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Physician Engagement The POSP Experience

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First of its kind in North America. Tri-partite (AH&W, AMA and regional health ... Lab results to community EMRs. DI text & other reports to community EMRs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Physician Engagement The POSP Experience


1
Physician Engagement- The POSP Experience
  • BC Health Information Professionals Society
  • November 17, 2006

2
Agenda
  • Program overview
  • Change management
  • Results
  • Key learnings
  • Challenges
  • Testimonials

3
Program Overview
4
Overview
  • Launched October 1, 2001
  • First of its kind in North America
  • Tri-partite (AHW, AMA and regional health
    authorities) program provides
  • Financial support (70/30 cost share arrangement)
  • Change management services
  • Mandated requirements for physician office
    systems (VCUR)
  • Strategic investments in IT to move patient
    care/EHR agendas forward

5
AHW
RHAs
Labs
Registries
PIN
Alberta Netcare
Lab Results History
Portal 2006
Capital Netcare
Upload of dispensing information
Lab results to community EMRs
HIE
Pharmacists
DI text other reports to community EMRs
Community DI
Community MDs
6
POSP mandate
To establish a physician office information
infrastructure that is integrated with the health
information system and which enables information
exchange within the physician community and
beyond.
7
Why? To support
  • Improved patient care
  • in the community
  • in the regions
  • through information exchange
  • Professional development/knowledge management
  • Practice management efficiencies

8
Participation alternatives
  • 3 levels of participation
  • Level 1 computer in physicians office with
    browser version of provincial EHR
  • Level 1.5 computer access at point of care with
    browser version of provincial EHR
  • Level 2 EMR integrated with provincial EHR and
    regional data at point of care

9
POSP at a glance
Post Implementation Review (Completed after
6month declaration)
Intake (Starts funding clock)
Automation Readiness Assessment
PIAConsultation (Must be completed prior to go
live date)
Kick-off meeting (POSP, Vendor, Physician RHA)
EHRReadinessAssessment (AHW)
Ongoing Change Management and Outreach activities
Service Agreement (Must be received 30 days from
Intake)
Application
Enrollment (Must be received 120 days from
Intake)
Implementation
Physician Declarations (Must be submitted 6 and
12 months after implementation)
PIA(OIPC) (Must be received prior to go live
date)
Ongoing Change Management and Outreach activities
business process
site visit
physician submitted form
10
Program management office
11
Service delivery vs. admin.
POSP program management office
repository/coach/manager model
Benchmarks Repository 10 15
Repository/Coach 15 25 Repository/Coach/Manag
er 25 35
12
Change Management Services
13
Delivery
  • Approximately 12 of program budget
  • POSP acts as general contractor
  • Team lead 7 change management advisors
  • All clinics assigned to a change management
    advisor (approximately 150 clinics/per CMA)
  • Clinics ranked in quartiles based on various risk
    factors contact targets set

14
Delivery structure
15
Required services
  • Automation readiness assessments
  • Kick-off meeting with vendor, physician
  • Privacy impact assessment
  • Post-implementation review
  • Second round underway
  • Physician-led (Yea!)

16
Elective services
  • Workflow analysis
  • Total cost of ownership review
  • Improving computer literacy
  • Assistance with privacy impact assessment
  • Review of vendor quotes and contracts
  • Team building
  • Technology assessments
  • Project management
  • Demo clinics
  • Physician mentors

17
Business Requirements
  • Purpose
  • Documentation to support common understanding of
    clinics business requirements
  • When is it useful?
  • Ideally before the clinic starts talking to the
    vendors
  • What is it?
  • On-site meeting Field Resource and physicians
    and clinical staff representing all process areas
    of clinical operations
  • Document findings and recommendations

18
Business Requirements
  • Benefits
  • Gives the clinic representative(s) confidence
    when speaking to the vendors regarding clinics
    requirements
  • Comprehensive list of all business requirements
    broken down by mandatory, important, nice-to-have
  • Supports informed decisions when choosing
    software
  • Delivery
  • Typically 1 to 4 hours on-site plus documented
    findings
  • Often partnered with Workflow analysis or
    Technical Requirements

