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Sharon E. Mace MD, FACEP, FAAP

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Observation Medicine Strategies: A Clinical Approach Tips for Success or Failure Sharon E. Mace MD, FACEP, FAAP Director, Observation Unit Director, Pediatric ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sharon E. Mace MD, FACEP, FAAP


1
Observation Medicine StrategiesA Clinical
ApproachTips for Success or Failure
  • Sharon E. Mace MD, FACEP, FAAP
  • Director, Observation Unit
  • Director, Pediatric Education/Quality Improvement
  • Research Director, Rapid Response Team Cleveland
    Clinic
  • Former Chair, ACEP Section of Observation
    Medicine
  • Faculty, EM Residency, MetroHealth Medical
    Center/Cleveland Clinic
  • Professor, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of
    Medicine at Case Western
    Reserve University

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Number of Hospitals, Hospital Beds and EDs vs ED
Visits
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Purpose ofObservation Medicine
  • Allows physicians to evaluate and treat selected
    patients over a finite time period which
    improves ED flow and has many benefits

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What Is Observation?
  • While there are different interpretations, for
    Medicare from HIM-10 455 (Pub. 100-2,Medicare
    Benefits Policy Manual, Chapter 6, 70.4)
  • Observation services are those services
  • (a) Furnished on a hospitals premises
  • (b) Includes use of a bed and periodic monitoring
    by nursing or other staff
  • (c) Reasonable and necessary
  • (d) To evaluate an outpatients condition
  • (e) Determine the need for possible admission as
    an inpatient
  • (f) Ordered by physician
  • (g) Usually do not exceed one day
  • (h) May go for up to 48 hours
  • (i) Under unusual circumstances may exceed 48
    hours

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Why Observation Medicine
  • Better patient care
  • ? missed diagnoses
  • Cost effective
  • Rapid, efficient, evaluation / work-ups and
    treatment
  • Risk management and malpractice, ? liability
  • Psychosocial advantages
  • Fiscal benefits
  • Provided there are mechanisms for Observation
    Unit (OU) set up / maintenance
  • OM is a process and a mindset, not a location

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Organizational Framework
  • Patient criteria inclusion, exclusion, OU
    management, specific time frame
  • Personnel clinical and administrative
  • Resources location, equipment, supplies
  • Specific policies and procedures
  • Strong leadership empowered to clinically and
    administratively manage the OU
  • Using policies, procedures, guidelines, clinical
    pathways, order sets, other tools
  • Multidisciplinary teamwork approach / meetings

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Admission Criteria for Observation
  • Stable vital signs
  • Non-critical, stable, low maintenance
  • Do not need intensive nursing care
  • Do not need intensive physician care
  • Expected to have a disposition in a reasonable
    short time frame observation, diagnosis,
    treatment for lt 24 hours

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Acceptable Diagnoses for Observation
  • Cardiac chest pain, CHF, syncope
  • Respiratory illnesses asthma, pneumonia
  • not acceptable respiratory failure,
    epiglottitis, severe hypoxemia, hypercapnia
  • GI / dehydration gastritis, vomiting, diarrhea
  • not acceptable shock
  • GU kidney stone
  • not acceptable obstruction with renal failure

May want to start with chest pain
ensure success, then expand
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Acceptable Diagnoses for Observation
  • Infections cellulitis, lymphangitis
  • Neurology seizures, viral meningitis, minor
    head injury
  • Toxicology ingestions, overdose
  • Hematologic sickle cell, hemophilia
  • Chronic illnesses DM ? glucose (not DKA)
  • S/p procedures oversedated, s/p LP etc.

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Patient Exclusion for Observation
  • Critically ill
  • Unstable vital signs
  • Need intensive nursing care
  • Need intensive physician care
  • Anticipated length of stay gt 24 hours

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Unacceptable Diagnoses for Observation
  • Shock
  • Coma
  • Respiratory failure
  • Bacterial Meningitis
  • Neutropenic fever
  • Critically ill

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Advantages of ObservationPrimary Care,
Specialists
  • Expands patient base
  • ? referrals, ? office visits, ? procedures, ?
    admits
  • Easier to coordinate care
  • Better, faster evaluation
  • Improved MD profile
  • Clinical pathways
  • Quality, cost containment
  • ACOs
  • Disease management
  • Variation reduction
  • Other initiatives

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Advantages of ObservationHospital
  • New product line
  • Expanded referral base
  • Better use of services at ? cost
  • ? lengthy inpatient admits
  • ? trend outpatient services
  • ? outliers 1 day LOS
  • PEPPER report

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Healthcare in Crisis
  • The 2.2 trillion healthcare sector is now mired
    in deep crisis related to safety, quality, cost
    and access that pose serious threats to the
    health and welfare of many Americans1
  • An estimated 30 to 40 cents of every dollar spent
    on health care, or roughly three quarters of a
    trillion dollars per year is spent on costs
    associated with overuse, underuse, misuse,
    duplication, system failures, unnecessary
    repetition, poor communication, and
    inefficiency 2
  • 1 CMS
  • 2 Lawrence National Academy Press

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Per Capita Medicare Spending Regional Variations
Congressional Budget Office. Research on
Comparative Effectiveness of Medical Treatments.
2008
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CMS Value BasedPurchasing Plan
  • Clinical quality
  • Adverse events
  • Patient safety
  • Patient centeredness
  • Avoid unnecessary costs
  • Investment in structural/system components
    IT capability, care management
    processes/tools
  • Consumer driven Performance results/Transparency

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Success Depends Upon
  • Prompt physician decision making
  • Excellent documentation
  • Empowered observation nursing staff
  • Superb coding ? ? reimbursement
  • Strong physician leadership
  • Administrative support
  • Buy in from other hospital departments,
    physicians, health care providers
  • Tools for success
  • Policies and procedures includes
    inclusion/exclusion criteria, evaluation,
    treatment, disposition plan
  • Guidelines, clinical pathways

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How to Succeed or Fail at Observation Medicine
Observation Medicine
Success
Time (Length of Stay)
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Observation Success
  • Major benefits
  • Easiest way to build beds
  • ? revenue per bed
  • ? labor costs/RN ratio
  • ? exposure to risk
  • ? quality
  • ? patient satisfaction
  • ? cost

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Observation Advantages
  • Improved patient care ? missed diagnosis /
    severity
  • Improved patient outcome
  • ? risk, ? malpractice
  • ? ED patient throughput, ? ED LOS
  • ? patient satisfaction
  • Better public relations
  • ? ED volume
  • Financial ? revenue, ? denials, ? penalties

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Recovery Audit Contractors (RAC)
  • Private corporations under contract via
    contingency to CMS
  • Review all claims submitted by Medicare providers
    in order to prevent overpayments/underpayments
  • Akin to a whistle blower or bounty hunter
  • Focus high-risk DRGs, 1 day stay, observation

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United States Department of Justice
  • Marcos Daniel Jimininez
  • United States Attorney for the Southern District
    of Florida
  • 99 N.E. Fourth Street, Miami, Fl. 33132
  • Press Release
  • For Immediate Release Feb.11, 2005
  • For information, contact public affairs
  • Carlos B. Castillos
  • Special counsel for public affairs
  • (305) 961-9425
  • Cleveland Clinic pays U.S. 2.75 million

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