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Joint Commission Blood Management Performance Measures

Joint Commission Blood Management Performance Measures. Mark T. Lucas, MPS, CCP Joint Commission Technical Advisory Panel Blood Management Performance Measures Project. The Joint Commission.

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Joint Commission Blood Management Performance Measures

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  1. Joint Commission Blood Management Performance Measures Mark T. Lucas, MPS, CCP Joint Commission Technical Advisory Panel Blood Management Performance Measures Project

  2. The Joint Commission • "To continuously improve health care for the public, in collaboration with other stakeholders, by evaluating health care organizations and inspiring them to excel in providing safe and effective care of the highest quality and value“ • The Joint Commission accredits over 19,000 health care organizations and programs in the United States. • 400+ programs internationally. • Centers for Medicare Services recognize Joint Commission accreditation as a condition of licensure and the receipt of Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement.

  3. History of The Joint Commission • 1951 – ACP, AHA, AMA, CMA join with ACS to create the Joint Commission, an independent, not-for-profit organization whose primary purpose is to provide voluntary accreditation of hospitals on minimum standards for patient safety and efficacy of treatment. • 1953 - JC published Standards for Hospital Accreditation • 1965 – Congress passes the Social Security Amendments, stating that hospitals who meet JC standards can participate in Medicare and Medicaid programs.

  4. History of The Joint Commission • 1995 – Federal Government recognizes Joint Commission laboratory accreditation services as meeting CLIA 1988 requirements. • 1997 – JC introduces ORYX to integrate outcomes and performance measures into accreditation. • 2003 National Patient Safety Goals are instituted. • 2005 – JC goes global. WHO recognition.

  5. History of The Joint Commission • 2007 – JC launches VAD Certification Program for destination therapy • 2007 JC says “Hospitals go smoke free” • 2007 Blood Management becomes important as a means of reducing unnecessary transfusions and costs

  6. JC is coming!!!!!

  7. The Joint Commission • Standardized performance measures • NQF endorsed • Inpatient hospital care • Required for accreditation since 2002 • Shared with Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (mostly) • Currently 10 sets • More in development

  8. Performance Measures Indicators, statistics, or metrics that are used to gauge the performance of an activity, process, or operating entity. Performance measures are also the reference markers used to measure whether a goal is being achieved • Patient decision-making based on data and scientific evidence. • The results demonstrate improvements in health care quality and patient safety.

  9. Joint Commission Standards Standards address the organization’s level of performance in key functional areas Standards set forth performance expectations for activities that affect the safety and quality of patient care The Joint Commission develops its standards in consultation with health care experts, providers, measurement experts, purchasers, and consumers

  10. Transfusions in the United States 80,000 transfusion decisions occur each day U.S. txfs 44% more blood than Europe and Canada Variability in txfsn practice, inadequate training in txfsn medicine, no standards for tx. Rising costs of healthcare, blood products New evidence for safety of blood txfsn Importance and utility of blood management to reduce cost and promote effective use of resources

  11. Joint Commission • All the variability in transfusion practices shows "there is both excessive and inappropriate use of blood transfusions in the U.S.," advisers to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius concluded earlier this month. "Improvements in rational use of blood have lagged."

  12. Stakeholder Panel Meeting - February 5, 2007 • Stakeholders Meeting at Joint Commission in Chicago • Feasibility and utility of developing a set of blood management performance measures • Unrestricted educational grant from Bayer Healthcare Pharmaceuticals Objectives: • Investigate the current state of blood management practices • Review evidence-based studies, clinical guidelines and performance measures for use in improving blood management practices • Establish the need and desire for standardized performance measures focused on blood management

  13. Stakeholder Organizations • National Partnership for Women and Families • Society of Thoracic Surgeons • Cleveland Clinic • Department of Health and Human Services • American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons • American Association of Blood Banks • Food and Drug Administration • American College of Surgeons • American Society of Hematology • American Society of Anesthesiology • National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute • American Nurses Association • Society for Critical Care Medicine • American Red Cross • Society for the Advancement of Blood Management • Office of Blood Research and Review

