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Click to edit Master title style Welcome to… Click to edit Master subtitle style How the Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records relates to the Quality of Patient Care Wednesday, April 18, 2012 ClickMeaningful to edit Master title Quality style of Care On Use and Click to edit Master subtitle style Agenda Moderator, Sharon Murphy Enright of Envision Change, LLC I. On Meaningful Use and Quality of Care 60 minutes Allen Flynn II. Meaningful Use – Pharmacy Update 15 minutes Burl Beasley III. Clinical Pharmacy Program Updates 15 minutes Trent Beach IV. Live! Questions & Answers 20 minutes V. Administrative Updates 10 minutes Bob Fink ClickMeaningful to edit Master title Quality style of Care On Use and Click portion This to edit Master presented subtitle by: style Allen Flynn, Pharm.D., CPHIMS, CHS Chair, 2011-12 ASHP Section on Pharmacy Informatics & Technology Solution Designer, Health Practice Innovators healthpracticeinnovators.com ClickMeaningful to edit Master title Quality style of Care On Use and Objectives forsubtitle the session Click to edit Master style 1. Understand what the Meaningful Use Electronic Health Record Incentive Program is & includes 2. Describe how & why electronic medical record systems (EMRs) and electronic health records (EHRs) may help improve the quality of care for ALL patients 3. Identify several challenges to meeting the Meaningful Use, Stage I hospital criteria ClickMeaningful to edit Master title Quality style of Care On Use and What is the Meaningful Click to edit Master subtitle style Use (MU) of the Electronic Health Record (EHR) initiative of the federal government? • Carrot & Stick Federal Incentive • HITECH legislation in ARRA (2009) • Eligible Hospitals & Eligible Providers Clickdifference to edit Master title ‘EMR’ style & ‘EHR’* The between ELECTRONIC MEDICAL an Application Click to edit Master subtitleRECORD: style environment composed of the clinical data repository, clinical decision support, controlled medical vocabulary, computerized provider order entry and clinical documentation, used by Caregivers to document, monitor, and manage care within a Care Delivery Organization (CDO). EMR data is the legal record of what happened to the patient and is owned by the CDO. ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD: A Standardized subset of each care delivery organization’s EMR, owned by the patient and has patient input and access that spans episodes of care across multiple CDOs. The EHR in the US will ride on the proposed National Health Information Network (NHIN). *Source: http://www.himssanalytics.org/docs/wp_emr_ehr.pdf Click to edit title style Sharing EMRMaster data creates the patient’s EHR EMR = electronic medical record EHR = electronic record Click to edit health Master subtitle style EMR CHS Hospital. Interoperable systems exchanging information. EMR Oncologist Office EHR of the patient EMR University Hospital EMR Primary Care MD EMR ED at CHS Hospital Click to edit Masterrelated title style EMR Components to medications Patient Care Process Components Domain Specialty Systems (OB, Opthy, etc) Click to edit Tracking Master Boards subtitle style / Dashboards Online Flowsheets electronic-MAR / Bar Coded Medication Admin. Surgery & Anesthesia Systems Structured Clinical Documentation Oncology Treatment & Regimen Management Retail Pharmacy System / Inpatient Pharmacy System Order & Medication Reconciliation e-Prescribing / Order Sets / CPOE AMBULATORY INPATIENT EDs & HODs EMR EMR Click should to edit Master title style Why we implement EMRs & EHRs? Click Masterincluding subtitle stylemedication safety 1. to↑edit Safety, 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. ↑ Efficiency of providing care (↓ Costs) ↓ Health Disparities Engage patients & families in their care Improve care coordination / transitions Improve population and public health Click to edit Master title style Does EMR/EHR technology improve safety? Health (HIT) and Patient Click to IT edit Master subtitle Safety: style Building Safer Systems for Better Care Institute of Medicine, 2011 > Implementation methods vary (“big bang” or unit-by-unit) > Configurability varies & configurations of the same system differ > Clinician training approaches vary > Workflow integration (front-line adaptations) vary KAUSHAL et al. 2003 – AIM | “CPOE can substantially reduce med error rates” POON, BATES et al. 2010 – NEJM | “BCMA ↓ serious admin. med errors 51%” DORR et al. 2007 – JAMIA | “67% of reviewed HIT experiments positive” BLACK et al. 2011 – PLOS MED | “limited evidence of benefits” and “some evidence of new risks from these technologies” Click to edit Master title style Does EMR/EHR technology save costs? Costs and Benefits Healthstyle Click to edit Masterof subtitle Information Technology Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), 2006 “In summary … all five cost-benefit analyses predicted substantial savings from EHR (and health care information exchange and interoperability) implementation. In other words, the quantifiable benefits are projected to outweigh the investment costs. However, the predicted time needed to break even varied from three to six to perhaps as long as 13 years. Our evidence review found consistent predictions from five cost-benefit studies that implementation of an EHR system can be financially viable at the individual organization level or through a nationwide implementation with high levels of health care information exchange and interoperability.” Click to edit Master title style Does EMR/EHR technology reduce disparity? Impact Electronic Health style Records Click to of edit Master subtitle on Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Blood Pressure Control at US Primary Care Visits Samal, L et al. Archives of Internal Medicine, 2012, 172(1), 75-76. TABLE: % of patients with blood pressure relatively under control Paper records EMR/EHR Blacks 69% 75% Whites 75% 78% Click to edit Master title style Does EMR/EHR technology ↑ engagement? 