (minimize searching) • Discuss goals of care, family and patient dynamics, highlight treatment plan • Ultimately last check on whether the transfer is appropriate Disease Specific Ordersets Remember that slightly less than half of these patients are readmitted from SNFs with the same diagnosis (Ouslander, JAMDA 2011) Improve INTERACT 3.0 (Interventions to Reduce Acute Care Transfers) is: • A quality improvement program based in LTC • Focuses on management of acute change in condition. • Clinical and educational tools as part of program • Strategies for every day use in LTC http://interact2.net/index.aspx Improve INTERACT Hospital Hosp-NH Transfer checklist, Data list ED NH Capabilities List Skilled Nursing Facility & LTC INTERACT Quality Improvement Tools NH-Hosp Transfer checklist, Data list Can the patient INTERACT Communication within the NH (e.g. specialized SBARS) return from the ED to the NH for INTERACT Decision Support Tools for Change in Condition (Triggers & Care Paths) treatment?? INTERACT Advance Care Planning Tools Improve ED Engagement For some evaluation in the ED setting is appropriate. How do we help our ED colleagues feel comfortable about sending appropriate patients back? Control Don’t practice DMAI… Continue to work within the collaborative groups: • Monitoring population, proce ss (at least compliance with interventions) & outcomes metrics Control Don’t practice DMAI… • Continue to perform RCAs on readmissions and problematic transfers • Rapid cycle improvement for issues that arise • Ask QIO for updated SNA to see how things have changed over time Need More Help? Partner with Your QIO Control State based private contractors to CMS • Improve quality of care for CMS beneficiaries • Originally work in quality assurance-> quality improvement projects (multiple in the PAC setting) • Coordinate submission of data for public reporting for Hospital, NH, Home Health Compare Thanks for your attention! Contact Information Further questions or comments? Feel free to contact us at: • Heather: [email protected] • Rob: [email protected]