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A Strategy for Inpatient Integration Terry Horton, MD, FACP Delaware Valley Node September 21, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "A Strategy for Inpatient Integration Terry Horton, MD, FACP Delaware Valley Node September 21, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Strategy for Inpatient Integration Terry Horton, MD, FACP Delaware Valley Node September 21, 2010

2 Hospitals Inpatient Services Aggregate the Highly Disordered Much higher rates of AUD and SA compared to general society, most are dependent* Significant medical comorbidities Expensive revolving door higher use of ER (2.3x), inpatient care (6.7x)** Increased AMA, readmissions * Saitz, 2007; Bertholet, 2010 ** Stein, 1993

3 Hospitals have an Emerging Imperative Need to Improve: Safety Health care costs Joint Commission compliance

4 Hospitals Need Best Methods/tools to: Screen and diagnose – must be pragmatic Effectively treat withdrawal Engage and transition into ongoing drug tx SBIRT not effective for inpatients but Linkage to tx improves outcome* * Bertholet, 2010

5 Delaware’s Epidemiology Estimated 2009 population of 885,000 9% of adults alcohol/drug abusing or dependent* 65,000 in need of alcohol/drug treatment** 8,216 admissions to publicly-funded SA treatment services statewide 2006*** * 2004-2005 NSDUH data ** Wright et al. 2007 *** Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, 2007 Tx gap

6 Delaware’s Primary Hospital System Wilmington/Christiana Hospitals 1100 beds 160,491 ER visits 54,597 admissions* No in-house substance abuse/etoh service *2009 data

7 CCHS prior to 2009 No standardized ETOH/Substance abuse screening SBIRT for trauma service only No standardized withdrawal treatment protocols or monitoring Social Work consult for referral 3 root cause analyses in 2007-8 directly related to delirium and tremens

8 2008-9 CCHS Epidemiology Less than expected rates of ETOH withdrawal ( 0.75% actual vs. 0.9-1.25% calc) 2x more DTs than expected (0.2% vs. 0.05-.125%) Majority of DTs are secondary dx’s 115/179 (64%) 1/1/08-7/31/09 23% >= 65 years old Deaths more common in secondary dx: 19/20

9 The Intervention ETOH Withdrawal Symptom Order Set launched on October 6, 2009 for med/surg inpatients includes screening tool for risk of AW CIWA clinical assessment/scoring Score triggered treatment and monitoring protocol

10 Outcomes: Improved Safety No Sentinel Events since launch Significant reduction of submitted cases to DOM No cases to date associated with over- treatment

11 Quarterly Outcomes Data Protocol launch

12 Restraints Use

13 ICU Transfers

14 Length of Stay Protocol launch

15 Project Engagement Community partner imbedded at WH Peer-to-peer inpt/outpt intervention Data Review N = 313 (9/1/08- 6/10/10) 35% successfully admitted into 33 inpt/out drug/alcohol treatment programs

16 Project Engagement: Partnering with DPCI/Aetna Claims from June 1, 2009 - November 30, 2009 3 months before and after claims review, n = 18 MetricPrePostFinding Medical inpatient admits12833% decrease ER visits543338% decrease BH/SA inpatient admits71043% increase BH/SA outpatient visits121633% increase PCP office visits275188% increase Delaware Physicians Care Inc, May, 2010

17 CTN Opportunities for Inpatient-based Research Define/develop pragmatic tools and protocols to screen and improve safety Develop and test methods to engagement and link into ongoing drug/etoh treatment Study clinical and fiscal outcomes


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