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Title: Quality Through Collaboration:


1
Quality Through Collaboration The Future Of
Rural Health Tim Size, Executive Director Rural
Wisconsin Health Cooperative Hawaii Rural
Hospital Flex Conference Waikoloa Beach Marriott,
September 30th, 2005
2
Presentation Overview
  • Midwest Filter
  • Overview of the IOM Report on the Future of
    Rural Health
  • What Can I Do Now? Three Perspectives
  • Where Rural Can Lead the Way Linking Individual
    Population Health.

3
The IOM Committee on the Future of Rural Health
Care
  • Charge to the Committee
  • Assess the quality of health care in rural areas.
  • Develop a framework for a core set of services
    and infrastructure necessary to deliver those
    services to rural communities.
  • Recommend objectives and changes in policies and
    programs required to achieve those objectives.
  • Consider implications for federal programs and
    policy.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.

4
What IOM Did Before Looking at Rural Health
  • In 2001, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) released
    the report Crossing the Quality Chasm A New
    Health System for the 21st Century.
  • Based on a large body of evidence documenting
    serious shortcomings in the American health care
    system overall, the 2001 IOM report called for
    fundamental reform of the U.S. health care
    system.
  • The report identified six aims for quality
    improvement health care should be safe,
    effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient,
    and equitable.
  • The rural report is 8th in the Quality Chasm
    series.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
5
The Committees 5-Part Proposed Strategy
  • Adopt an integrated approach to addressing
    personal and population health needs at the
    community-level.
  • Establish a stronger quality improvement support
    structure to assist rural systems and
    professionals.
  • Enhance human resource capacity of rural
    communities (professional and rural residents).
  • Monitor and assure that rural health care systems
    are financially stable.
  • Invest in building an information and
    communications technology (ICT) infrastructure.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
6
Chapter 2 Individual Population Health
  • Rural communities must reorient their quality
    improvement strategies from an exclusively
    patient- and provider-centric approach to one
    that also addresses the problems and needs of
    rural communities and populations.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
7
Chapter 2 Recommendations
  • Congress should provide resources to the DHHS to
    support comprehensive health system reform
    demonstrations in five rural communities.
  • Demonstrations should evaluate alternative models
    for achieving greater integration of personal and
    population health services and innovative
    approaches to the financing and delivery of
    health services, with the goal of meeting the six
    quality aims.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
8
Chapter 3 Quality Improvement Infrastructure
A great deal of attention has been focused on
enhancing quality improvement capabilities.
Because of their small scale and low operating
margins, rural providers have found it difficult
to make such investments. Although many elements
will be the same for rural and urban areas, some
customization is needed for rural areas.
Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
9
Chapter 3 Recommendations
  • Establish a Rural Quality Initiative in DHHS to
    coordinate and accelerate efforts to measure and
    improve the quality of personal and population
    health care programs in rural areas..
  • Initiative should be coordinated by HRSAs ORHP
    with guidance from a Rural Quality Advisory Panel
    consisting of experts from the private sector,
    state, and local governments with knowledge and
    experience in rural health care quality
    measurement and improvement.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
10
Chapter 4 Strengthening Human Resources
The IOM committee believes that a renewed and
vigorous effort must be made to enhance the
health professions workforce in rural areas. This
effort should focus on enhancing the quality
improvement knowledge and skills of practicing
professionals and the supply and preparedness of
future professionals working in rural areas.
Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
11
Rural Under-Representation Starts in Med School
Wisconsin Academy of Rural Medicine, Planning
Committee, 7/05
12
Chapter 4 Recommendations
  • Congress should provide resources to HRSA to
    expand rural experientially based workforce
    training programs.
  • Professional schools should work to (1) to
    attract rural applicants, (2) locate much of the
    educational experience in rural communities, (3)
    expand distance learning programs, (4) make
    greater effort to recruit faculty with experience
    in rural practice and (5) develop rural-relevant
    curricula.
  • The federal government should provide financial
    incentives for residency training programs for
    rural tracks by linking some portion of graduate
    medical education payments under Medicare to this
    end.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
13
Chapter 5 Provide Adequate/Target Financial
Resources
Communities must have adequate, appropriately
financial resources. A great deal of
experimentation is under way to better align
payment incentives with the quality aims rural
communities should be part of these efforts. But
rural health care systems have been financially
fragile, and many still have small operating
margins, making it difficult to participate.
Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
14
Chapter 5 Recommendations
  • CMS should establish 5-year pay-for performance
    demo projects in five rural communities starting
    2006.
  • ARHQ should produce a report no later than FY 06
    analyzing the aggregate impact of changes in the
    Medicare program, state Medicaid programs,
    private health plans and insurance coverage on
    the financial stability of rural health care
    providers, and detail actions to ensure
    sufficient financial stability.
  • HRSA and SAMHSA should conduct a comprehensive
    assessment of the availability and quality of
    mental health and substance abuse services in
    rural areas.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
15
Chapter 6 Utilize Health Information Technology
HIT bridges distances by providing more
immediate access to clinical knowledge,
specialized expertise, and services not readily
available in rural areas. However, many rural
communities are unprepared to participate fully
in the information age.
Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
16
Chapter 6 Recommendations ( 1 of 2 )
  • Include a rural focus in the Office of National
    Coordinator for Health Information Technology
    (NCHIT).
  • Provide all rural communities with high-speed
    access to the Internet.
  • Eliminate regulatory barriers to the use of
    telemedicine.
  • Financial assistance to rural providers for HIT.
  • Foster rural HIT collaborations and
    demonstrations.
  • Provide ongoing educational and technical
    assistance to rural communities to maximize the
    use of HIT.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
17
Chapter 6 Recommendations ( 2 of 2 )
  • Congress should ensure that rural communities are
    able to use the Internet for the full range of
    health-related applications.
  • Congress should provide direction and financial
    resources to assist rural providers in converting
    to EHRs over the next 5 years.
  • AHRQs Health Information Technology Program
    should be expanded for rural areas.
  • NLM, with the NCHIT and AHRQ, should establish
    regional ICT/telehealth resource centers
    interconnected with the National Network of
    Libraries of Medicine.

