Quality Toolkit Prepared by: Offered by HomeTown Health in conjunction with the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. 1 QUALITY TOOLKIT INDEX Several themes recurred during coaching calls and conversations with quality leaders in the Iowa 2016-17 SHIP Critical Access Hospital (CAH) consortium. HMA has assembled a Tool Kit comprised of the most recent, public-domain articles and weblinks that address these Iowa-specific themes. We have endeavored to select authoritative resources that are most relevant to the unique challenges of CAHs. Our hope is that these resources – organized and at your fingertips – will streamline your ability to learn and plan your journey through the world of quality improvement. We have included resources related to the following topics: A. Planning and Leading QI projects within CAHs: Based on learnings from the Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP), a general-purpose guide provides basic directions and resources for conducting and streamlining quality improvement projects in rural hospitals. “Quality Improvement Implementation Guide for Critical Access Hospitals” - In May, 2016, Strasis Health published a guide and toolkit to assist CAHs in planning, streamlining, and implementing quality improvement and safety initiatives. The resource includes: • A quality improvement implementation model focused on small, rural hospitals • Suggestions and considerations for identifying and prioritizing areas for improvement • A table detailing key national quality initiatives including links to external websites for further information • A ten-step guide to leading quality improvement topics Prepared by in conjunction HomeTown Health and the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. * INDEX * B. Engaging Key Stakeholders: Physicians, Board of Directors, and Patients & Families - Physicians – Physicians play a critical role in every aspect of healthcare but involving them in QI, while necessary, can be tricky. o “CPNET –A Roadmap for Trust – Enhancing Physician Engagement” – This resource summarizes the evidence on physician engagement, drawing on peer- reviewed articles and reports from the grey literature, and suggests an integrative framework to help healthcare managers better understand and improve physician engagement. o “Healthcarecollaboration – Practical Strategies for Engaging Physicians” – This slide deck summarizes in bulletpoint form multiple do’s and don’ts related to engaging physicians. Although a sizeable section is focused on physician recruitment and retention, the advice in this section related to culture and communication has general applicability for increasing physician involvement in quality improvement. o “HealthCatalyst - The-Best-Way-Hospitals-Engage-Physicians-Nurses-and-Staff” -Overwhelmed and ill equipped, and plagued by limited understanding of risk- based payment models and how their behavior contributes to healthcare waste and inefficiency, physicians are struggling in the new environment. Financial incentives are overrated – this article reviews alternative (and more successful) ways of engaging physicians and other caregivers. o “IHI - Engaging Physicians in a Shared Quality Agenda” – This whitepaper from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement continues to stand as a vital framework for engaging physicians, especially those who are independent members of a hospital’s organized medical staff. - Boards of Directors - safeguarding and improving quality and patient experience does not fall solely on frontline clinicians - it is a core governance responsibility (multiple resources). o “Hospital Board Oversight of Quality - Synthesis of Research” – This Milbank Quarterly article from 2013 presents a narrative review of 122 empirical research papers, finding a correlation between high-performing hospitals, on the one hand and, on the other, strong and committed leadership that prioritizes quality and safety and sets clear and measurable goals for improvement. Prepared by in conjunction HomeTown Health and the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. * INDEX * o “Hospital Governance and Quality of Care” - This Health Affairs article is based on a large survey of non-profit hospital board chairs. A key finding is that among respondents there is less than-optimal focus on clinical quality and large differences between high- and low-performing hospitals. There are major opportunities to shift the knowledge, training, and practices of hospital boards to promote a greater focus on improved clinical quality. o “How to Guide - Governance Boards on Board for QI” – The Institute for Healthcare Improvement has developed a “getting started” toolkit that provides practical guidance in the establishment of a board membership structure and set of activities that will allow the board to spend more than 25% of its time on quality and safety issues. o “Questions to Ask When Forming a Board Quality Committee” – A succinct, high-value, bullet-pointed summary of key questions to address when pursing a board focus on quality. o “Telling QI stories to Boards of Directors” – Stories are compelling ways to educate and engage boards in quality and safety. This one-page document sketches out best practices related to sharing stories with boards of directors. o “The role of governing boards in improving patient experience” – This article evaluates board engagement around improving patient experience and offers practical examples of how to increase board involvement. Part of this requires developing a nuanced understanding of board member attitudes. - Patients and families – Patient and family advisory councils can be instrumental in transforming the culture of CAHs towards patient-centered care (an all-purpose guide). o https://www.stepsforward.org/modules/pfac - The American Medical Association’s STEPSforward program, in partnership with Consumers Advancing Patient Safety and Project Patient Care, has developed a sophisticated set of online modules to assist hospitals in the creation of patient and family