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WHA Improvement Forum For November “Building the Business Case for Quality” Tom Kaster Courtesy Reminders: •Please place your phones on MUTE unless you are speaking (or use *6 on your keypad) •Please do not take calls and place the phone on HOLD during the presentation. 1 Improvement Forum Topics The Value Equation IOM Cost of Quality IHI Building the Case for Quality The Financial Impact of Quality HANYS Regulatory Pressures for Improved Quality 2 The Value Equation Increase Quality = Increase Value Decrease Cost = Increase Value Increase Quality and Decrease Cost = Accelerated Increase in Value 3 Institute of Medicine (IOM): Cost of Poor-Quality of Care in Lives and Dollars The scope of poor quality of care (3 forms) – Overuse: Provide unneeded care – Underuse: Fail to provide needed care – Misuse: Make a mistake and cause harm 4 IOM: Overuse Overuse occurs when a drug or treatment is given without medical justification. – Examples includes: • Treating people with antibiotics for simple infections • Failing to follow effective options that cost less or cause fewer side effects – Avoiding overuse can decrease cost 5 Overuse Examples Both examples can have a negative impact to the patients and to costs: • Prescription overuse – Prescribing antibiotics for a viral illness – Using brand name when generics are available • MRI overuse – When use appropriate MRI’s are valuable – Often MRI’s do not change the treatments prescribed or a patients outcome. 6 IOM: Underuse Underuse is when doctors or hospitals neglect to give patients medically necessary care or to follow proven health care practices – Examples include: • Failure to give beta-blocking drugs to people having heart attacks • People receiving necessary preventative care like mammograms or vaccinations – Avoiding underuse improves quality 7 Consequences of Underuse • As many as 91,000 Americans die each year because they do not receive evidence-based care for chronics conditions like HBP, diabetes and heart disease • Billions of dollars a year are spent reacting to the consequences of underuse 8 IOM: Misuse Misuse occurs when a patient does not fully benefit from a treatment because of a preventable problem, or when a patient is harmed by a treatment. – Some examples include: • Prescribing a drug that a patient is allergic to • The appropriate care protocol is not given resulting in patient harm – Avoiding misuse improves quality 9 Consequences of Misuse • Billions of dollars a year are spent on helping patients recover from health care harm • Conservatively between 44,000 and 98,000 people die annually from preventable errors 10 Building the Business Case 11 Obstacles to Building a Business Case for Quality • The complexity of healthcare • The fragmentation of payer types • Lack of reliable performance indicators that correlate QI to cost savings • The perception that waste elimination will negatively effect patient care • The perception that increased efficiencies may reduce FTE’s 12 Preparing Yourself to Talk the Talk 1. Learn and Understand Healthcare Financial Terms and Payer Dynamics 2. Develop methodologies to measure the financial impact of improvement (ROI etc…) 3. Understand the importance of connecting financial impacts to gain management support 13 Dark Green vs. Light Green Money Light Green Money Dark Green Money Efficiencies and cost savings gained through improvement efforts that do not have a direct impact on the bottom line, but intuitively result in positive outcomes. Efficiencies and cost savings gained through improvement efforts that do have a direct impact on the bottom line as well as produce positive outcomes. 14 Examples of Light Green • Organize equipment and supplies room to reduce hunting and searching time • Streamline workflow to increase efficiencies • Enable care givers more time at the bedside to meet patient needs • Reduces patient harm from falls, pressure ulcers • Make work more enjoyable and experience less attrition • Improves patient experience • Improves HCAHPS scores 15 Light Green to Dark Green May 2, 2012 (San Francisco, California)— • Blood-product management plan put together by the Virginia Cardiac Surgery Quality Initiative (VCSQI) helped optimize the process and lowered the overall use of transfusions, cutting related mortality by half. • Savings of $50 million statewide over two years http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/763272 16 Light Green to Dark Green A house-wide hourly rounding initiative… …Requires the improvement of overall efficiencies: • Nurses spend their time in more value added activities at the bedside … Which is shown to improve patient and family satisfaction on HCAHPS scores … Which will positively effect Value Based Purchasing factors • Reduce Harm by lessoning Falls and Pressure Ulcers ... Which will reduce average length of stay for our Medicare patients • Decrease overall medication doses per stay … Which in turn will improve profit margins for fixed payment patients 17 IHI: Examples of Dark Green Savings Areas of Focus Supplies and Medication Effort and Target Reduce supplies needed by X% by reducing the number of adverse events and complications Purchased Services (Agency) Fees Reduce agency fees by XX% due to improved predictability in demand and improved staff morale that results from the change Overtime Reduce overtime by XX% due to improved predictability in demand on staff from fewer adverse events and complications FTE Reduction from Attrition Reduce FTE Salary and wages by X% by not replacing staff following attrition, if