1. Thetorise fall of Googlestyle Health Click editand Master subtitle 2. VA lessons learned, the use of KP.org by Kaiser patients and other examples appear somewhat positive 3. Hilton et al., PLOS ONE, paper on PHR barriers demonstrated levels of computer literacy are an issue 4. It may be too early to understand the real value to patients of personal health records, disease & health management systems (a LOT is happening here!) Click to edit Master stylecoordination? Do EMRs & the EHR title improve Click to edit Master subtitle style 1. Can EHRs help ↓readmissions? Predictive analysis of readmission *may* help… 2. Hysong et al., Implementation Science, 2011 “Despite facilitating information transfer between PCPs and subspecialists, e-referrals remain prone to coordination breakdowns.” Click to edit Master stylepublic health? Do EMRs & the EHR title improve Click to edit Master subtitle style Improving Quality Fihn, S. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. 2009; 2: 294-296 Indicator VA 2008 VA 2007 Commercial 2007 Medicare 2007 Medicaid 2007 Diabetic retinal eye exams 86% 85% 55% 63% 50% Diabetic microalbuminuria screening 93% 91% 81% 86% 74% BP < 140/90, diabetic patients 78% 77% 64% 59% 56% BP < 140/90, hypertension patients 75% 76% 62% 58% 53% Click to edit Master titleuse style What makes EMR/EHR MEANINGFUL? meaningful, (a)style having a purpose, Click to edit Masteradj., subtitle (b) full of meaning; significant - Merriam-Webster, 2012 • Quality of EHR Use is to be measured • Overall Quality of Use is hard to define • Criteria-based approach is being used Click to edit Use Master title Meaningful Stage I –style Eligible Hospitals 1. to Computerized Provider Click edit Master subtitle style Order Entry (CPOE) 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Drug-Drug Interaction & Drug-Allergy Checks Maintain updated medical problem (DX) lists Maintain ACTIVE medication lists Maintain ACTIVE medication allergy lists Record a STANDARD set of demographics Record and track vital signs (ht, wt, bp, bmi) ClickStage to edit style cont. MU I –Master Eligibletitle Hospitals, 8. to Record Smoking Status Click edit Master subtitle style (>= 13 yo) 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Report clinical quality measures to CMS Implement ONE clinical decision support rule Provide patients with an e-copy of their info. Provide e-copies of discharge instructions Be capable of exchanging clinical information Protect and secure patient information ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master CPOE for medication orders Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Use computerized provider order entry (CPOE) for medication orders directly entered by any licensed healthcare professional who can enter orders into the medical record per state, local and professional guidelines. Measure More than 30 percent of all unique patients with at least one medication in their medication list admitted to the eligible hospital’s or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department have at medication order entered using CPOE. least one ClickStage to edit title style Checks MU I –Master DDI & Drug-Allergy Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Implement drug-drug and drug-allergy interaction checks. Measure The eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital has enabled this functionality for the entire EHR reporting period. ClickStage to edit title style Problem Lists MU I –Master Updated Medical Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Maintain an up-to-date problem list of current and active diagnoses. Measure More than 80 percent of all unique patients admitted to the eligible hospital’s or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department have at least one entry or an indication that no problems are known for the patient recorded as structured data (ICD-10 code!) ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master Keep ACTIVE Medication Lists Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Maintain active medication list. Measure More than 80 percent of all unique patients admitted to the eligible hospital’s or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department have at least one entry (or an indication that the patient is not currently prescribed any medication) recorded as structured data. ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master Keep ACTIVE Allergy Lists Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Maintain active medication allergy list. Measure More than 80 percent of all unique patients admitted to the eligible hospital’s or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department have at least one entry (or an indication that the patient has no known medication allergies) recorded as structured data. ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master Send Clinical Quality Measures Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Report hospital clinical quality measures to Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Measure Successfully report to CMS hospital clinical quality measures selected by CMS in the manner specified by CMS ClickStage to edit title style Support Rule MU I –Master 1 Clinical Decision Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Implement one clinical decision support rule related to a high priority hospital condition along with the ability to track compliance with that rule. Measure Implement one clinical decision support rule • • • • VTE prophylaxis monitoring rules Empiric antibiotic re-evaluation rules Catheter-Associated UTI rules Restraint Reminder rules ClickStage to edit stylefor Patients MU I –Master e-Charttitle Copies Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Provide patients with an electronic copy of their health information (including diagnostic test results, problem list, medication lists, medication allergies, discharge summary, procedures) upon request. Measure More than 50 percent of all patients of the inpatient or emergency departments of the eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital who request an electronic copy of their health information are provided it within 3 business days. ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master e-Discharge Instructions Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Provide patients with an electronic copy of their discharge instructions at time of discharge, upon request. Measure More than 50 percent of all patients who are discharged from an eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department and who request an electronic copy of their discharge instructions are provided it. ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master Capable of e-exchange of PHI Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Capability to exchange key clinical information (for example, problem list, medication list, medication allergies, and diagnostic test results), among providers of care and patient authorized entities electronically. Measure Performed at least one test of certified EHR technology’s capacity to electronically exchange key clinical information ClickStage to edit title style MU I –Master That MUST be all, right? 14topieces Click edit Master subtitle style of the EMR so far… what is Meaningful Use again? CPOE Allergies Vital Signs Meds ClickStage to edit style cont. MU I –Master Eligibletitle Hospitals, MENU SET – must *also* meet 5 out of 10! Click to edit Master subtitle style 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Drug-Formulary Checks Record Advance Directives Incorporate clinical lab results as structured data Generate lists of patients with specific conditions Identify patient-specific educational resources Medication reconciliation online Provide a summary of the care record at transitions Capable to submit immunization data electronically Capable to report certain lab results to public health agencies Capable to submit syndromic surveillance data to agencies ClickStage to edit Master–title style MU I Option Drug-Formulary Checks Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Implement drug formulary checks. Measure The eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital has enabled this functionality and has access to at least one internal or external formulary for the entire EHR reporting period. This formulary-checking may seem mysterious yet the testing is straight-forward. Most CPOE systems reflect the formulary and offer a non-formulary ordering pathway. Many CPOE systems can point users to therapeutic substitutions. ClickStage to edit Master–title style MU I Option Criteria-Based Lists Click to edit Master subtitle style Objective Generate lists of patients by specific conditions to use for quality improvement, reduction of disparities, research, or outreach. Measure Generate at least one report listing patients of the eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital with a specific condition ClickStage to edit Master title style MU I Option– Individualized Education Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style Use certified EHR technology to identify patient-specific education resources and provide those resources to the patient if appropriate. Measure More than 10 percent of all unique patients admitted to the eligible hospital’s or Critical Access Hospital’s inpatient or emergency department are provided patient specific education resources. • New starts on Warfarin • FDA’s ‘REMS drugs’ ClickStage to edit Master–title style MU I Option Meds Reconciliation Objective Click to edithospital Master style Hospital who receives a The eligible orsubtitle Critical Access patient from another setting of care or provider of care or believes an encounter is relevant should perform medication reconciliation. Measure The eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital performs medication reconciliation for more than 50 percent of transitions of care in which the patient is admitted to the eligible hospital’s or CAH’s inpatient or emergency department. ClickStage to edit Master–title styleSummaries MU I Option Handoff Objective Click to edit Master subtitle style The eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital that transitions their patient to another setting of care or provider of care or refers their patient to another provider of care should provide summary care record for each transition of care or referral. Measure The eligible hospital or Critical Access Hospital that transitions or refers their patient to another setting of care or provider of care provides a summary of care record for more than 50 percent of transitions of care and referrals Click to edit Master title style So THAT’s Meaningful Use for Hospitals! Click14 to edit Master subtitle style Required Criteria > CPOE > Allergies > e-Copies etc. + 5 out of 10 Menu Set Criteria > Meds Rec. > Handoff Info. > Education etc. Click to edit Master title style An EMR -> EHR platform is the only way. Click to edit Master subtitle style Meaningful Use criteria cannot be met using paper processes or existing, separate information systems. Click to edit Master titlefor style Considerations – CPOE medications 1. Order sets are key | standardize with evidence Click to edit Master subtitle style 2. Formulary standardization will help greatly! 