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Maryland HIMSS Presents

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Title: Maryland HIMSS Presents


1
Maryland HIMSS Presents The Electronic Health
Record We Have the Data, Now What? April 25,
2008 Sheppard Pratt Conference Center The Use of
Clinical Data for Risk Management
Purposes Larry L. Smith, Vice President Risk
Management Services, MedStar Health
2
MedStar Health, Inc.
  • Beds
  • Total Licensed Beds.2,800
  • Annual net operating revenue.3.1 billion
  • Staff
  • Employees...25,000
  • Affiliated physicians...5,000
  • Patient Care
  • Annual inpatient admissions....158,000
  • Annual inpatient days.787,000
  • Annual outpatient visits..1,561,000
  • Annual home health visits.....208,000
  • Births, FY07.....11,100
  • MedStar Hospitals
  • Franklin Square Hospital
  • Georgetown University Hospital
  • Good Samaritan Hospital
  • Harbor Hospital
  • Montgomery General Hospital
  • National Rehabilitation Hospital
  • Union Memorial Hospital
  • Washington Hospital Center

3
In 2001 MedStars Risk Management Program
accepted a challenge from the Organization ..
4
The Challenge
  • Identify a system-wide Patient Safety Initiative
    that was
  • Data driven
  • Clinician driven
  • Able to demonstrate a measurable reduction in the
    number of patient injuries as well as the
    frequency and severity of professional liability
    claims insured through MedStars captive
    insurance company

5
To Get Started
  • We began by asking Simple Questions
  • What clinical specialty?
  • What conditions?
  • What causes?
  • What cost in patient injuries and dollars?

6
OB Low Hanging Fruit or Mission Impossible?
  • Findings from Ten-Year Retrospective Claims
    Review
  • OB accounted for 4 of clinical enterprise
  • OB claims accounted for 11 of professional
    liability claim frequency (48 out of 436 claims)
  • OB claims accounted for 31 of professional
    liability claim severity (21M out of 67M)

7
Typical Loss Profile OB is 40-50 of total paid
Source ERC Excess HPL Claims, closed 1999-2002
8
Professional Liability impact on the business of
Obstetrics
  • Vital community services are being threatened
  • Less Hospitals with OB services
  • Those keeping OB services are challenged with
    growing pains
  • Finding obstetrical services is becoming more and
    more difficult
  • Practicing Obstetricians are dropping obstetrics
    in their prime
  • The average age when Physician stop practicing OB
    is now down to 48 yrs
  • Does the future look any better?
  • Newly trained physicians are avoiding OB due to
    lifestyle and liability
  • Only 65 of residency training slots in
    obstetrics are filled by US medical grads,
    compared to 86 a decade ago
  • Drawing from the bottom 10 of resident pool,
    slots going unfilled

9
The Approach
  • We used the findings from the retrospective
    Claims Review Program to create a Burning
    Platform for change in obstetrical care

10
OB Risk Reduction Initiative
  • In September 2001 under the auspices of the VPMA
    Council and at the direction of the MedStar
    Board, the OB Risk Reduction Task Force was
    chartered to evaluate the causes and minimize the
    risk of avoidable patient injury in MedStars OB
    Labor and Delivery Units.

11
OB Risk Reduction Task Force
  • Charter
  • To produce measurable reduction in the number and
    cost of professional liability claims in OB
  • Goals
  • To identify specific risk reduction efforts that
    will produce a reduction in OB claim frequency
    and severity
  • To develop and successfully implement system-wide
    OB patient care and professional practice
    standards
  • To oversee and support the efforts at each
    MedStar hospital to attain compliance with
    standards established
  • Membership
  • OB Chairs
  • OB RN Directors

12
OB Claims Review
Represents 80 of the Injuries in our 48
Obstetric Claims during Loss Years 97-01
13
Studderts Research underway at Harvard also
suggests that the nature of Errors in
Obstetrical Liability cases is different Dispropo
rtionately more errors in OB are Cognitive in
nature rather than Technical
14
OB Risk Reduction Task Forces Initial
Achievements
  • Identified and addressed top ten risk issues
    through development of
  • Patient Care Standards
  • Oxytocin Guidelines
  • Standardized Electronic Fetal Monitoring
    Terminology
  • OB Simulation Program at each site
  • Captive funded educational programs for staff
    (RNs and MDs)
  • Changed culture of OB service across MedStar
    system to focus on Patient Safety
  • Gave Birth to system-wide Patient Safety
    initiatives across MedStar

15
OBRRTFs Development of Clinical Standards -
Good First Step
  • While development of system-wide standards and
    guidelines were a significant achievement,
    without a method to insure compliance, deviations
    were likely to occur resulting in patient
    injury
  • In early 2003 a catastrophic birth related injury
    resulting from multiple deviations from
    established standards and guidelines demonstrated
    the weakness in the traditional approach
  • Case was determined indefensible and settled
    early for 4M
  • Search began for a technology to support the
    consistent use of established clinical guidelines
    in delivering obstetrical care

16
IPROB(Intelligent Patient Record for Obstetrics)
  • IPROB was identified as the electronic system for
    the OB setting that satisfied the Committees two
    critical requirements
  • real time alerts to provide healthcare providers
    real time access to Standards of Care and
    Protocols and
  • reliable data to monitor and measure adherence to
    accepted Standards of Care and Clinical Protocols