  14. David J. Ballard, MD, MSPH, PhD, FACP, Co-chair Neil Bangs, MS, MT (ASCP) SBB Richard J. Benjamin, MD, PhD, FRCPath, MS Laurence Bilfield, MD Victor A. Ferraris, MD, PhD John Freedman, MD, FPCPC Jonathan C. Goldsmith, MD Lawrence Tim Goodnough, MD Penny S. Gozia, MD, MBA Jerry Holmberg, PhD, MT (ASCP), SBB Jonathan H. Waters, MD, Co-chair Harvey Klein, MD Mark T. Lucas, MPS, RCS, CCP Vijay K. Maker, MD, FACCS John (Jeffrey) McCullough, MD AryehShander, MD, FCCM, FCCP Bruce D. Spiess, MD, FAHA Lynne, Uhl, MD Jeffrey Wagner, BSN, RN Rosalyn Yomatovian, MD Technical Advisory Panel

  15. The Gathering

  16. Panel Discussion

  17. PBM Development • Over 68 candidate measures considered by technical advisory panel (TAP) • 19 measures selected for public comment • 10 measures underwent alpha testing • 7 measures selected for pilot testing

  18. Draft Measures for Alpha Testa a 8 of the measure populations would be determined based on medical record documentation of transfusion ICD-9-CM procedure codes (eg, 99.02, 99.04, etc).

  19. Final 7 Measures • BM-1 Informed Consent • BM-2 RBC Transfusion Indication • BM-3 Plasma Transfusion indication • BM-4a Platelet Transfusion Indication • BM-4b Prophylactic Platelet Transfusion Indication • BM-5 Blood administration documentation • BM-6 Preoperative Anemia Screening • BM-7 Preoperative Blood Type Testing and Antibody Screening

  20. Transfusion Consent • Numerator: Patients with a signed consent who received information about the risks, benefits and alternatives prior to the initial blood transfusion or the initial transfusion was deemed a medical emergency • Denominator: Patients of all ages who received red blood cell, plasma or platelet transfusions

  21. Transfusion Consent Rationale • The rate of transfusion consent in the US is unknown • Studies in other countries showed there is poor documentation and room for improvement • Involving patients in healthcare decisions is a national priority

  22. Transfusion Consent Data Elements • Transfusion Consent • Information Addressed Risks, Benefits and Alternatives to transfusion

  23. Transfusion Alternatives • Preoperative Period • Erythropoietin • Androgens • Iron, folate, B12 supplements • Avoidance of anticoagulant drugs • NSAIDS • Herbal supplements • Antiplatelet drugs • Heparin/warfarin • Intraoperative Period • Normovolemichemodilution • Cell salvage • Adjuncts • Point of care testing • Microsampling • Drug therapy • desmopressin • ε-aminocaproic acid • recombinant factor VIIa • Deliberate hypotension • Maintenance of normothermia • Avoidance of normal saline • Appropriate positioning • Postoperative Period • Washed or unwashed cell salvage • Erythropoietin/Iron • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy • Minimize phlebotomy

  24. RBC Transfusion Indication N:Number of RBC transfusion units with pre-transfusion hemoglobin or hematocrit and clinical indication documented D:Number of red blood cell transfusion units evaluated

  25. RBC Indication Rationale • The rate of RBC transfusions in US hospitals is unknown • Promotes a standardized process of: • checking a lab result prior to each transfusion • documentation of a reason why blood was transfused • Information about total blood use could be used to determine benchmarks by diagnoses or procedure

  26. RBC Data Elements • Clinical Indication for RBCs • Pre-transfusion Hemoglobin/hematocrit Result • RBC ID • Trauma patients excluded • RBC unit exclusions

  27. Plasma Transfusion Indication N:Number of plasma transfusion units with pre-transfusion laboratory value AND clinical indication documented D:Number of plasma units evaluated Trauma patients excluded

