THE HIGH ALERT PROGRAM: HOW COORDINATED CARE PLANS FOR SPECIFIC ED PATIENTS CAN BENEFIT PATIENTS, PROVIDERS AND HOSPITALS Christopher Ziebell, M.D. Emergency Service Partners, L.P. Austin, TX • Christopher M. Ziebell, MD, FACEP – Emergency Service Partners, LP High Alert Program Overview • Introduction/Program Description • Impact on Work Environments • Evaluation/Results What is the High Alert Program? • Case Management System – Identifies Patients with Complex Needs – Identifies Patients with Numerous ED Visits – Organizes Clinical Information – Creates a Plan for Future Patient Encounters Evolution of the High Alert Program • • • • • • • SERT Mechanism for filtering out high-utilizers Behavior modification Avoids pressure to triage out Technology breakthrough Database intervention and development Narcotic termination letters The Process Patient Referral Patient Chart Review Treatment Plan Creation Treatment Plan Implementation Resource Requirements for Program Development Case Management Database Social Work Patient Nursing Director IT Support Administrator Medical Director High Alert Levels Level 4 Level 3 General Patient Population Patients w/ Treatment Plan Compassionate Dialysis • Sickle Cell • CHF Level 2 Suicidal Patient Level 1 Dangerous Patient Examples of Cases • • • • • • • • Chronic Care Management Gastric Bypass Patient Sickle Cell Anemia Heart Transplant Fall Precautions DNR Management of Homeless Patients SSI Your Biggest Challenge? • • • • • Patient Treatment History Boundaries of Care Development of the Care Plan Identify Appropriate Resources Staff and Patient Follow-up What Does it Take to Implement? Sample Policy • Sample Policy Exists Relation to New Models of Payment or Care Delivery • • • • • • Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) Medical Home Quality Care Cost Reductions Hospital Re-admissions Wellness and Prevention Emphasis Personal Perception • • • • Faster Lower Cost Higher Quality Lower Conflict Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 8.Disciplined, standardized process – Holds up to JCAHO/Legal Reviews Old Model: “Winging It” Key Processes: Memory PLAN Rumor Suspicion Conflict *Visit List* Old Model: “Winging It” Here last week! Likes Dilaudid Cousin in Jail! Advantages: • Easy • Already in Use Disadvantages: • • • • • No Continuity Poly-pharmacy Liability Inappropriate Wasted Resources New Model: High Alert Program Process: • Referrals • Multiple Inputs • Research • Social Work • Case Management • PCP • Documentation • Director Approval • Re-evaluations • Modifications Advantages: Many Disadvantages: Time-Consuming Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 7.Increases physician job satisfaction • Worth the costs of HAP • Does not “tie the MD’s hands” • Not “cookbook medicine” Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 6.Improves the work life of our nurses • Worth the costs of HAP! • ED “hardest places to work” • World-wide nursing shortage • RN/MD partnership on treatment plan Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 5.Involves the ED patients’ private MD • Adds authority to care plan • Engenders trust • Suggests ramifications/consequences to bad behaviors He stole my cell phone last Friday! Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 4.Improves quality of care • Detailed synopsis of issues • Necessary steps in workup • Appropriate treatments Just another OTD patient…… Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 3.Improves speed of care • Avoids unnecessary calls • Avoids unnecessary testing Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 2.Exposes non-compliance • 48 visits with nary a PCP visit • 15 different dentist appointments in 1 year! The care plan says you’re 4 minutes late with my meds! Medical Director Perspective Eight reasons HAP is important to our Emergency Departments: 1.Decreases conflicts and tensions • Medical Director gets to be the heavy • Patient / RN / MD all know the drill • Defined endpoints for ED visits Staff Survey • Non-scientific poll Survey 1………… 2…..