improved work processes permit 18 IHI: Equations to Measure Quality in Dark Green Dollars • Total Wages per Admission • Total Medication Cost per Admission 19 IHI: Total Wages per Admission Equation Total wages per admission (Average wage per hour) (Worked hours per patient day) (Patient days per admission) 20 IHI: Total Wages per Admission Equation Average wage per hour: • Cost associated with recruiting and training new staff for vacant positions • Increased cost associated with contract labor to fill vacancies • Premium overtime pay 21 IHI: Total Wages per Admission Equation Worked hours per patient day: • Inappropriate ICU staff time due to discharge delays to other units • Excess budgeted hours due to uneven staffing needs due to poor scheduling of surgeries with disregards to workflow • Excess budgeted hours due to poor prediction of demand 22 IHI: Total Wages per Admission Equation Patient days per admission: • Excess patient day due to delays in discharge and poor coordination of the process • Excess patient days due to lack of setting and executing daily goals for the patient, family and care team • Excess patient days associated with and adverse event or complication 23 IHI: Total Medication Cost per Admission Equation Average cost per dose: • Excess cost of brand names when generic are available • Excess cost associated with failure to make a timely switch in Med Administration mode (IV to Oral) • Excess cost associated with overuse of expensive meds when less expensive alternatives are available 24 IHI: Total Medication Cost per Admission Equation Number of doses per admission: • Excess cost associated with failure to stop medications appropriately (continuing preventative antibiotic use longer than 24 hours after surgery) • The medication cost associated with treating an adverse events 25 IHI: Tying Equations to Dollars Reduction in overall SSI: – Patient days per admissions: Decreased – Number of doses per admission: Decreased – Average length of stay: Decreased 26 The Financial Impact of Quality • • • • Medicare Fixed Payments (DRG’s) Privately Insured Uninsured Regulatory 27 The Financial Impact of Quality Medicare Fixed Payments--Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG) WI: Medicare DRG Reimbursement for Appendectomy WI: Medicare DRG Reimbursement for Appendectomy With Minor Complications No Complications $14,850 $13,500.00 $11,800.00 14,00016,000 $11,800 12,00014,000 12,000 10,000 10,000 8,000 8,000 6,000 6,000 4,000 4,000 2,000 2,000 0 0 $3,050 $1,700.00 Costw/ Complications Reimbursement Cost Reimbursement 10% Increase Cost Reimbursement Deficit Deficit Deficit 28 Consequences of Low Quality • Medicare Fixed Payments--Diagnosis Related Groups (DRG) – Falls / PUP / CAUTI / Falls – Efficiencies / Increase Length of Stay / Increase of Rx Cost • Increased financial deficit • Increased harm to patient 29 The Financial Impact of Quality: Privately Insured 20,000 18,000 16,000 Private Insurer Reimbursement for Appendectomy with Minor Complications $19,305 Private Insurer Reimbursement for Appendectomy No Complications $14,850 $17,550 18,000 14,000 16,000 $13,500 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 14,000 12,000 $4,455 10,000 8,000 $4,050 6,000 4,000 2,000Cost w/ Minor Complications 10% 0 Increase Reimbursement (30% Margin) Profit 30 Consequences of Low Quality • Privately Insured – Falls / PUP / CAUTI / Falls – Efficiencies / Increase Length of Stay / Increase of Rx Cost • Increased financial revenues – Eventual lower negotiated reimbursements – Eventual pressures to adjust or change payment models • Increased harm to patient 31 The Financial Impact of Quality: Uninsured 18,000 Uninsured Reimbursement for Appendectomy Minor Complications $17,820 $14,850 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 $2,970 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 Cost w/ Minor Complications 10% Increase Direct Cost to Patient (20% Margin) Profit 32 Consequences of Low Quality • Uninsured – Falls / PUP / CAUTI / Falls – Efficiencies / Increase Length of Stay / Increase of Rx Cost • Increase financial burden on patients • Increased likelihood of unpaid claims • Increase charitable care • Increased physical and or financial harm to patient 33 Federal Pressures to Improve Quality (do not pertain to CAH’s) • Hospital-specific historical quality performance compared to national performance standards • Dynamic programs that change each year – Measures and domains (additions/deletions) – Performance standards (moving target) • Increased financial exposure each year (max exposure shown below) Slide provided by the Hospital Association of New York State 34 Takeaways • Improving quality and / or reducing cost increases value to the patient • Financial and Quality leaders can drive huge improvement and cost reductions by teaming up and learning each other’s world • As data becomes more available, so will the ability to tie ROI to quality • No matter what the industry, improving value and reducing cost equates to long term sustainability • Even if a quality improvement project does not impact the bottom line it may still be the right thing to do 35 Next Month December – Strategies for Improving Efficiencies and Reducing Waste 36 Resources • Institute for health improvement– Increasing Efficiency and Enhancing Value in Health Care • Institute of Medicine: Overuse, Underuse and Misuse of Medical Care • Blood Use Article: www.medscape.com/viewarticle/763272 • Hospital Association of New York State Regulatory Pressures to Improve Quality 37 Thank You! 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