3. Be wary of ‘duplicate items’ in many sets 4. Order entry has to be followed by routine order maintenance! 5. Oncology is a specialty area of CPOE focus 6. Create a sustainable testing methodology 7. Policies and procedures will need updating Click to edit Master title style Alerts Considerations – Drug-Related 1. Alert fatigue is real and problematic Click to edit Master subtitle style 2. Contraindicated DDI lists are available Murphy et al., Development of computerized alerts with management strategies for 25 serious drug-drug interactions, AJHP, Vol 66, Jan 1, 2009, p 38. 3. 4. 5. Allergy data quality is an important area for focused improvement Alerts need to be speedy | ‘actionable’ Dose alerts can be useful | also infusion rate alerts may improve safety Click to edit Master title style Considerations – Clinical Decision Support 1. Each CDS rule is a project (!) Click to edit Master subtitle style 2. How with the rule(s) be assessed for success or failure? Which outcomes are involved? 3. Forcing functions should force! Medical leadership support will be needed. 4. Assess alert-response workflow carefully … > who should see the alert? > when should they see it in their workflow? > what happens if they ignore the alert? > what do they need to document within the alert dialog? Click to edit Meaningful Master title Use, styleStage 2 ! Here comes Click to edit Master subtitle style While we’re working on Stage I… Proposed Stage II Rule published by CMS in the Federal Register March 7th Comment period open until May 7th, 2012 Final rule expected to be published later in 2012 ClickStage to edit title style MU 2 –Master Medication-related changes? 1. to CPOE now has to bestyle for 60% of orders Click edit Master subtitle 2. 3. 4. 5. Five Clinical Decision Support interventions eMAR is implemented and used for more than 10% of med orders Medication reconciliation at more than 65% transitions of care Menu: e-Prescribing for more than 10% of discharge prescriptions from the hospital Click to edit Use, Master title2 style Meaningful Stage – eMAR & BCMA Click Master subtitle style CMSto –edit “We propose to define eMAR as technology that automatically documents the administration of medication into Certified EHR technology using electronic tracking sensors, e.g., RFID or bar codes” – p. 139 Click-The to edit Master title style MU Tech Picture Supply Chain Integration into Medication-Use Cycle Product Supply Chain C C P P P PROACTIVE IV DRIP REFILLS OUTCOME C C Clinical Focus END Click to edit Master subtitle style AUTOMATED PRESCRIBING AUTOMATED ORDER VERIFICATION COMPUTER ASSISTED IV FLUID ANALYSIS DISPENSED PRODUCT LOCATION TRACKING INHERENT ORDERING SAFETY PHARMACIST PATIENT TRIAGE SYSTEM AUTOMATED COMPOUNDING ROBOTS PATIENT-SIDE DELIVERY SYSTEMS COMPATIBILITY, ADMINISTRATION AUTOMATED ADC PICK-NREPLENISH BCMA CDS SMART IV PUMPS CDS INDICATION, DOSE, DDI, DFI, UTILIZATION BAR CODE SCANNING AT COMPOUND & DISPENSE DDI/ALLERGY Automated Product Selection AUTOMATED DOSE PICKING SYSTEMS CPOE PHARMACY SYSTEM EMR-EHR EMR-EHR ORDER SETS BEGIN CDS LABELS EMR Sen DOSE, TIMING AUTOMATED DISPENSING CABINETS (ADCs) CDS eMAR EMR TRACKING LAYER V AUTOMATED TREATMENT FAILURE IDENTIFICATION LAYER IV CDS BUG-DRUG, CORE MEASURES, P-KINETICS ADE SURVEILLANCE RULES ENGINE LABS HX, DX EMR-EHR LAYER III Sentry 7 LAYER II LAYER I FOUNDATION Click&toPharmaceutical edit Master title style MU Care Processes Click to edit Master subtitle style Medication Therapy Management / RPh-led disease management Pharmaceutical Care Planning / Outcome objectives listed for all meds Indication Management Pharmacist Charting / Patient Medication List / / Every med has documented indication(s) Some specific medications have RPh notations All meds documented w/Medication Reconciliation ClickSuccess to edit Master styleB, JHIM, 2010 MU Factors title – Hoehn 1. to Strategic focus on Qualitystyle & Safety of care Click edit Master subtitle 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Physician champions / Executive Leadership engaged Clinical IT governance is established (‘clinical ops’) Track record of care process change successes Organization is invested in adopting standards and driving out unwanted workflow variance Clinicians have experience using IT as they provide care IT/IS department is on board and aligned with MU goals IS infrastructure can support 24x7x365 needs {Flynn} MU success is everyone’s success, all must take part ClickSuccess to edit Master title style MU will be Yours at CHS! The Department ofsubtitle Veterans Affairs and other large Click to edit Master style health systems have demonstrated precisely how quality of care in the U.S. can be improved while costs of care are reduced when EMR/EHR technology is widely used. Teams around the country are taking up the challenge of Meaningful Use and accomplishing great things for patients. The entire, nationwide healthcare team at CHS is destined to achieve great things as it puts EMR and EHR technology to significant, good, meaningful use! ClickEnd. to edit Master The Thank you.title style Click to edit Master subtitle style How the Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records relates to the Quality of Patient Care Wednesday, April 18, 2012 MEANINGFUL USE Operations Approach to meet MU Objectives for Attestation Wednesday April 18, 2012 Burl Beasley, BS Pharm, MPH, MS Pharm Operations Approach to meet MU Objectives for Attestation Agenda Overview MU Stage 1 Core/Menu Sets Examples Core Objective Dashboard – Objective