Committee on the Future of Rural Health Care.
Quality through collaboration the future of
rural health care. Washington, DC National
Academies Press 2004.
18
What Can I Do Now? Three Perspectives
  • Leaders Death Dying Cycle
  • What Can I do Now?
  • RWHC Hospitals Quality Directors Survey Results
  • Wisconsin Hospital Association
  • University of Minnesota Rural Research Center

19
Quality Leaders Work Through Death Dying Cycle
Data Transparency
Public Measurement Reporting Requirements
Acceptance
Shock Disbelief
Bargaining
Anger
Data Standardization
Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
20
Shock Disbelief
  • All about the numbers
  • Insist on seeing the numbers first
  • Question validity/reliability
  • Multiple attempts to explain
  • Too early to set goals or expectations

Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
21
Anger
  • Too many measures
  • Measures are not important
  • Collection and reporting burden is too big
  • Someone else is at fault
  • Physicians
  • Nurses
  • Hospitals

Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
22
Bargaining
  • Are the measures clinically relevant?
  • Can these measures be improved?
  • How can I collect this data within my budgetary
    restraints?
  • How can I demonstrate improvement in these
    measures when patients dont comply?
  • Is the incentive worth the effort?

Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
23
Acceptance
  • When QI is a state of mind, not a project
  • All about performance improvement
  • Anxious to tell our story good, bad or ugly
  • View the customer as the one to whom we are fully
    accountable
  • Seek out best practices
  • Willing to share data tools and resources with
    others
  • Strive to constantly improve

Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
24
From RWHC What Can I Do Now? ( 1 of 2 )
  • Data Collection Feedback
  • collect data on patient care processes and
    outcomes
  • develop a reporting format that is easy to read
  • report results continually to everyone
  • change incident reporting to opportunity for
    improvement
  • External Benchmarks
  • improve JCAHO Core measure data CHF, AMI CAP
  • recognize as important, implement and monitor the
    JCAHO National Patient Safety Goals
  • change systems to comply with patient safety
    measures such as requiring site marking,
    identifiers before treatment, etc.
  • develop Care Pathways for consistency of care

RWHC Hospitals Quality Directors Survey, 8/05
25
From RWHC What Can I Do Now? ( 2 of 2 )
  • respond to insurers measures for quality such as
    compliance with diabetes management
  • implement bar code scanning for medication
    administration
  • there are a lot of resources God Bless the
    internet!
  • Team Work
  • promote a non-punitive environment
  • work towards a culture of teamwork
  • develop small quality action teams
  • charter a proactive medication management team
  • utilize patient care council to problem solve
    clinical issues
  • train/orient new personnel with strong preceptors
  • develop stronger physician/nursing relationships

