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Mount Auburn Practice Improvement Program (MA-PIP)

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Presentation on theme: "Mount Auburn Practice Improvement Program (MA-PIP)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mount Auburn Practice Improvement Program (MA-PIP)
Community Learning Session #3 Improving Communication: To Improve Care and Patient Satisfaction While Reducing Malpractice Risk Yvonne Cheung, MD, MPH, CPPS Chair, Department of Quality and Patient Safety Mount Auburn Hospital December 4, 2015 This project is funded through a Commonwealth of Massachusetts - Health Care Workforce Transformation Fund Grant (#54038)

2 Learning Objectives As a result of participating in this activity, learners will be able to: Describe strategies and tools that improve communication with patients and patient safety Use small tests of change to make it feasible to improve care while providing care Identify and employ strategies for engaging patients in improvement work.

3 Disclosure Statement All Presenters and Content Developers have no significant financial interest/arrangement with any organization(s) that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest with the subject matter of the presentation.

4 Mount Auburn Practice Improvement Program (MA-PIP): Why now?
Purpose: Improving patient safety in office practice/ambulatory care Enabling your practice to improve your work while you do your work- “see problems and solve problems” Build on a proven model – federally funded PROMISES program Build infrastructure, integrate with current ambulatory patient safety program Enabling your practice to improve without disrupting patient care - Skills to be a learning organization - Engaging all practice staff to “ see problems and solve problems” - Same approach can improve patient safety, quality, patient experience, efficiency - Makes work more manageable Accelerating Improvement in Healthcare & “ Leader-led Learning: the great differentiator” Steve Spear

5 Key Concepts For Safety Focus on systems, not people
Work on a culture of safety For improvement: Define a clear aim Use measurement and data for decision making Remember that improvement requires change Keep testing using PDSA cycles – keep tests small For everything: Remember that customers are key 5

6 Science of Patient Safety
Systems thinking Most problems do not result from individual workers; but from the design of work processes/system Safety culture Leadership & values Teamwork & communication Trust, psychological safety What if you started your staff meetings with the question: “Do you have any patient safety concerns we can talk about?” We don’t blame the people, we improve the system in which they work Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets; if we want to improve results we need to improve system Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results Safety culture starts from the top, as defined by leadership beliefs and core values What if you started your staff meetings with the question: “Do you have a patient safety concern we can talk about?” Requires teamwork and communication And atmosphere of trust, where individuals feel safe to share information about unsafe or potentially hazardous conditions so that we can identify strategies for improvement

7 Model for Improvement PDSA = Aim Measures Changes Test of Change
Developed by: Associates in Process Improvement Test of Change The Improvement Guide: A Practical Approach to Enhancing Organizational Performance, 2nd Ed. Gerald J. Langley et al. Jossey-Bass April 2009 Builds on Deming’s Theory and the scientific method Based on the development, testing and implementing of changes Heavily focused on learning from small scale tests – “trial-and-learning

8 Patient Safety Priorities in Ambulatory Care
Reliable processes - 3 key areas: -Test result management -Referral Management -Medication Management Communication – With patient, among staff, across settings What keeps you up at night? From the literature – the most common contributing problems 8

9 Why Focus on Communication
Physician-Patient Communication: The Relationship with Malpractice Claims Among Primary Care Physicians and Surgeons Study identified specific communication behaviors among Primary Care physicians with no malpractice claims vs. those who had experienced malpractice claims Levinson, et al., JAMA (7): From the literature – the most common contributing problems Study identified specific communication behaviors associated with malpractice history for primary care physicians (though not in surgeons) Multivariable model improved prediction by 57% above chance 9

10 Those Without Claims: Used statements of orientation (educating the patient about what to expect/flow of the visit) Used more facilitation (soliciting patient’s opinion, checking understanding, encouraging patient to talk) Spent longer in routine visit – 18.3 vs minutes (independent effect in predicting claims status) Summary question: Did it build a positive relationship, or lead to fewer errors, or both?

11 From latest IOM Report: To Improve Diagnosis and Reduce Diagnostic Error
Goal 1 - Facilitate more effective teamwork in the diagnostic process among health care professions, patients and their families Recommendation 1B: Partner with patients and families as diagnostic team members Facilitate patient and family engagement in the diagnostic process Align with their needs values and preferences 23% of MA residents Involved in Medical Error Situation (HSPH/BLC/Health Policy Commission, Sept 2014 ) Review of closed malpractice claims in Primary Care: 72% are diagnosis-related (397/551) – (data from Crico, Coverys)

12 Communication Issues for Today’s Discussion
For today’s discussion – not focused on patients with “additional” communication challenges - health literacy, language barriers, cultural literacy etc. Focus is communication with patients without barriers, but still have symptoms not addressed, unanswered questions, unclear understanding, concerns with the treatment etc.

13 Brief Small Group Discussion
What are some examples in office practice of how poor communication results in harm to a patient? Invite comment – list on flipchart

14 Feedback and large group discussion

15 Examples of Suboptimal Communication That Can Lead to Safety Risk:
With the clinician: Interrupting the patient and not hearing all the symptoms Not asking about concerns with the treatment plan Not assuring correct understanding of instructions Not acknowledging uncertainty about diagnosis Incomplete communication about danger signs Interrupting the patient and not hearing all the symptoms, leads to wrong diagnosis (Osler) Not asking about concerns with the treatment plan, patient does not follow through Not assuring correct understanding of instructions – unclear explanation, or just asking “ do you have any questions” Not acknowledging uncertainty about diagnosis and explain the expected outcome and need for the patient to call and let the office know Incomplete communication about danger signs to watch for with new medications, what to do Didn’t check to see that all health issues were raised and discussed, left a problem unaddressed

16 Examples of Suboptimal Communication That Can Lead to Safety Risk:
Not checking to see that all issues were addressed Not making it safe to admit lack of adherence to prior treatment plans Not using structured communication formats (missing new information on family history) Clinician doesn’t make it safe to admit where there was not adherence to prior treatments ( side effects from medications, stopped taking) Not using structured communication formats (missing new information on family history)

17 Examples of Suboptimal Communication That Can Lead to Safety Risk:
With other office staff Front desk didn’t get information to assess urgency of the need Not checking at the front desk – do they understand the next steps, have barriers or concerns Not checking to make sure they got all their questions answered

18 Overlap With Those Working on Patient-Centered Medical Home
Patient Safety brings added dimensions and focus on communication. Moving beyond non-compliance (“Why don’t they do what I tell them to?”) Some similar issues – shared decision making, motivational interviewing, effective teaching Some additional nuances - missed diagnosis, safety issues in other staff communications


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