Tracker Attestation Scorecard Attestation Readiness Timeline Overview MU Stage 2 50 Meaningful Use Defined • The Department of Health and Human Services defines “Meaningful Use” as furthering five (5) healthcare goals: 1. Improving the quality, safety, and efficiency of care while reducing disparities 2. Engaging patients and families in their care 3. Promoting public and population health 4. Improving care coordination 5. Promoting the privacy and security of electronic health records • Federal Government has provided incentive funding to off-set a portion of the cost of Electronic Health Record (EHR) implementation • This is contingent upon meeting the regulatory objectives within the required timeframes. CHS Goals for Achieving Meaningful Use: • Have all facilities Stage 1 compliant by July 2013 • Implement any known Stage 2 technologies as they are available (for example, Bar Code Medication Administration) 51 Meaningfully Using IT to Improve Outcomes PATIENTCENTERED CARE 2015 and beyond 2013 - 2015 STAGE 3: STAGE 2: 2011 - 2013 STAGE 1: Data capture and sharing 52 Advanced clinical processes Improved Outcomes Meaningful Use (MU) Technology Staged Approach Foundational Stage 1 Stage 2 Components Components Components (2011 - 2012) (Deadline July 2013) (2 Yrs. Post Stage 1) Certified Health Information System (HIS) ED CPOE Bar Code Medication Admin Certified Emergency Department System (EDIS) ED Clinician Documentation Technology Foundation Inpatient CPOE Inpatient Phys. Doc Clinical Doc/Vitals I&O Order Set Governance Evidence Based Orders Physician Portal Health Information Exchange (HIE) Integration Medication Reconciliation Personal Health Record (PHR) Quality & Metrics Reporting HIPAA Security Assessments By 53 Meaningful Use Objectives – Stage 1 Core Set • CPOE for Medication Orders • Drug-Drug, Drug-Allergy Checks • Record Demographics • Up-to-date Problem Lists • Active Medication List • Active Medication Allergy List • Chart Changes in Vital Signs; Growth Chart; BMI Calculation 5454 • Record Smoking Status >/= 13 yrs old • One Clinical Decision Support Rule • Report Clinical Quality Measures • E-Copy of Health Information • E-Copy of Discharge Instructions • E-Exchange Key Clinical Information • Security and Data Protection Meaningful Use Objectives – Stage 1 Menu Set • Drug Formulary Checks • Advanced Directives • Incorporate Lab Results into EMR • Generate Lists of Patients • Identify Patient-Specific Education • Medication Reconciliation • Provide Summary of Care at Transitions • e-Submit Immunization Data • e-Submit Reportable Lab Results • e-Submit Syndromic Surveillance Data CHS recommends 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 (Optional 4 and 5) 5555 Core Objective 1 – CPOE for Medication Orders 56 Core Objective 1 – CPOE for Medication Orders CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • ProMED – Physicians enter orders directly into ED system – No pharmacy check, orders are directly from physician to nurse Status/Roadmap • • • • • 57 ProMED update to MU-certified version Implement EPD (physician documentation & order entry) Update policies Update workflows 30% threshold for all inpatients and ED observation Core Objective 2 – Drug-Drug/Drug-Allergy Interaction Checks 58 Core Objective 2 – Drug-Drug/Drug-Allergy Interaction Checks CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Functionality should be turned on in ProMED and Pharmacy system Status/Roadmap • Hospital must attest yes that this functionality was active during the entire reporting period • Screenshot of functionality in action • Documentation that the functionality has been active since beginning of reporting period – i.e. build documentation 59 Core Objective 4 – Active medication list 60 Core Objective 4 – Active medication list CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Clinicians will pull up a medication profile report from each system Status/Roadmap • Need sample medication profile • Procedure/Workflow for who maintains the home medication list • De-identified print screen of an indication of the “no active medication” field within the med list. • De-identified print screen of the review function field within the med list • Threshold Greater than 80% 61 Core Objective 5 – Maintain active medication allergy list 62 Core Objective 5 – Maintain active medication allergy list CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Nursing will enter allergies on admission to be verified by Pharmacy Status/Roadmap • Information entered in AS400 where the patient first came into the system… • Procedure/Workflow on the “no known allergy” field within the system • De-identified print screen of a patient’s record showing their allergies • Print screen of the allergy vocabulary name and version • Procedure/Workflow on who maintains, reviews, adds, etc. the allergy list • Need a screenshot of an example • 80% threshold 63 Menu Set Objective 1 – Drug formulary check 64 Menu Set Objective 1 – Drug formulary check CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Functionality should be turned on and maintained in the Pharmacy system Status/Roadmap • Hospital must attest yes that this functionality was active during the entire reporting period • Print screen of the formulary or preferred drug list that is available in the Electronic Health Record • Procedure/Workflow for drug formulary checking • Print screen of the alert of when a non-formulary medication is selected in the system 65 Core Objective 6 – Record Demographics 66 Core Objective 6 – Record Demographics CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Demographic information will be entered by registration staff at time of registration. • Mortality information will