RWHC Hospitals Quality Directors Survey, 8/05
26
From WHA What Can I Do Now? ( 1 of 2 )
  • Evaluate where your hospital is related to the
    Death and Dying cycle of change
  • Identify impediments to improvement in your
    hospital
  • Increase visibility and communication about
    quality issues
  • Increase focus on quality at Board meetings
  • Find opportunities for your Board and senior
    leadership to interact with physicians and staff
    about quality issues
  • Participate in Pay for Performance
  • Purchaser pilots
  • Incorporate quality targets into senior
    leadership compensation (and staff)


Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
27
From WHA What Can I Do Now? ( 2 of 2 )
  • Use quality measures to assist decision making
  • Public reporting (CheckPoint, Hospital Compare)
  • Organizational scorecards/dashboards
  • Participate in learning/sharing opportunities
  • State Hospital Association Initiatives
  • Rural tasks in QIO 8th Scope of Work
  • 100K Lives Campaign
  • NRHA Quality Initiative
  • Develop a comprehensive plan to build a systems
    approach and create a culture of excellence

Leadership Keys to Improving Quality of Care by
Dana Richardson, Vice President, Quality
Initiatives, Wisconsin Hospital Association, 2005
Rural Health Conference
28
From UMRRC What Can I Do Now? ( 1 of 2 )
  • Link QI to your mission and strategic plan
  • Establish an organizational culture that actively
    supports QI
  • Reorient QI strategies from patient or
    provider-centered approach to one that also
    embraces a community/population approach
  • Define a relevant quality measure set for your
    hospital
  • Invest in MIS that supports QI

Health Care Quality for Rural America by Ira
Moscovice, University of Minnesota Rural
Health?Research Center at the Third Annual
Western Region Flex Conference, 6/05
29
From UMRRC What Can I Do Now? ( 2 of 2 )
  • Participate in public reporting initiatives
  • Develop QI teams in your hospital that address
    quality and patient safety issues
  • Join/develop a network that facilitates QI
    activities for CAHs
  • Work with your QIO, state hospital association,
    SORH, and universities on QI activities
  • Apply for QI-related grants

Health Care Quality for Rural America by Ira
Moscovice, University of Minnesota Rural
Health?Research Center at the Third Annual
Western Region Flex Conference, 6/05
30
Part III Rural Can Lead the Way
  • The healthcare system of the 21st century should
    maximize the health and functioning of both
    individual patients and communities. To
    accomplish this goal, the system should balance
    and integrate needs for personal healthcare with
    broader community-wide initiatives that target
    the entire population.

Fostering Rapid Advances In Healthcare Learning
From System Demonstrations, The Institute of
Medicine of the National Academies of Science,
2002.
31
(No Transcript)
32
How Far Are You Ready to Go?
  • NETWORKING A public health department and
    hospital/clinic exchange information about how
    they each support healthy early child
    development.
  • COORDINATING A public health department and a
    hospital/clinic do the above and decide to alter
    service schedules so that they can provide their
    combined support in a more user-friendly manner.
  • COOPERATING A public health department and a
    hospital/clinic do the above and agree to share
    neighborhood outreach resources to increase the
    effectiveness of their support.
  • COLLABORATING A public health department and a
    hospital/clinic do the above and provide skill
    development training for each other's staff to
    enhance each other's capacity to support health
    early child development.

Adapted from Art Himmelmans Collaborating for
a Change
33
Key Barriers to Providers Getting Involved
  • Tradition. With some notable exceptions, the role
    of providers has been seen as treating individual
    patients. Concern about the population as a whole
    has been the job of local and state public
    health departments.
  • Resources. Providers struggling to address
    traditional responsibilities with tight budgets
    are not looking for new roles that no one will
    pay for.
  • Values. The third is the conflict or discomfort
    about addressing population health issues, many
    of which relate to individual behaviors other
    peoples choices and their freedom to make those
    choices.

Unpublished manuscript Population Health
Improvement Rural Hospital Balanced Scorecards
A Conversation, Tim Size, David Kindig Clint
MacKinney
34
A Checklist for Successful Collaborating
  • Host organization ready?
  • The right partners involved?
  • Shared vision unifies partners?
  • Partners aware what is expected?
  • Partners know partnership goals and objectives?
  • People to do the work have been identified,
    staffed and made accountable?
  • Best practices have been researched and shared?
  • Assets residing within the partnership have been
    mapped?
  • Partnership encourages participation in and
    sustainability of its work?
  • Partnership actively recruits new members?
  • Defined governance model?
  • Leadership is effective?
  • Communication/outreach plan?
  • Financial needs known and addressed?
  • Work evaluated/revised?
  • Partnership knows challenges that it faces?