19
Business Requirements
SAMPLE
20
Ergonomics
  • Benefits
  • Identifies issues and practical actions
  • Supports informed decisions regarding
    improvements to the physical environment
  • Delivery
  • Typically 1 to 4 hours on-site
  • Valuable discussions when clinic rep available
    for walk through
  • Report may contain diagrams and photos

21
Ergonomics
  • Purpose
  • Assist clinic in planning changes to the physical
    work environment
  • When is it useful?
  • Clinic planning construction or furniture changes
    to coincide with new system
  • What is it?
  • Site inspection
  • Based on industry best practices
  • Document findings and recommendations

22
ErgonomicsAreas of consideration
  • Workersaccommodation for variations of size,
    strength, range of motion, and other physical
    characteristics
  • Work Settingparts, tools, furniture, displays,
    and other physical objects used to accomplish
    work tasks
  • Work Environmentclimate, lighting, noise,
    vibration, and other atmospheric conditions

23
Ergonomics
SAMPLE
24
Advanced Training
  • Purpose
  • To assist physicians and clinic staff in
    achieving greater utilization of the
    functionality within their physician office
    system.
  • When is it useful?
  • When physicians / clinic staff are struggling
    with basic utilization.
  • When physicians clinic staff are stable and want
    to take it to the next level.
  • What is it?
  • Financial assisted support for third-party or
    vendor supplied training not specified within
    their support agreement.

25
Advanced Training
  • Delivery
  • Onsite training provided by the vendor
  • Onsite physician mentoring
  • Off site training through a third-party
  • Potential Benefits
  • Increased comfort / satisfaction with automation
  • Increased efficiency throughout the office
  • Access to new information (e.g. population mgmt
    reports)

26
Technical Assessment
  • Purpose
  • Overview of clinics current technical status and
    recommendations for the clinics technical future
  • When is it useful?
  • Before the clinic starts talking to the vendors
    or when they are experiencing technical
    challenges
  • What is it?
  • On-site meeting Field Resource and key
    physicians and/or staff
  • Document findings and recommendations

27
Technical Assessment
  • Technical Assessment document includes
  • Observations current state of the clinic
  • Equip location current proposed with eye to
    new workflow
  • Network wiring/wireless existing plus
    constraints (i.e. cement walls, etc)
  • Server storage considerations
  • Hardware considerations re network, server, UPS,
    desktop/thin client/laptop, printing, scanning,
    etc
  • System Management Privacy considerations
  • Etc.

28
Technical Assessment
  • Benefits
  • Gives the clinic personnel a common understanding
    (and lexicon) of their existing technical
    environment and proposed future state
  • Supports informed decisions when choosing
    software and hardware
  • Delivery
  • Typically 1 to 4 hours on-site plus documented
    findings
  • Often partnered with Business Requirements or
    Workflow Analysis

29
Workflow
  • Purpose
  • Assess current workflow, identifying issues
    affecting current effectiveness,
  • Create a map of the ideal process and identify
    resources required to support the redesign
  • When is it useful?
  • First step, before vendor selection
  • Mature clinic looking to take performance to next
    level
  • Clinic stressed as result of poorly executed
    implementation
  • What is it?
  • Cross-functional workshop

30
Workflow
  • Benefits
  • Develops a shared understanding of operations and
    priorities
  • Identifies important product requirements
  • Promotes informed product selection
  • Prepares clinic to make implementation choices
  • Identifies business decisions that must be made
    e.g. staffing
  • Builds buy-in for the project
  • Delivery
  • As many staff and physicians as possible
  • Minimum one half day for workshops, may be
    several sessions

31
Workflow Current Processes
SAMPLE
32
Workflow Ideal Process
SAMPLE
33
Dispute Resolution
  • Purpose
  • Assist parties in resolving issues that are
    impeding success with automation.
  • When is it useful?
  • When a dispute is evident or when parties appear
    to be moving apart.
  • What is it?
  • Facilitated meeting(s) with key physicians,
    staff, vendors or other parties.