be gathered at time of final coding. Status/Roadmap • Print screen of all the required data elements within demographics • Procedure/Workflow for how race and ethnicity are collected and stored within the system • Describe the process if a patient declines to answer race and ethnicity • De-identified print screen of where a preliminary assessment and clinical impression for cause of death is recorded in the system 67 Core Objective 8 – Record Smoking Status 68 Core Objective 8 – Record Smoking Status CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Smoking status requirement met for all platforms • Data should be completed at the time of the admission assessment Status/Roadmap • Procedure/Workflow for capturing patients smoking status • Print screen of the smoking field in the system 69 Core Objective 10 – Clinical Decision Support Rule 70 Core Objective 10 – Clinical Decision Support Rule CHS Strategy for Stage 1 • Clinical decision support rule may be decided at facility level • Falls utilizing the Morse Fall Scale with appropriate assessments Status/Roadmap • Print screen showing the system configuration dates or a copy of the change control log indicating when the decision build was enabled • Print screen of the real time notification that occurs in the system • Procedure/Workflow of if an override occurs in the system (e.g., does an alert track this) • Procedure/Workflow on what structured elements will be used in the decision support from the system (e.g., patient’s problem list, med list, demographics, etc.) 71 MU Readiness Review – Scorecard & Dashboard • Review Attestation requirement and process and roles – Operations Support - RCI – Internal Audit – Revenue Management • Attestation Readiness Scorecard • Dashboard MU Objective Tracker – Completion and update of dashboard with multidisciplinary group 72 Readiness Scorecard • Shows progress implementing foundational elements towards achieving each of the Stage 1 objectives – Progress rated on scores of 0-5 per objective • “% Score without EMR” – Readiness before EMR application go live • “Live in EMR” – % Readiness with EMR application 73 Attestation Scorecard ….Next Steps • When Attestation Readiness shows… – Total score = 6 for each of the 14 core objectives – Total score = 6 for 5 of 10 menu objectives • Then Operations Support… – Sets up Attestation Readiness Assessment with IT Compliance and Audit in preparation to attest • Upon successful audit & completion of 90-day reporting period… – Revenue Management submits attestation form to CMS 74 Overview of Readiness Assessment Process • Internal Audit was assigned ownership of the Meaningful Use(MU) readiness assessment project and partnered with Ernst & Young(E&Y) and Operations Support to develop an effective approach for assessing MU Stage 1 compliance. • The E&Y MU readiness framework is a proven best practice designed approach that was successfully piloted at two CHS facilities in 2011. • The readiness assessments are designed to evaluate each core and menu set objective and determine if the usage outcomes are meeting MU Stage 1 requirements. 75 Readiness Assessment - Corporate Support Operations Support Regional Clinical Informaticist (RCI) Internal Audit (IA) Revenue Management (RM) By 76 Monitoring, Reporting and Filing Timeline 30 Days USAGE MONITORING 77 90 Days ATTESTATION REPORTING 14 Days ATTESTATION FILING Monitoring, Reporting and Filing Timeline 30 Day Usage Monitoring Period USAGE MONITORING 30 Days • RCI notifies IA that facility is ready to start 90 attestation period • IA issues Engagement Letter and RFI to facility C-team. • RFI is returned to IA prior to the start of the 90 attestation period • IA schedules on-site visit 78 ATTESTATION REPORTING 90 Days • IA analyzes RFI deliverables prior to on-site visit. Works with RCI and facility to address any issues or questions • IA performs interim readiness assessment 2-3 weeks after start of 90 day attestation period • IA completes interim assessment, issues report and schedules an exit meeting to discuss results • IA monitors remediation efforts (if applicable) • End of 90 period – IA requests final MU statistics report and analyzes results ATTESTATION FILING 14 Days • IA issues final report to management • RM provides attestation package to facility to complete and return to Corporate • Attestation package is approved by facility management and retuned to Corporate • IA validates attestation package and sends package to RM • RM enters data into CMS website • Stage 1 compliance is achieved Monitoring, Reporting and Filing Timeline 90 Day Attestation Reporting Period USAGE MONITORING 30 days • RCI notifies IA that facility is ready to start 90 attestation period • IA issues Engagement Letter and RFI to facility C-team. • RFI is returned to IA prior to the start of the 90 attestation period • IA schedules on-site visit 79 ATTESTATION REPORTING 90 days • IA analyzes RFI deliverables prior to on-site visit. Works with RCI and facility to address any issues or questions • IA performs interim readiness assessment 2-3 weeks after start of 90 day attestation period • IA completes interim assessment, issues report and schedules an exit meeting to discuss results • IA monitors remediation efforts (if applicable) • End of 90 period – IA requests final MU statistics report and analyzes results ATTESTATION FILING 14 days • IA issues final report to management • RM provides attestation package to facility to complete and return to Corporate • Attestation package is approved by facility management and retuned to Corporate • IA validates attestation package and sends package to RM • RM enters data into CMS website • Stage 1 compliance is achieved Monitoring, Reporting and Filing Timeline 