…..… • Effort to minimize bias 3……….…. • 10 questions; multiple-choice • Sent via e-mail employing SurveyMonkey • 39 doctors and 60 nurses responded Staff Perspective • Increases physician job satisfaction SURVEY RESULTS • 100% believe the HAP makes their job easier. Staff Perspective • Improves the work life of our nurses SURVEY RESULTS • 75% believe the HAP makes their job easier. Staff Perspective • Improves quality of care SURVEY RESULTS • 85% of MDs feel quality is improved • 57% of RNs feel quality is improved Staff Perspective • Improves speed of care SURVEY RESULTS • 76% of MDs feel LOS is reduced • 63% of RNs feel LOS is reduced Staff Perspective • Decreases conflict and tensions in the ED SURVEY RESULTS • 87% of MDs feel conflicts are reduced • 50% of RNs feel conflicts are reduced Overall Perspective Brings a controlled & predictable process to high-stress patient encounters within a chaotic environment Staff Opinion — VIDEO Five Strategies for Reducing Unnecessary Visits • • • • • Chronic Care Management Substance Abuse Screening Off-Site Center for the Homeless Primary Care Liaison Collaborative Clinic –The Advisory Board This was written in 1993… …You’ve come a long way Baby! HAP Enrollments in Study • Program active at several hospitals • Studied: 7 hospitals with historical data • HAP patients in study: – 1,269 met inclusion criteria (HAP patients with visit data within the study interval) Demographics • 57% male • Are much more commonly 20–40 than our general population HAP Patient Visits Study Percentage of Selected Sites and Period Time Frame for Data Collection 40 Months 12/2006 – 4/2010 Total # of Visits in Selected HAP Sites over Period 100.0% 513,829 Total # of HAP Visits 2.3% 11,667 HAP Visits Excluded from Sample 0.9% 4,791 HAP Visits in Study 1.3% 6,876 HAP Patient Visits For 7 Selected Sites within Period HAP Visits in Study For 7 Selected Sites within Period Site Site A Site B Site C Site D Site E Site F Site G Totals All Visits 126,924 118,953 92,684 49,774 36,456 13,220 75818 513,829 HAP Visits % of Total 2.67% 2,041 3.62% 2,431 0.47% 247 2.20% 565 2.05% 567 0.97% 88 2.06% 937 1.34% 6,876 Interval Sampling-Definition: “HAP Enrollment Interval” • “Before and After” HAP enrollment intervals were made for each individual patient • Length of individual intervals were based on patient enrollment date • “After” HAP enrollment interval consisted of # of days since patient’s enrollment to 5/1/2010 • “Before” interval is then set to equal number of days prior to each patient enrollment Interval Sampling Patient A Pre-Interval Post-Interval Enrollment Date Patient B Pre-Interval Post-Interval Enrollment Date Study Begins Study Ends HAP Enrollments in Study • Total HAP Visits in study: 6,876 • HAP visits before: 4,526 • HAP visits after: 2,350 • 48% reduction in number of visits HAP Visits/Patient Before vs. After Enrollment at Selected Sites Over Entire Period # Patients Before HAP Enrollment # Patients After HAP Enrollment 1 to 6 Visits 1,028 568 6 to 12 197 65 12 to 18 34 29 18 to 24 6 6 24 + 4 6 Totals 1,269 674 HAP Visits/Patient Patients with 2 years of data (1 year interval before and after) # Patients Before # Patients After 1 to 6 Visits 278 134 6 to 12 137 44 12 to 18 25 26 18 to 24 6 5 24 + 4 3 Totals 450 212 HAP Population: Top Ten Diagnoses HAP Patients Visits in Selected Sites within Study Period HAP Primary Diagnosis LUMBAGO HEADACHE NAUSEA WITH VOMITING SHORTNESS OF BREATH ABDOMINAL PAIN-OTH SPEC SITE NAUSEA ALONE UNS CHEST PAIN UNS BACKACHE PAIN IN LIMB UNS MIGRAINE WO INTRACTABLE MIGRAINE Before 15.9% 14.7% 14.1% 10.2% 9.6% 9.1% 7.3% 6.6% 6.4% 6.2% After 12.6% 12.2% 15.6% 11.5% 8.9% 10.4% 9.7% 5.8% 6.8% General 6.41% 11.5% 11.7% 7.9% Key Points re: Diagnosis • Majority have a pain component • Top 3 pain-related diagnoses had percentage drop • 4 of 10 Top Diagnoses follow general population Lab, CT, X-ray Utilization