34
Dispute Resolution
  • Delivery
  • Facilitated meetings
  • Time extremely variable
  • Potential Benefits
  • All parties able to move forward

35
Program Results
36
Information sources
  • Operational data
  • Post-implementation reviews
  • Far more than surveyed during external evaluation
  • Matched with independent assessment by field
    resources
  • External evaluation of program delivery and
    impact of POSP on clinical outcomes
  • Baseline data collected (April/02 June/03)
  • On-line surveys and case studies
  • 2nd evaluation completed August 2005
  • Based on interviews (management consultant and
    physician teams) of statistically valid sample of
    POSP participants

37
Target market
  • Approximately 5,700 physicians in Alberta
  • Roughly 10 (552) are facility-based (e.g.,
    anesthesia, emergency medicine, general
    pathology)
  • Roughly 2/3 located in Calgary/Edmonton 1/3 in
    non-metro regions (NB re Supernet)
  • 67 are general practitioners, 33 specialists

38
Physician participation
  • As of August/06
  • 3,336 active participants (65 of eligible
    physician population)
  • Level 2 2,747 (83) Level 1.5 407 (12) and
    Level 1 182 (5) percentages relatively
    constant since start of Phase 2
  • 1074 clinics
  • 625 Level 2 physicians havent selected a vendor
    yet (18 of POSP population but most of these
    (430) are in large groups (e.g., Dept. of
    Medicine)
  • Physician retention high (88) to date

39
Results (cont.)
  • POSP participation to date matches population of
    Alberta physicians in terms of gender, age and,
    generally, specialty
  • Majority of physicians (83) are choosing Level 2
    Electronic Medical Record billing
    scheduling, integrated with provincial regional
    data
  • Physician participation in Calgary (32 of
    Calgary physician population) lags physician
    participation in Capital (41)
  • Due to greater functionality in Capital? Culture?
    Physician leaders?

40
Automation progress
41
Post-implementation reviews
  • of Phase 1, Level 2 physicians visited in
    Round 1 (856) meeting program outcomes re use
    of technology is high (80)

42
Post-implementation reviews - detail
43
Physician rating of value
44
Field resource assessment
45
External evaluation (Aug. 05)
  • Physicians are using office automation
  • Staff are using it too
  • Overall physician satisfaction with program is
    high
  • First in Canada leader world-wide results in
    Alberta quantum higher than in jurisdictions
    without a program

46
External evaluation (cont.)
  • Benefits of automation for physicians
  • Better information recall (readable, not lost)
  • Less wasted staff, physician time
  • Improved patient recall
  • Management of labs easier
  • Prescriptions, especially repeats, easier fewer
    pharmacy questions
  • Referral/consult letters easier, more complete
  • Patients like it
  • Improved quality of professional life

47
External evaluation (cont.)
  • Office processes have changed (whos behind Door
    1?)
  • Workflow altered but so far little in the way of
    staff savings
  • Note this is different for Phase 2 physicians
    where we encourage starting with workflow
    analysis prior to selection of a vendor/product
  • Productivity savings offset by
  • Learning new processes
  • Need to scan paper (solutions in sight)
  • Physician productivity has improved, but not
    significantly
  • Connectivity (clinical content) and basic
    computer skills are greatest needs expressed by
    physicians

48
External evaluation (cont.)
  • Vendor satisfaction is quite variable issues
    of
  • System crashes
  • Hardware-software compatibility
  • Software not robust enough
  • Software oriented to GPs not specialists
  • Inadequate support services
  • Perception that vendors oversold their products
  • Vendor community has not rationalized as
    anticipated
  • More vendors, larger international vendors,
    regional vendors