14 Day Attestation Filing Period USAGE MONITORING 30 days • RCI notifies IA that facility is ready to start 90 attestation period • IA issues Engagement Letter and RFI to facility C-team. • RFI is returned to IA prior to the start of the 90 attestation period • IA schedules on-site visit 80 ATTESTATION REPORTING 90 days • IA analyzes RFI deliverables prior to on-site visit. Works with RCI and facility to address any issues or questions • IA performs interim readiness assessment 2-3 weeks after start of 90 day attestation period • IA completes interim assessment, issues report and schedules an exit meeting to discuss results • IA monitors remediation efforts (if applicable) • End of 90 period – IA requests final MU statistics report and analyzes results ATTESTATION FILING 14 days • IA issues final report to management • RM provides attestation package to facility to complete and return to Corporate • Attestation package is approved by facility management and returned to Corporate • IA validates attestation package and sends package to RM • RM enters data into CMS website • Stage 1 compliance is achieved Stage 1 Readiness Assessment – Interim Scorecard 81 Stage 1 Readiness Assessment – Detailed Report 82 Stage 1 Readiness Assessment – Final Report 83 MU Readiness Review - Summary • • • • • • • • 84 Facility to determine 30 day usage monitoring period Facility to determine 90 day reporting period Clinical Decision Support – Falls Assessment Test Menu Items 1, 2, 3, 7, and 8 (Optional 4 & 5) Policy and Procedure Updates Workflow review and validation Governance Structure (MU, BCMA, CPOE, etc) Establish MU Core Team Meetings – MU Objectives 14 Core and 5 Menu – Zynx Order Set Suggested Attestation Dates/Readiness Determine Usage Monitoring Date – May 1st 2012 Determine Attestation DATE - June 1st 2012 Attestation Date: September 1st 2012 Attestation Period – 90 Days – 30 Day Usage Monitoring - May 1- May 31 – 90 Day Attestation Period June 1 – August 31st – Attestation Filing 14 days (EST at: August 20 – 31 2012) • Continued Monitoring by CHS and CMS • • • • st – Of note: Reporting period for facility may not be the same as audit period for CMS 85 Meaningful Use Stage 2 • Stage 1 starts the process for continuation to Stage 2, 3 …..4 • Published Federal Register – March 7th 2012 proposed rules • Eligible Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals: – Federal Fiscal Year-based – Starts on October 1, 2013 • Modifications to – Core Set – Menu Sets • eRx, HIE, structured data 86 Meaningful Use Stage 2 (continued) • Eligible Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals must meet or qualify for exclusion on: • 16 Core Objectives • 2 of 4 Menu Objectives • Exchange of Key Clinical Information Objective is being replaced by Transitions of Care Objective • Re-evaluating the process for providing patients with an eCopy of health information to address practical challenges facing EPs, EHs, and CAHS 87 MU Stage 2 vs Stage 1 88 MU Stage 2 Core (cont) – Medications – Increase threshold of CPOE to 60% • Incorporate Medications, Lab, Radiology Orders – Electronic transmission of Prescriptions • eRX • Compare to a formulary and transmit • Drug-drug and drug allergy checks (eHR reporting period) – Clinical Decision Support Measures • 5 CDS – – Possible ……HbA1C, INR, FSBS, CrCl • Generate and transmit permissible discharge prescriptions electronically (eRx) – More than 10% of hospitals discharge medication orders are: • Compared to at least one drug formulary • Transmitted electronically using Certifiend eHR • 89 Medication Reconcilation – moved to core measure Impact on Patient Care • Drug interactions represent 3-5% of preventable hospital adverse drug reactions (ADRs) – $136 Billion yearly – LOS, Cost and Mortality double for ADR patients • Important contributor to the number of ED visits and hospital admissions • ADR’s increase exponentially with 4 or more medications • Prescribe to avoid ADR’s – DDI and DAI • 90 http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DevelopmentApprovalProcess/DevelopmentResources/DrugInteractionsLabeling/ucm11484 8.htm Meaningful Use is predicted to have the following effects • • • • • Reductions in repeated tests Reductions in medical record keeping costs Decreased length of stay Increased patient safety Reduction in medical errors – eMAR is critically important to making care safer by reducing medication errors which may make care more affordable – eMAR cuts in half the adverse drug event (ADE) rates for nontiming medication errors – Hospital bar-coding demonstrated that associated ADE cost savings allowed hospitals to break even after 1 year and begin reaping cost savings going forward. 91 Meaningful Use Program Communication For more information, please visit the CHS Meaningful Use program website, i-connect, at: http://chsweb.chs.net/i-connect/Pages/default.aspx 92 • Selected References: • Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Electronic Health Record Incentive Program— Stage 2 available at: – http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-03-07/pdf/2012-4443.pdf – Accessed April 3rd 2012 • HIMMS Executive Summary MU Stage 2 NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULE MAKING: 42 CFR 412, 413, and 495 available at: – http://www.himss.org/content/files/20120301_HIMSS_ExecutiveSummaryMU_Stage 2.pdf – Accessed April 3rd 2012 93 Clinical Pharmacy Program Updates Trent A. Beach, Pharm.D., M.B.A., M.H.A., FASHP Director, Clinical Pharmacy Services Community Health Systems 94 Overview Clinical Initiative in Medical Imaging Sentri7 Discussion Formulary Standardization Medication Use Evaluations 95 Medical Imaging Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI) Myocardial perfusion Imaging Myocardial blood flow is impacted by stenosis (>40%) with hyperemia • A nuclear-medicine study used to evaluate the adequacy of blood supply to the heart muscle Disparity in flow between normal and diseased myocardium with stenosis PET & SPECT capture images of relative myocardial perfusion before and after radionuclide administration and hyperemia Comparative images determine the coronary flow reserve and areas of compromised myocardial perfusion. Uren et al. NEJM. 1994; 330: 1782-8. Iskandrian. Am J Cardiol. 