advisory councils. o “AHRQ - Working With Patient and Families as Advisors” – AHRQ has developed an implementation handbook to assist hospitals develop effective partnerships with patients and family members with the ultimate goal of improving hospital quality and safety. o “Toolkit - Patient and Family Advisory Council” – BJC Healthcare has released a comprehensive, step-by-step guide to establishing hospital-based patient and family advisory councils. Prepared by in conjunction HomeTown Health and the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. * INDEX * C.Measuring and Improving Patient Experience beyond HCAHPS: Recognizing that CAHs must often participate in HCAHPS, but that in rural settings HCAHPS survey responses are often insufficient in number, reporting is delayed, and actionable information is frequently lacking, we offer resources that describe rapid-cycle, real-time alternatives for assessing and improving patient experience. Today, every healthcare provider is struggling to lift its patient satisfaction ratings. Yet providers often learn about patient complaints far too late in a hospital stay to affect those perceptions. And that can be costly. Medicare in 2017 started to use patient satisfaction scores to determine up to a quarter of the 2% penalty or reward in its value based purchasing program. Traditional methods of evaluating a visit from the patient’s side that focused on satisfaction with care through post- care surveys and interviews have been limited by a number of factors, including low response rate, recall bias related to delay in obtaining information, selection bias related to which patients actually complete a survey, and the halo effect, which reflects patients’ desires to speak highly of their providers. Several innovative approaches to obtaining and acting to improve patient experience in real time are noted in resources provided below. o Real Time Patient Experience Methods o Alberta Health System Emotional Care Pathways o The Current State of Patient Experience Surveying and Future Innovations o At the University of Pennsylvania, researchers tested the use of a kiosk delivered survey offered to patients to elicit feedback on care experiences as a method for obtaining patient feedback in real-time. http://www.ajmc.com/journals/issue/2011/2011-7-vol17- n7/AJMC_11jul_DiRocco_e270to276/ o At Denver Health Medical Center, a QI team instituted a brief, three-question verbal survey that asked a group of patients to rate their doctor on listening, explaining, and being helpful. It turned around and immediately provided that feedback to the frontline caregivers. They also provided training for clinicians in cases where there were areas for improvement. http://www.journalofhospitalmedicine.com/jhospmed/article/127060/real- time-patient-experience-surveys#jhm2533-bib-0022 o Wofford and colleagues at Wake Forest University Medical Center tested the use of web- based survey technology to elicit patient feedback on clinical care experiences in a primary care setting. Of the 727 available patients during clinic survey days, 293 (40%) completed the survey. For the 12-question survey, the average time per survey was 40 seconds. Yes/No questions took less time than multiple choice questions (average 9.6 seconds versus 14.0). http://medinform.jmir.org/2015/1/e13/ Prepared by in conjunction HomeTown Health and the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. *INDEX * D. Transitions of Care: Safely discharging patients to their home environment and avoiding readmissions is an intensifying priority. A variety of landmark studies and toolkits support the ability of CAHs to tackle this thorny challenge. Resources included on best practices in care transitions in this toolkit include the following: o The Project RED toolkit o The IDEAL Discharge program from AHRQ o Links to Project BOOST and the Transitional Care model o The Institute for Healthcare Improvement Guide to Care Transitions Prepared by in conjunction HomeTown Health and the Iowa Department of Public Health through the 2016-2017 SHIP Grant Program #5887SH01. * INDEX * Quality Improvement Implementation Guide and Toolkit for Critical Access Hospitals May 2016 This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under grant number U1RRH29052, Rural Quality Improvement Technical Assistance Cooperative Agreement, $490,194 (0% financed with nongovernmental sources). This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS, or the U.S. Government. Quality Improvement Implementation Guide and Toolkit for CAH Hospitals Table of Contents Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 2 About MBQIP ............................................................................................................................. 2 Purpose of This Guide ................................................................................................................ 2 How to Use This Guide............................................................................................................... 2 Rural Hospital Quality Improvement – A Model for Implementation ........................................... 3 Prioritizing Opportunities for Improvement ............................................................................... 5 Ten Steps to Leading Quality Improvement Topics ....................................................................... 7 MBQIP Quality Improvement Focus Areas ............................................................................. 12 Additional Resources ................................................................................................................ 13 Appendix A – FORHP MBQIP Infographic ................................................................................. 14 Appendix B – Federal and National Quality Programs ................................................................ 15 Appendix C – MBQIP Acronym Guide........................................................................................ 