  28. Plasma Rationale • The rate of plasma transfused in the US hospitals is unknown • Promotes a standardized process of: • checking a lab result prior to transfusion • documentation of a reason why blood was transfused • STS recommends transfusion based on bleeding and preferably guided by POC tests (Grade C, Class IIa)

  29. Plasma Data Elements • Clinical Indication for Plasma • Pre-transfusion Laboratory Testing • Plasma ID

  30. Platelet Transfusion Indication N:Number of platelet transfusion units with pre-transfusion platelet testing AND clinical indication documented D:Number of platelet units evaluated Trauma patients excluded

  31. Platelet Rationale • The rate of platelets transfused in the US hospitals is unknown • Transfusion of platelets associated with adverse events • Promotes a standardized process of: • checking a lab result prior to transfusion • documentation of a reason why platelets were transfused

  32. Platelet Data Elements • Platelet Clinical Indication • Pre-transfusion Platelet Testing • Platelet ID

  33. Blood Administration Documentation N:Number of transfusion units (bags) or doses with documentation for all of the following: • patient identification and transfusion order (or Blood ID) confirmed prior to the initiation of transfusion • date and time of transfusion • blood pressure, (pulse) and temperature recorded pre, during and post transfusion D:Number of red blood cells, plasma and platelet units or doses evaluated

  34. Blood Administration Rationale • Majority of blood is transfused in hospitals • Numerous errors are associated with incorrect Patient ID • The transfusion process is very complex and has been identified as a high-risk area for error • Standardizing the process will enable reliable tracking of potential adverse events nationally

  35. Administration Data Elements • Patient ID Verification • Transfusion Order • Transfusion Start Date • Transfusion Start Time • Vital Sign Monitoring • Blood ID Number Note: Patients with trauma codes or RBC unit exclusions are not in this measure

  36. Preoperative Anemia Screening N:Patients with preoperative anemia screening 14 - 45 days before Anesthesia Start Date D:Selected elective surgical patients Cardiac patients removed

  37. Anemia Screening Rationale • Preoperative anemia is associated with increased morbidity and mortality • A national audit found that 35% of patients scheduled for joint replacement therapy had a hgb <13 at preadmission testing • Formal protocols for early detection, evaluation and management of high-blood loss surgeries has been identified as an unmet need

  38. Anemia Screening Data Elements • Preoperative Anemia Screening Result Date • Reasons for No Preoperative Anemia Screening • Point of Origin for Admission or Visit

  39. Preoperative Blood Type Screening N:Patients with preoperative type and screen or type and crossmatch completed prior to Surgery Start Time Anesthesia Start Time D:Selected elective surgical patients

  40. Blood Type Testing Rationale • This measure is supported by the Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goal • Patient safety is a national priority • This issue affects the majority of hospitals and other high-blood use procedures

  41. Blood Type Testing Data Elements • Preoperative Blood Type Testing • Blood Type Testing Ordered

  42. Lessons learned… • Measuring blood transfusions and associated processes would enable hospitals to identify areas for improvement • Optimizing a patient’s hemoglobin level before surgery may result in less blood use during and after surgery • Checking to make sure blood is available before surgery (if ordered) is in the patient’s and hospital’s best interest

  43. Lessons learned… • These are general measures that collect data on all patients that can be further analyzed by diagnoses and/or procedure code, age group or appropriateness as studies become available • There is a lack of literature regarding “gaps in care” that these measures address • The lack of national guidelines for blood – impacts the ability to standardize clinical indications

  44. Lessons learned… • The abstraction burden for these measures using paper-based records is • Complete data on all transfusions could be collected by eMeasures with minimal effort and provide comprehensive data on product usage and benchmarking • Some of the measures are similar to the measures collected in Australia

  45. Final Lessons Learned… • Use of these measures could be used in conjunction with the hemovigilance measures on transfusion related events • If the rate of blood transfusions in hospitals is unknown, how will outcomes be monitored?

  46. Next Steps • Measures have been placed in The Joint Commission’s Library of Other Measures for use by anyone interested • Encourage use of the PBM measures at the local level • Funding pending for retooling the specifications for retrieval from the electronic medical record

  47. PBM Data Collection

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