The Collaboration Primer by Gretchen Williams
Torres and Frances Margolin
35
Examples of Next Steps Local
  • Devote a periodic Board meeting or a portion of
    every Board meeting to review population health
    indicators.
  • Add Board members with specific interest and/or
    expertise in community health improvement.
  • Create a community health Board subcommittee to
    explore opportunities for partnerships with other
    organizations to improve community health.
  • Consider hospital or clinic employees or
    employees of a proactive local employer as a
    community and develop interventions to improve
    employee health. Then, expand the experience to
    the larger community.

Unpublished manuscript Population Health
Improvement Rural Hospital Balanced Scorecards
A Conversation, Tim Size, David Kindig Clint
MacKinney
36
Examples of Next Steps State Regional
  • Advocate for improved community health
    measurement techniques and increased community
    health improvement valuation.
  • Assist hospitals and clinics, and other
    stakeholders, to begin to link the mission of
    community health improvement to budget,
    operations, and performance measurement.
  • Partner with academic institutions to design
    research projects that test hypotheses related to
    provider performance improvement and community
    health measurement.

Unpublished manuscript Population Health
Improvement Rural Hospital Balanced Scorecards
A Conversation, Tim Size, David Kindig Clint
MacKinney
37
Wisconsin Strong Rural Communities Initiative
  • The Rural Health Development Council, a
    legislatively appointed advisory group to the
    State of Wisconsins Department of Commerce, is
    looking for six rural Wisconsin communities to
    join it in developing the Strong Rural
    Communities Initiative. The goal of the
    initiative is for rural communities to improve
    their health indicators and health status through
    the development of ongoing, local interventions
    by coalitions that include (1) the local hospital
    and representatives of the medical community, (2)
    the county health department, and (3)
    representatives of other non-health related local
    businesses. Involvement of the local business
    community and the long term potential to reduce
    health care costs is a particular emphasis of
    this initiative.

Wisconsins Strong Rural Communities
Initiative http//www.rwhc.com/SRCI.html
38
Six Interventions by Hospital-Public
Health-Business
  • Offering cardiac risk profiles, safe workout and
    proper nutrition instruction and follow-up
    evaluation at area employers.
  • Multi-sector teams provide prevention and health
    promotion services to corporate and independent
    worksite locations.
  • Health risk assessments and health improvement
    planning for large to small employers as well as
    individuals.
  • Promote local primary care and preventive health
    services and build a successful worksite based
    wellness program.
  • Increase primary and secondary prevention in
    response to rising obesity rates by targeting
    businesses and their employees.
  • Expand fitness program for local police to the
    community.

Wisconsins Strong Rural Communities
Initiative http//www.rwhc.com/SRCI.html
39
The Hospitals Risk of Not Changing
  • A frequently cited example of a sectors failure
    to adapt to changing times is the railroads
    falling from monopolies in the late 19th century
    to bankruptcy in the 20th.
  • The railroads kept on doing what had been a
    successful business strategy running trains.
    Railroads failed to adapt to a market that was
    redefining transportation as cars, trucks and
    airplanes.
  • Healthcare markets are now being redefined
    shifting from purchasing service units to
    purchasing quality outcomes. Importantly,
    quality care is increasingly defined in both
    personal and population perspectives.
  • This developing redefinition of healthcare needs
    to be reflected in rural provider strategic
    planning. It is a great opportunity for rural
    health.

Unpublished manuscript Population Health
Improvement Rural Hospital Balanced Scorecards
A Conversation, Tim Size, David Kindig Clint
MacKinney
40
Partial List of Resources
  • Association for Community Health Improvement
    http//www.communityhlth.org/
  • The Collaboration Primer Proven Strategies,
    Considerations and Tools to Get You Started
    http//www.hret.org/programs/content/colpri.pdf
  • The Community Tool Box at http//ctb.ku.edu/
  • VHA Health Foundation http//www.vhahealthfoundati
    on.org/vhahf/resources.asp
  • Kellogg Leadership for Community Change
    http//www.klccleadership.org/
  • Community-Campus Partnerships Tools and
    Resources http//depts.washington.edu/ccph/partner
    ships.html
  • Building Stronger Communities for Better Health
    http//www.policylink.org/Research/pdfs/JointCente
    r-Communities.pdf
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