17 Appendix D – Measure Quick Reference Guide .......................................................................... 18 Appendix E – Patient Safety Measure Summary .......................................................................... 19 Appendix F – Outpatient Measure Summary ............................................................................... 22 Appendix G – Patient Engagement Measure Summary ............................................................... 27 Appendix H – Care Transitions Measure Summary ..................................................................... 30 Appendix I – Glossary .................................................................................................................. 34 Appendix J – Tools ....................................................................................................................... 35 Stratis Health Rural Quality Improvement Technical Assistance │ www.stratishealth.org 1 Quality Improvement Implementation Guide and Toolkit for CAH Hospitals Overview About MBQIP The Medicare Beneficiary Quality Improvement Project (MBQIP) is a quality improvement activity under the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy’s (FORHP) Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility (Flex) grant program. Implemented in 2011, the goal of MBQIP is to improve the quality of care provided in critical access hospitals (CAHs) by increasing voluntary quality data reporting by CAHs and then driving quality improvement activities based on the data. Critical access hospitals have historically been exempt from national quality improvement reporting programs due to challenges related to measuring improvement in low volume settings and limited resources. It is clear, however, that some CAHs are not only participating in national quality improvement reporting programs, but are excelling across multiple rural relevant topic areas. Small rural hospitals that participate in Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) often outperform prospective payment system (PPS) hospitals on survey scores. MBQIP provides an opportunity for individual hospitals to look at their own data, compare their results against other CAHs and partner with other hospitals around quality improvement initiatives to improve outcomes and provide the highest quality care to each and every one of their patients. As the US moves rapidly toward a health care system that pays for value versus volume of care provided, it is crucial for CAHs to participate in federal public quality reporting programs to demonstrate the quality of the care they are providing. Low numbers are not a valid reason for CAHs to not report quality data. It is important to provide evidence-based care for every patient, 100 percent of the time. MBQIP takes a proactive approach to ensure CAHs are well-prepared to meet future quality requirements. For more information about MBQIP, please see the FORHP infographic in Appendix A. Purpose of This Guide This guide is intended to help CAH staff structure and support quality improvement efforts, as well as identify best practices and strategies for improvement of MBQIP measures. Measures included in the MBQIP Quality Guide This guide focuses on measures reported for MBQIP as part of the fiscal year (FY) 2015 Flex grant cycle, which ends August 31, 2016. Recognizing the evolving nature of health care quality measures, this guide will be updated on a routine basis to align with changes made to MBQIP. A current list of MBQIP measures is posted here. How to Use This Guide This guide provides basic directions and resources for conducting and streamlining quality improvement projects in rural hospitals, with a particular focus on MBQIP. This guide and toolkit includes: A quality improvement implementation model focused on small, rural hospital settings Suggestions and considerations for identifying and prioritizing areas for improvement Stratis Health Rural Quality Improvement Technical Assistance │ www.stratishealth.org 2 Quality Improvement Implementation Guide and Toolkit for CAH Hospitals A table detailing key national quality initiatives that align with MBQIP priorities, including links to external websites for further information (Appendix B) A ten step guide to leading quality improvement topics An internal monitoring tool to assist with tracking and displaying MBQIP and other quality and patient safety measures A list of acronyms related to MBQIP measures (Appendix C) Summaries of current MBQIP measures by domain including best practices for improvement (Appendix D) A glossary of key words with definitions. Throughout the document key words are hyperlinked so the reader is able to click on the word and go directly to the glossary Rural Hospital Quality Improvement – A Model for Implementation When structured in a way that leverages the advantages of smaller scales such as easier access to key people, and less cumbersome decision-making hierarchies, rural hospital quality improvement can be achieved efficiently and effectively. A hub and spoke model can be used as an illustration. Rather than initiating full teams for every topic area or initiative, one core quality and patient safety committee (hub), led by a designated chair, might initiate and oversee multiple topics or projects, active and sustained, by designating a leader or “owner” (spokes) for each of them. Individual project leaders might be chosen based on topic expertise, enthusiasm, or proximity to the process being improved. Active project implementation can be conducted in ad hoc working sessions, with the leader attending quality and patient safety meetings only upon special request, if the leader is not a standing member of the quality and safety committee. The flow of information from the quality and safety chair to each project or topic leader is critical to the success of the hub and spoke model. Below is an illustration of the model, suggesting possible MBQIP topic area designations. Stratis Health Rural Quality Improvement Technical Assistance │ www.stratishealth.org 3
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