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Care Transitions for Medication Safety in the Community

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Presentation on theme: "Care Transitions for Medication Safety in the Community"— Presentation transcript:

1 Care Transitions for Medication Safety in the Community
Lauren E. Glaze, PharmD Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice UAMS South Family Medical Center

2 Objectives Define transitional care and its impact on healthcare outcomes and expenditures Describe the development of a Transitions of Care (TOC) service Identify medication-related strategies to decrease hospital readmissions Review examples of pharmacist-led interventions to enhance transitions of care in rural communities

3 Source: Healthy Transitions Colorado, 2015.
Transitions of Care “The movement of patients between health care locations, providers, or different levels of care within the same location as their conditions and care needs change.” -National Transitions of Care Coalition, 2008 Source: Healthy Transitions Colorado, 2015.

4 Barriers to Successful Care Transitions
Multiple providers Different EMRs Medication discrepancies Poor communication Lack of patient/family education Inadequate planning and goal setting

5 Why focus on care transitions?
Improve patient safety and health outcomes Reduce readmissions and healthcare costs

6

7 2011 Readmission Costs $41.3 billion in hospital costs for 3.3 million adult 30-day readmissions Medicare $4.3 billion Medicaid $839 million Private Insurance $785 million Source: Hines AL, et al

8 Source: New England Journal of Medicine, 2009 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid, 2012

9 Source: HCUP Statistical Briefs #153 and #154: http://www. hcup-us

10 Source: HCUP Statistical Briefs #153 and #154: http://www. hcup-us

11 CMS Data 64% of Medicare patients received no post-acute care between discharge and readmission 76% of readmissions may be preventable Medicare beneficiaries report greater dissatisfaction in discharge-related care than any other aspect of care CMS measures U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. New HHS Data Shows Major Strides Made in Patient Safety, Leading to Improved Care and Savings. May 7,

12 Hospital Readmission Reduction Program (CMS)
YEAR READMISSION DIAGNOSIS PENALTY 2013* Acute MI, CHF 2015 COPD, TKA, THA 2016 CABG surgery 2017 Aspiration pneumonia, sepsis * CMS Transitional Care Billing introduced

13 The Bottom Line Poorly coordinated care transitions
Decreased quality of care Decreased health outcomes Increased hospital readmissions Increased costs

14 Transitions of Care Service
Reduce of adverse drug events Improve quality outcomes Reduce hospital readmission rates

15 Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) and Rural Health Clinic (RHC)
7 counties in South Arkansas Adult Primary Care, Pediatrics, Senior Care, OB/GYN Family Medicine faculty physicians, residents, and students

16

17 Development of TOC Service

18 Key Players Hospital Physicians Pharmacist Case Managers Nurses Clinic
Physicians/APRNs QI Coordinator Care Coordinators Behavioral Therapist Health Educator

19 UAMS readmission stats

20 PharmD Impact stats

21 UAMS South TOC Workflow
Inpatient Care/ Discharge DAY 0-1 Follow-up Phone Call DAY 2-3 Follow-up Clinic Visit DAY 7-14 TOC Billing DAY 30

22 Inpatient Care Medical Team includes attending physician, UAMS medical residents, students, PharmD, and scribe who perform daily rounds PharmD assists in medication selection, duration, and dosing PharmD focuses on UAMS patients medication discrepancies Discuss inpatient care and plans for discharge

23 Discharge UAMS patients identified by PharmD and hospital case managers Brief discharge counseling and verification of information performed by PharmD or PharmD student Hospital Nurse provides updated medication list to patient and preferred community pharmacy* Hospital Nurse calls UAMS South to schedule Follow-up Clinic Visit

24 Follow-up Phone Call UAMS South discharged patients ed to QI Nurse and PharmD daily Led by PharmD or PharmD student within 48 hours of discharge Call to patient’s community pharmacist Call patient or patient caregiver (2 attempts) TOC phone script utilized

25 Phone Call Script How are you feeling? What appointments do you have ?
What imaging/labs/exams are scheduled? Where you able to get your new medication(s)? How are you taking your new medication(s)? What issues/concerns do you have with your new medication(s)? What questions do you have for me? Your provider? Your case coordinator?

26 Phone Call Documentation
TOC Phone Note completed by PharmD or PharmD student Includes discussed appointments, medications, concerns, etc. Hospital discharge note copied to UAMS note Update UAMS EMR to reflect Hospital discharge medication reconciliation Note sent to PCP for review before Follow-up Clinic Visit

27 Follow-up Clinic Visit
Led by PCP within 7 to 10 days of discharge PharmD performs medication education, verifies adherence, and addresses concerns Follow up appointment scheduled for 1-3 months PCP completes clinic visit note with TOC billing code

28 TOC Billing UAMS coder bills TOC codes at day 30-post hospital discharge for MEDICARE PATIENTS CPT Code – Transitional care management services with moderate medical decision complexity (face-to-face visit within 14 days of discharge) CPT Code – Transitional care management services with high medical decision complexity (face-to-face visit within 7 days of discharge)

29 CMS TOC Rules Must include: Date of discharge
Date of Interactive Contact (phone call, , or face to face) with beneficiary or caregiver Non-face to face services* Date of Follow-up Visit (face to face or telemedicine) Complexity of medical decision making (moderate or high)

30 CMS TOC Rules Discharge from: Inpatient Acute Care Hospital
Inpatient Psychiatric Hospital LTAC SNF Inpatient Rehab Hospital Outpatient Observation

31 CMS TOC Rules Discharge to: Home Nursing Home Assisted Living

32 CMS TOC Rules Only 1 health professional may report services of 1 billable TOC service per beneficiary within 30 days Same healthcare provider can perform discharge, phone call, and follow-up visit Follow-up visit may not take place the same day as reported discharge May not bill TOC codes and CCM, ESRD, or Care plan oversight services code

33 Why Involve the Pharmacist?
Prevent medication errors Address medication concerns Avoid Adverse Drug Events Provide medication counseling Assess medication adherence and efficacy

34 Pharmacist Interventions
Improper drug selection Subtherapeutic dosages Supratherapeutic dosages Medication non-adherence Therapeutic duplications Therapeutic omissions Drug interactions Drugs with no indications Treatment failures

35 UAMS Outcomes Completed ___ TOC services since September 2015 (___ weekly discharged patients) Billed 14 Medicare patients Billed Medicaid for ____ patients on EOY reports

36 Clinical Outcomes QI results

37 QI Group Benefits ACT Southwest

38 Partnership Feedback Hospital Home health SNF/Assistant Living
Community pharmacists

39 Patient Success Stories

40 Future Endeavors Discharge med rec sent to patient’s preferred pharmacy Monthly adherence checks with community pharmacist and at subsequent PCP clinic visits

41 Future Endeavors

42 Future Endeavors Expand to other South Arkansas Hospitals
Med rec at admission by inpatient pharmacist “Meds to Beds” program Follow-up face to face visits in patient’s home

43 Question Which of the following is not a barrier to successful care transitions? Different EMRs Multiple providers Medication discrepancies Great communication Lack of patient education

44 Questions?

45 TOC Resources

46 Care Transitions for Medication Safety in the Community
Lauren E. Glaze, PharmD Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice UAMS South Family Medical Center


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