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Project RED Re-Engineering Discharge

Project RED Re-Engineering Discharge. Faculty from Joint Commission Resources Deborah M. Nadzam, PhD, BB, FAAN Susan Whitehurst, MSN, MBB. Project RED: Module 1. Preparation for the redesign of your discharge process. Re-engineering Discharge.

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Project RED Re-Engineering Discharge

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  1. Project REDRe-Engineering Discharge Faculty from Joint Commission Resources Deborah M. Nadzam, PhD, BB, FAAN Susan Whitehurst, MSN, MBB

  2. Project RED: Module 1 Preparation for the redesign of your discharge process

  3. Re-engineering Discharge • The goal of the AHRQ- funded project is to help participating hospitals across the country improve the discharge process to assist patients more safely care for themselves at home and to prevent readmissions

  4. Module I Outline • Course Overview Modules 1-4 • Planning your project • Project RED components

  5. Discharge Planning Discharge Order Written H & P Rx Plan Patient Admission Discharge Event Discharge Process PATIENT EDUCATION DISCHARGE INSTRUCTIONS Post-D/C Follow-up

  6. Module 1: Getting Started!Objectives • Identify organizational strategic priorities that will align with local, regional and national requirements • Develop a systematic performance improvement process to facilitate knowledge transfer and sustainable change • Review the roles of executive sponsor, project team leader, discharge advocate, physician champion and pharmacist in the redesigned discharge process • Develop an understanding of Project RED’s 11 components

  7. Course Overview Modules 1- 4 • Module 1 – Getting Started! • Module 2 – Patient Admission Care and Treatment • Module 3 – Patient Discharge and Follow Up Care • Module 4 - The Hospital Launch

  8. Principles of the Newly Re-Engineered Hospital Discharge Explicit delineation of roles and responsibilities Discharge process initiation upon admission Patient education throughout hospitalization Timely accurate information flow: From PCP ► Among Hospital team ► Back to PCP Complete patient discharge summary prior to discharge

  9. Principles of the Newly Re-Engineered Hospital Discharge (continued) Comprehensive written discharge plan provided to patient prior to discharge Discharge information in patient’s language and literacy level Reinforcement of plan with patient after discharge Availability of case management staffoutside of limited daytime hours Continuous quality improvement of discharge processes

  10. Re-engineered Discharge

  11. Performance Improvement Structure Deming, Shewhart, Lean Lean Six Sigma DEFINE MEASURE ANALYZE IMPROVE CONTROL • PLAN • DO • CHECK (STUDY) • ACT

  12. Determine Your Infrastructure OversightCommittee Champions Project Teams

  13. Project RED Oversight “Steering” Committee Vision Mandate Improvement Identify Champions Receive and Review Updates

  14. Selecting the Right Projects Aligned to core hospital-wide strategies Standardized project metrics will roll up to organization’s balanced scorecard Contain a manageable scope Address customer and stakeholder needs Create sustainable improvement

  15. Emphasize Process, Focus on Results • What really matters to the organization? – achieve bottom line results • Can we measure the impact of the project? • How much has the project contributed this year and will contribute in future years?

  16. Project Champion Communicates the Vision Selects Project & Scope Selects Candidates for Training Reviews Projects Weekly Removes Barriers and Supplies Resources

  17. The Project Team

  18. Project Team Leader • Becomes educated in PI tools • Is a competent and confident facilitator • Is objective and neutral to the process • Facilitates an organized plan for the team • Is results focused

  19. Project Physician Champion • Communicates with Senior leaders • Communicates with Medical Staff • Provides physician perspective to the project team • Assists in the elimination of system barriers • For Project RED – believes in the intervention and value of improving discharge program

  20. Discharge Advocate • Designed to oversee patient discharge preparation • Coordinates all discharge activities within patient population • Facilitates team activities and discharge planning rounds with primary MD • Collects discharge focused data • Assures completion of AHCP and demonstrated learning by the patient

  21. Discharge Advocate (DA) • Is notified when patients in target population are admitted/diagnosed • Initiates action steps associated with Project RED • Initiates Patient Care Plan • Educates patient and family about condition, medications , other treatments, post discharge plans, and follow up ordered by the physician • Reviews Patient Care Plan with patient and family • Collects measurement data specific to project and patient population

  22. Patient’s Physician • Initiates patient plan of care based on critical pathway • Leads and/or participates in discharge planning rounds • Communicates potential date of discharge • Supports the performance improvement process

  23. Pharmacist • Verify physician orders • Reconcile admission meds with meds from home • Collaborate with care team specific to discharge needs • Reconcile meds upon discharge • Assist with patient medication questions

  24. As a team, consider the following questions: • Is our project scope manageable? • Do we have PI structure including oversight steering committee, project champion, DA, Pharmacist, team members , team leader, scheduled dates, times and resources needed for the meetings? • Have we alerted ad hoc resources such as finance, medical records, IT, education dept, etc as needed? • What is missing and who will be responsible?