17
What Really is Decision Support
  • Decision support is really just a reminder that
    the care for this patient has gone off track from
    an accepted standard.
  • Based on Best Practice Protocols
  • Relevant to the specific patient condition
  • Presented to the clinician In real time
  • With a continuous feedback loop of reevaluation
    with every new piece of information entered
  • Priority of each item takes into consideration
    what is most urgent to address at the present
    time

18
Illustration EMR without Decision Support
Like driving on a treacherous road without any
guardrails
Compliance with documentation in electronic
medical records is very low when the reminders
for documentation completeness are
deactivated Haberman et al Obstetrics and
Gynecology July 2007
19
With Decision Support -Escalating Levels of
Protection
Level one drive within the lines visual cues
and soft reminders
Level two rumble strip noisier/ repeated
reminders and escalation
Level three firm barrier of protection Pass only
with an explanation
20
Example Level One Flag Essential
documentation missing from chart
21
Example Level 2 Flag Real time context
sensitive actions with Rationale
22
  • Example Level 3 Flag
  • Contraindication
  • Options
  • Cancel
  • Confirm with explanation

23
Partnership between Technology and OB Care
Key Success Factors
Process Protocol Buy-in Workflow
Customization Ongoing Commitment To Improvement
People Ease of Use Culture of Safety Leadership
Support Feedback
Technology Services Regular Clinical Version
Updates Provision of Reports and
Dashboards Sharing Best Practices Bad Outcome
Case Evaluations
24
Commitment to Continuous Improvement with a
Technology catalyst
  • Error Reduction Experience
  • Case Review Experience
  • User Behavior Analyses
  • Experience with Escalated Prompting Mechanisms

ü
ü
ü
  • Practice Based Evidence
  • Collaborative Best Practice Protocols
  • Collaborative Feedback
  • Collaborative Enhancements
  • Evidence Based Medicine/ Standards of Care
  • Recognized Authorities Guidelines/Requirements
  • Professional Literature

ü
Idealized Care Model
ü
ü
ü
ü
  • Knowledgebase Refinement
  • Prompting sensitivity/specificity
  • New Features
  • User behavior reinforcement

ü
ü
ü
25
Improving Quality Measures with IPROB
Four Key Quality Measures were targeted for
improvement using the CAM mechanism
25 Improvement Sustained over time
CAM Intervention initiated 06/05
CAM Compliance Adherence Mechanism
26
Error Prevention/ Near Misses/Good Catches
Q1 2007
Items Not Ordered associated with a
Contraindication
Actions/Decisions/Orders Not ordered, while
starting to place an order for a contraindicated
order, by clicking the Cancel button
175 instances during 629 births (1 per 3.6
births)
27
Early RM awareness and PI support
  • Example List of Reports
  • Trigger Reports such as IHI
  • AOI index
  • Detailed Select Case Analysis

28
Converting Future Savings into Current Dollars
  • The Challenge
  • Develop a methodology supportable by our
    actuaries and auditors to quantify the potential
    of future savings in order to justify an up-front
    investment of current capital and operating
    dollars

29
Developing a Business Case for Acquiring IPROB
  • Simulated use of the IPROB System on the OB claim
    settled for 4M
  • Compared retrospective expert reviews to IPROBs
    electronic responses regarding the care provided
    in this case
  • The IPROBs prompts mirrored the findings of the
    expert reviews
  • Each identified the critical clinical issues at
    the time they occurred (e.g., non-reassuring
    fetal heart patterns, inappropriate use of
    Pitocin, failure to discontinue use of Pitocin
    and failure to notify the physician)
  • Conclusion
  • Had IPROB been in use, and used as designed,
    injury would have been avoided

30
Monetizing the System-wide OB Initiative
  • MedStars OB clinicians, risk/claims managers and
    captives actuary collaborated to develop a
    model to assess the potential financial impact of
    using of system-wide Standards of Care reinforced
    by the use of the IPROB

31
We found the money!
  • The underlying clinical care involved in the
    prior ten years of OB claims were reviewed by a
    senior OB physician
  • Analysis assumed that IPROB had been in use
    during this ten-year period
  • Physician was asked to evaluate whether the use
    of the IPROB would have improved the outcome and
    avoided or lessened the liability in each case
    reviewed
  • Based on this analysis, the captives actuary
    concluded that it was reasonable to assume that
    the use of IPROB over this ten-year period would
    have resulted in a significantly lower OB
    liability
  • Had MedStars claim history included this lower
    liability- the funding of MedStars captive would
    have been reduced by 2M annually, representing
    10 of total captive premium at the time.

32
Malpractice ROICumulative Direct Financial
Impact of IPRob
First year of Positive Cash Flow
ROI Positive
.444 M
.039 M
(.332 M)
(.777M)
(1.226M)
FY 04
FY 05
FY 06
FY 07
FY 08
33
Loss Years1997 2001Pre OBRRTF Valued as of
6/30/01
Losses Pre and Post IPROB
Loss Years1/1/05-6/30/07Post IPRob Valued as
of 6/30/07
Loss Years2002 2007Post OBRRTF Valued as of
6/30/07
Loss Years1997 2001Pre OBRRTF Valued as of
6/30/07
Frequency and Severity
34
Focus On What You Can Control
  • Focus on better outcomes
  • Commit to quality
  • Actively engage in loss prevention
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