Virtually unchanged •2.5% increase in lab tests •1% decrease in radiology Services Utilized 1800 1600 1636 1504 1400 1200 1000 756 842 810 After 800 576 600 478 400 274 200 0 Neither Lab Tests Before X-rays Before: 4,526 Both After: 2,350 Disposition 83.09% 82.46% 90.00% 82.26% 80.00% 70.00% 60.00% Before 50.00% After Gen'l Pop 40.00% 30.00% 20.00% 14.56% 14.51% 14.19% 10.00% 0.42% 0.73% 0.32% 1.93% 2.30% 3.23% 0.00% Admitted to Hospital Admitted To ICU Discharged Transfer Length of Visit: Before vs. After • LOV virtually unchanged Financial Observation: Professional Only • HAP Before-Visits shows 11% reduction in collections over general patient population • HAP After-Visits shows same picture as collection percentages of general patient population HAP “Before” Patients Payer Mix: HAP vs. General Population Payer Difference Charity 3.29% greater Federal/State 4.79% greater Self Pay 7.30% greater Commercial 15.37% lower HAP Visits Summary At Selected Sites During Study Period: • 48% reduction in number of visits • 7.1% increase in number of visits in general patient population at study sites – using midpoint of study period Soft Findings • Decrease in variation and predictability of outcome • Results in increased patient safety (e.g., decreased radiation) • Patients appreciate the fact that you know them when dealing with complex needs • Impact on Patient Satisfaction Scores unknown Hard Findings • Reduced visits by 48% • No improvement in the LOV data • No change in percentage of patients to receive Lab and X-ray, but actual drop in line with drop of visits • Payer Mix Changes after enrollment to mirror general population Example from Another Health Care System: • In the 12 mos pre-HAP (8/1/10-7/31/11), 76 patients had ≥ 11 ED visits 1046 total visits • In the 12 mos post-HAP (9/1/11-8/31/12), the same 76 patients had 370 visits – – – – 3 had more visits 1 had same visits 55 had fewer visits 17 had zero visits • 64.6% reduction in ED visits Does HAP Reduce Cost? • Identified “Top 20” from 1 01, 2012 through 8 30, 2012. • ED Case Manager reviewed the ED visit history of each patient for patterns and trends, noting PCP, if any, and type of funding (majority unfunded). Does HAP Reduce Cost? • Case Manager and Medical Director reviewed the “Top 20” list, devised patient-specific Care Plans, and sent out notification letters to each “Top 20” patient. • Case Manager spent a great deal of time coordinating outpatient care with private physicians and community clinics specific to each patient’s needs in order to reduce unnecessary ED visits for non-emergent problems. Comparison of # Visits 9 mos pre-HAP vs. 4 mos post-HAP 40 35 4 30 20 15 10 5 13 3 25 7 2 31 0 21 2 0 2 0 0 1 3 1 2 2 1 0 14 14 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 11 11 475310 339683 380676 508998 324119 484546 601615 313164 601442 438400 415897 471950 607572 322297 478187 452904 605149 490323 0 4 mos post-HAP 9 mos pre-HAP Comparison of ED Charges 9 mos pre-HAP vs. 4 mos post-HAP 0 200,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 1,000,000 9 mos pre-HAP 4 mos post-HAP $642,652.63 $132,807.65 Comparison of ED Charges 9 mos pre-HAP vs. 4 mos post-HAP (extrapolated out to 9 mos post-HAP) 0 200,000 400,000 600,000 800,000 1,000,000 9 mos pre-HAP 4 mos post-HAP $642,652.63 $298,817.21 9 mos post-HAP A Third Example Quick look at reduction in ED utilization among patients with repeated visits, after HAP implementation, for site “A” • In the 12 months January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010: – 47 patients had 10 or more ER visits – 689 total visits (14.7 visits/pt avg) A Third Example • In the 12 months January 1, 2011 through December 31, 2011: – The same 47 patients had 353 visits or a 51.2% reduction (7.5 visits/pt avg) – 7 had more visits – 39 had fewer visits – 1 had zero visits • This site has no case management support, and the Medical Director does it all himself. 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