49
Evaluators conclusions
  • Keys to POSPs results
  • VCUR (mandated physician office system
    requirements)
  • Involving vendors
  • Allocating funding attention to change
    management
  • Tri-lateral involvement (Ministry, regions,
    physicians)
  • Clinical content
  • Active (coach/manager model) program management
    office

50
Program results
  • Grant funding increase implemented based on
    reference price review (2004)
  • Clinic site security/system management assessment
    completed
  • Well received by clinics
  • Serious areas of concern identified follow-up
    visits to at-risk clinics completed next round
    planned
  • Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) push complete,
    privacy compliance officer hired, funding
    suspended to incent compliance, mandatory PIA
    visit introduced
  • Net result compliance significantly improved 30
    to 88)

51
Program results
  • Clinical decision support summit February 2006
  • Definition and framework approved Quick wins
    identified
  • Getting the Most from Your EMR focus group in
    May, 2006
  • Procurement toolkit for physicians released
  • VCUR v2 complete product list released April
    18th - currently 12 vendors/26 apps.
  • Conversion of patient data content standard and
    messaging specification to enable physicians to
    switch systems
  • Major risk mitigation strategy for physicians
    having/wanting to change vendors
  • Emphasis on effective conformance testing

52
Learnings
53
Content
  • Clinical operational value in stand-alone
    EMR.value increases exponentially with EHR
    content
  • Prioritieslab, drugs, DI (text),
    referral/consultation
  • Physician preference for integration of core
    data
  • Concerns re data completeness need to be
    addressed
  • Look and feel important
  • Go slow re introduction of clinical decision
    support

54
Engagement processes
  • Need to address entire physician community
  • Physician-led outreach
  • Criteria-based selection of mentors
  • Ongoing analysis follow up
  • Enlist support of College
  • Financial support
  • Relationship-based, personalized, face-to-face
    service works best
  • Prompt and effective issue management
  • Use of traditional communication channels

55
Challenges
56
Challenges
  • Lab, drugs and DI
  • Not available yet province-wide
  • Delay in roll-out of integrated EHR/EMR solution
  • Program hiatus during negotiations
  • 2 negotiating priority for physicians
  • Wont go back to paper but will they evergreen?
  • Program management office concentrating on
    helping existing participants move to more
    effective use of technology
  • Post-48 month funding question
  • Approximately 1,200 physicians (gt1/3 of POSP
    participants) will hit the 48-month cap by
    November/06

57
Challenges
  • System management
  • How will this get done/ Where will ongoing
    support come from?
  • Increasing complexity of EHR world
  • Data integrity
  • End-to-end conformance testing
  • Data stewardship
  • Coordinating delivery of change management
    services
  • Regional solutions
  • Physician load
  • Access to high-speed bandwidth
  • Clinical decision support
  • Primary care networks
  • Nascent provincial IM/IT strategy

58
Testimonials
59
What the docs are saying
Now its so easy and so accessible to get the
information you need to make decisions on patient
care, it truly makes our job much easier and
makes patient care much better and safer. Dr.
Michael Chatenay, Surgeon
60
What the docs are saying
This is the way medicine is going and if you
don't go there, you'll miss out in a lot of the
exciting things that will be happening in
medicine. Dr Steve Edworthy, Rheumatologist
61
What the docs are saying
Within the next decade at least, I think it
will be the norm... if you're planning to stay in
practice, this is something you will need to
do. Dr Heidi Fell, Family Practitioner
62
What the docs are saying
All physicians have to do is call POSP and
they can be taken through everything they need to
start. Dr Norm Yee, Family Practitioner
63
What the docs are saying
Answering phone calls, chasing down requests
for tests that were done a week ago, we don't
have to do that... and that's been a real plus
for us. Dr Bill Anderson, Radiologist
64
Its about people, not technology
65
Thank You!Mary Gibsonmarygibson_at_shaw.ca(780)4
66-2613
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