1 / 33

Progress on the Surgical Care Improvement Project SCIP Special Study: The Unique Role of a Surgeon Organization

SCIP Special Study

dierdra
Télécharger la présentation

Progress on the Surgical Care Improvement Project SCIP Special Study: The Unique Role of a Surgeon Organization

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Progress on the Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) Special Study: The Unique Role of a Surgeon Organization and

    2. SCIP Special Study From Surgical Infection Prevention (SIP) to SCIP Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) contract awarded to: Kentucky Medicare Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) Ohio Medicare QIO

    3. SCIP Special Study continued Subcontracts: Kentucky Medicare QIO with Quality Surgical Solutions Ohio Medicare QIO with Oklahoma Medicare QIO

    4. Quality Surgical Solutions (QSS) A surgeon organization whose mission is to improve quality and decrease costs of surgical care

    5. QSSAdded Value to SCIP Surgical quality expertise Surgical research and practice expertise Practiced, accomplished leadership Surgeon network Hospital recruitment and commitment Access to surgeon data on hospital case abstracted data

    6. Building Physician Consensus Growing awareness of quality movement Quality is more than the avoidance of error Surgeons curiously excluded and/or non-participants in much work to date

    7. Scene Setting To Err is Human* and Crossing the Quality Chasm** Fundamental conflict with extreme risks and/or anxiety about professional liability issues Relative success with SIP Promise of reassertion of physician leadership

    8. KentuckyA Favorable Platform for Special Study University of Kentucky Medical Center (UKMC) alpha test site for National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP/VA) Early quality initiatives at Norton Hospital Quality Surgical Solutions Health Care Excel of Kentucky

    9. What is QSS? 66 surgical specialists 15 hospitals 12 cities 2 health plans 43 protocols/current procedural technology (CPT) codes BETTER PRACTICES

    10. Specialties Represented in QSS General surgery to include trauma, digestive, vascular, colorectal, oncology, endoscopy Orthopedic, otolaryngologic, urologic, gynecologic surgery

    11. Fundamental Hypotheses Better quality surgical care is associated with reduced direct and overall expenses Physicianled initiatives work Commitment to prove concepts and ethically reward its doctors Only effective public role is that of patient advocate

    12. Record of Achievement Locally Confidentiality of data Prompt spread of agreed upon goals Surgeons more prone to emulate other surgeons

    13. Create an Environment of Transformational Change Innovate, report, refine, publish Quality Improvement Conference Value of the near miss and the praise of heroes and heroines Examine routine and/or outdated printed orders

    14. Personal Role Generally Helpful Accept secondary and tertiary referrals without pain Longstanding commitment to surgical excellence Trained (partly or fully) many of Kentuckys surgical specialists Halo effect of QSS and having discussed it with hundreds of surgeons and administrative leaders Personalized letters seeking surgeon support for SCIP through their hospitals

    15. Which Six and Why? A Lap GB D CABG/valve B Hysterectomy E CR resections C Major vascular F Total Knee/Hip ____________________________________ Not limited to Medicare beneficiaries Primarily large volume hospitals Significant complications and death

    16. Recruitment for SCIP Pilot Group meetings for potential hospital participants and often their surgical specialists Follow-up meetings, letters, and telephone calls Recognition of the impact of current data submissions with invisible or meaningless feedback

    17. Conference Calls Interest groups for each procedure Lewis, Garrison, Polk, Van Vlack, and 2-5 specialists for the procedure Prolonged sessions Physicians very knowledgeable of current literature Immediate agreement on process measures and feedback

    18. Detailed Development of QSS Involvement Laborious development of doctor report forms Alpha test of forms Surgeon-leader reports Begin to match hospital and surgeon reports Broad-based educationlaboratory for student success (LSS), grand rounds, collaboratives

    19. An Overview Hospital contributions - Multiple procedures and surgeons Honest sampling Detailed, accurate abstraction - Tremendous enthusiasm Surgeon contributions - Pre- and postop data Detailed outcomes Documentation of patient education

    20. Unique Opportunity to Match Hospital and Physician Reporting More complete outcomes Validation of accuracy for both methods of reporting Consolidate surgeon and hospital performance into homogenous profile of quality

    21. Patient Education Far better done in surgical specialists officeshow to document and promulgate How can we quantitate and then assess quality? Discussion

    22. Atmosphere that Promotes Patient Safety Near miss and specific praise for the hero or heroine Value of the process that targets the very rare disaster The analogy between a plane crash and a pulmonary embolusprophylaxis of the latter carries both risks and costs

    23. We have achieved our goals in reining in the professional liability dragon. Physicians must now take the lead in identifying and solving problems of patient safety. We are now more protected than ever and can be the patient advocate we all want to be. Allow doctors to clearly identify methods that provide improved quality. June, 2004 G.E. McGee, M.D., FACS

    24. Peer-Reviewed Publications Allen JW, DeSimone KJ. Valid peer review for surgeons working in small hospitals. Am J Surg 2002;184:16-18. Allen JW, Hahm TX, Polk HC Jr. Surgeon-led initiatives cut costs and enhance the quality of endoscopic and laparoscopic procedures. J Soc Laparosc Surg 2003;7:243-247. Galandiuk S, Rao MK, Heine MJ, et al. Mutual reporting of process and outcomes enhances quality outcomes for colon and rectal surgery. Surgery 2004; 136:833-841. [Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Central Surgical Association, March 2004]. McCafferty MH, Polk HC Jr. Addition of near-miss cases enhances a quality improvement conference. Arch Surg 2004;139:216-217. Shively EH, Heine MJ, Schell R, et al. Practicing surgeons lead in quality care, safety, and cost control. Ann Surg 2004;239:752-762 [Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Surgical Association, 2003]. Galandiuk S, Carter MB, Abby M, eds. When to Refer to a Surgeon. St. Louis, MO: Quality Medical Publishing, 2001.

    25. A multifaceted endeavor with the ultimate goal of significantly improving surgical care in the United States through the prevention of complications associated with surgery

    27. The Elements of SCIP The Partnership The Program The Pilot

    28. The SCIP Partnership A coalition of organizations interested in: the improvement of surgical care through the reduction of post-operative complications the development of performance measures and a data collection tool

    29. SCIP Partners Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) American College of Surgeons (ACS) American Hospital Association (AHA) American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN)

    30. SCIP Partners continued Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

    31. The SCIP Program Technical elements, consisting of process measures (including specifications), outcome measures (including appropriate risk adjustment methods), and the SPOT database and electronic data collection tool

    32. The SCIP Pilot A Medicare demonstration pilot designed to assess the feasibility of engaging private sector hospitals to reduce the incidence of post-operative morbidity and mortality

    33. Where Do We Go From Here? Completion of pilot data collection Final reports Finalization of performance measures for 8th SoW National rollout

    34. For more information Visit the National SCIP Web site http://www.medqic.org/scip Contact the Kentucky Medicare QIO kyscip@kyqio.sdps.org (800) 300-8190 Contact Quality Surgical Solutions http://www.qualitysurgical.com (502) 583-7579

More Related