2007; 99: 1619-20. Hyperemia is preferably induced by exercise, however agents such as dipyridamole, adenosine, and regadenoson, which temporarily increase blood flow, is used in ~40% of the 8.5 millions MPI studies performed annually in the U.S. 96 Medical Imaging LexiScan® Conversion Initiative Convert regadenoson (LexiScan®) to dipyridamole in radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging Develop a procedure with the imaging staff for ordering and dispensing pharmacy-prepared dipyridamole syringes Generic adenosine could be considered a secondary position if significant physician pushback to dipyridamole 97 IVIG Eliminate Gammagard Convert to Octagam Convert 25% Flebogamma Move 25% of Flebogamma to Octagam Move to single lyophylized powder Convert Gammagard S/D to Carimune 98 • Role in redefining pharmacy productivity • Internal performance • External benchmarking Expectations • Phase I Hospitals • Begin May • Phase II Hospitals • Begin September New metrics Implementation Timeline Sentri7 • Utilization • Performance • Scheduling & Assignments 99 Formulary Standardization eHR CPOE Zynx Initiative Standard Formulary 100 Medication Use Evaluations Minimum Annual Target – 4 MRSA MUE Sign up now with HPG Documented Improvement • Performance • Utilization • Safety 101 Questions? 102 To Ask a Question & Adjust Control Panel Expand or Collapse Type your question here 103 103 Click to edit Master title style CE Numbers: LIVE Click PRESENTATION to edit Master subtitle style ACPE # 204-999-12-082-L04P Credit: 2.0 CE Hours for Live Webinar and post test Transcript ID: 12082 HOME STUDY ACPE: 204-999-12-507-H04P Credit: 1.5 CE Hours for Recorded webinar post-test Transcript ID: 12507 Obtaining ACPE Continuing Education Click to edit Master title style Continuing Education Pharmacists Click to edit Masterforsubtitle style The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Educations as a provider of continuing pharmacy education. Live Webinar This live knowledge-based CE activity offers 2.0 contact hours (0.20 CEUs) of continuing education credit for pharmacists. Participants must successfully complete the online post-test and evaluation to earn CE credit. LIVE PRESENTATION CE Number: ACPE # 204-999-12-082-L04P Credit: 2.0 CE Hours for Live Webinar and post test Transcript ID: 12082 105 Obtaining ACPE Continuing Education Click to edit Master title style To receive ACPE continuing credit you must Click to edit Master subtitleeducation style complete the assessment test found on the ASHP website. Go to ASHP Learning Center at http://ce.ashp.org. Login using your ASHP username (email address) and password. If you are not an ASHP member/customer create a free account by clicking on the “Register” button and follow the prompts. A. Enter your username (email address) and password, click submit B. Enter your name, address, and select your customer class as “Pharmacist” C. Complete all the required fields to create your customer record. ClickObtaining to edit Master title style Education ACPE Continuing After you login to the ASHP Learningstyle Center, you should be on the My Click to edit Master subtitle Account screen; click on “Exam Center” on this screen. Search for tests on the “Exam Center” screen using keyword “CHS” then click on the “Filter” button. The Key word search will give you a listing of all the CHS webinar tests available online (both live and recorded). 1. Click the check box to select the test and click “Register” button to add the test to you test bank. 2. Click on “Start” to begin the test, answer the questions 3. Click on “Grade Test” at the end to see your score. (70% or higher to pass). If you do not pass, you have one more opportunity to retake the test. 4. Click on the link to complete the evaluation and click the “Finish” button before you can print your statement. 5. Your CE Statement should appear on the screen to print. Obtaining ACPE Continuing Education Click to edit Master title style The recorded knowledge-based CE (home study) activity offers 1.5 hours Click to edit Master subtitle style (0.15 CEU) of continuing pharmacy education credit upon successful completion of the online post-test and evaluation. The recorded Webinar will be available within 4 - 7 days after the live webinar and posted on the CHS Pharmacy Services website. From this site, select the “Pharmacy Conferences and National Pharmacy Directors” section. This link will take you to the 2011 presentations with handouts. From this screen, you can select the appropriate handout to view or print and the recorded presentation desired. HOME STUDY ACPE: 204-999-12-507-H04P Credit: 1.5 CE Hours for Recorded webinar post-test Transcript ID: 12507 108 ClickObtaining to edit Master title style Education ACPE Continuing Note: to If you not complete evaluation, you will see your Click editdid Master subtitlethe style transcript page with a link to complete the evaluation next to the title of the test. If you have any questions, contact the Educational Services Division staff at [email protected] 109 UPDATE ON CURRENT CHS INITIATIVES AND STRATEGIES Bob Fink, Pharm.D., M.B.A., FASHP, BCNSP, BCPS Chief Pharmacy Executive Community Health Systems 110