  25. Develop the Team Project Charter • Establish team members • Identify key stakeholders • Determine the problem statement • Determine the AIM statement (mission) • Identify patient and organizational benefits • Establish project targets and milestones • Acquire senior leadership sanctioning

  26. Sample Team Charter

  27. Define your current state: • Initiate a high level process map • Multidisciplinary participation • Patient admission is the starting point • After hospital care provision is the ending point • Ask each discipline what steps they take to prepare the patient for discharge

  28. Your current state may look like this…

  29. Once the process map is completed… • Analyze the work flow in the eyes of the patient • What defects exist? Where are communication breakdowns, failure to hand off information? • Where do the delays occur? • What are your Project RED gaps? • Do we have omission , selection, documentation, communication, administration failures? • What steps in this process would our patient be willing to “pay for”?

  30. Establish your Gap Analysis Sample Current State Process Project RED components Med Reconciliation National guideline used Follow up Appointment Outstanding Tests Post DC services Written DC Care Plan Emergency Contact Patient Education Demonstrated Learning DC Summary to PCP Post DC Phone Call • Discharge order • Discharge Instruction Form • Discharge teaching on day of discharge • No Discharge Advocate • No appt scheduled • No post DC phone call • No PCP DC Summary

  31. Metrics to Assess Impact • Timeliness of Project RED activities • Completion of patient care plan (thoroughness) • Outcomes • Readmission rates • Patient satisfaction with preparation for discharge • Staff satisfaction • Cost

  32. Team Activities: • Discuss high level process map comparison • Determine when you will draw/redraw your high level map • What failures are you predicting? • What measurements do you have in place?

  33. Questions about Project Planning?

  34. RED Checklist Eleven mutually reinforcing components: 1. Medication reconciliation 2. Reconcile discharge plan with national guidelines 3. Follow-up appointments 4. Outstanding tests 5. Post-discharge services 6. Written discharge plan 7. What to do if problem arises 8. Patient education 9. Assess patient understanding 10. Discharge summary sent to PCP 11. Telephone reinforcement Adopted by National Quality Forum as one of 30 US "Safe Practices" (SP-15)

  35. 11 RED Components Enable Discharge Advocates to: Prepare patients for hospital discharge Help patients safely transition from hospital to home Promote patient self-health management Support patients after discharge through follow-up phone call

  36. Discharge Planning Rounds

  37. Generating the Patient Care Plan • “Manual” – use of template for discharge advocate (DA) to enter all required data • Provide template to your IT department and request that they integrate with existing systems • May wish to or have already purchased discharge planning software which is integrated with your existing systems

  38. AHRQ Template for Care Plan • Free, downloadable, fill-able PDF form • Based on Project RED After-Hospital Care Plan • Store on your server for easy access by D.A. • Integrate with your current systems as able • Hard copies available from AHRQ www.ahrq.gov/qual/goinghomeguide.htm

  39. A Visual: After Hospital CarePlanhttp://www.bu.edu/fammed/projectred/toolkit.html

  40. Medications

  41. Medications - continued

  42. Medications - continued

  43. Follow up appointments

  44. Patient Questions

  45. Information about Condition

  46. Location of Appointments

  47. Compare Discharge Information LIST CURRENT STATE Patient Care Plan Sections Individual hard copy care plan (language specific) Medication calendars in lay terms Daily morning, afternoon and evening meds identified Patient questions list Scheduled follow up appointments Pending tests and results Location of appointments • Patient Name/Diagnosis • List of DC medications • Review of prescriptions • Dietary recommendations • Activity limitations • Post DC appointment if known WHAT ARE WE MISSING?

  48. Eliminate Documentation Time and Re-writes Ideally, information should flow from the medical record to the care provider that needs it. Ideally, information should flow from one practice setting to another Ideally, information that is documented can be time stamped and assessed for accuracy Ideally, the Patient Care Plan could be automated and flow to the hands of the care team and patient

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