1 / 16

Patient Safety and Clinical Pharmacy Services Collaborative (PSPC)

Patient Safety and Clinical Pharmacy Services Collaborative (PSPC). How to form a team for PSPC 6.0. PSPC informational presentations. Each presentation focuses on a different topic. Topics include: PSPC Overview How to Form a PSPC Team for our 6 th year (aka PSPC 6.0)

moshe
Télécharger la présentation

Patient Safety and Clinical Pharmacy Services Collaborative (PSPC)

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. Patient Safety and Clinical Pharmacy Services Collaborative (PSPC) How to form a team for PSPC 6.0

  2. PSPC informational presentations • Each presentation focuses on a different topic. Topics include: • PSPC Overview • How to Form a PSPC Team for our 6th year (aka PSPC 6.0) • How to Enroll in PSPC 6.0 • Collaborative Expectations • A PSPC team success story • Presentations are located at www.healthcarecommunities.org

  3. How to start building your teams? • Connect with Current PSPC Teams (teams who participated in our 5th year) • Create New PSPC Teams

  4. Connecting with current PSPC teams Find them at:www.medsmatter.org If you would like more information about current teams, please email patientsafety@hrsa.gov

  5. Creating New Teams?(3 things to remember) • Follow 7 guiding principles for building teams (will be shared in the next several slides) • Create partnerships/relationships that will make your teams successful • Use all available resources

  6. Guiding Principles • Patient Flow • The flow of patients will help determine which organizations should participate together as a Collaborative team • High Risk Population of Focus (POF) • Patients with high safety risk and high risk of poor health outcomes that your team wants to make improvements upon • Teams partnered with a QIO will expand these efforts to the Medicare, Medicare Advantage and dual-eligible populations.

  7. Guiding Principles 3. Primary Health Care Home • Health care home for patients in the defined population – this organization/ “home” is providing direct patient services • Should convene and lead the team • Should commit to tracking quality improvement results and assessing their progress throughout the course of the Collaborative

  8. Who should a team represent? For a patient population, one of several organizations can operate as a “primary health care home” and be accountable for the continuity of care for the patient. Hospital Specialist Ambulatory Surgery Center FQHC, CHC, Rural Clinic, HIV Clinic Able to operate as a primary health care home Home Health Care Academia and State Based Organizations

  9. Guiding Principles • Inter-Disciplinary Members on Teams Team Members • Pharmacists • Nurses • Physicians • Other primary care clinicians • QI staff • Administrators • Senior Leaders • Patients • More!!

  10. Guiding Principles • Health Professional Academic Institutions • Partner with school or college of pharmacy, nursing, medicine and other schools and/or collaborate with one • Most successful teams have had academic partners • Team Commitment • Teams must commit to integrating medication management services • “It takes a village to move a mountain” • Senior Leadership Support • Seniors Leaders to champion the work of the teams

  11. Create Partnerships • Create partnerships to “charter your teams” • Partnerships: • Add strength to teams • Help to leverage resources • Provide man-power and skill sets • Provides synergy “The whole is greater than the sum of it’s parts” - Aristotle

  12. Create Partnerships • Look for community partners with aligned goals to improve patient safety and health outcomes • Seek partners with skills that would add value to your team and benefit from your collaboration

  13. Thinking about your team • Teams are encouraged to partner with a safety-net organizations (ie: federally qualified health centers) • No minimum number of organizations needed to form a team • However, teams are encouraged to partner with at least one additional organization

  14. How to start building your team – Where to look? • Local healthcare providers • 340B Entities • Health Professional Academic Institutions • Local Health Departments • ADAPs or other Ryan White Centers • Primary Care Associations • Local pharmacies (chains and independents) • Drug Manufacturers • State Offices of Rural Health • Quality Improvement Organizations • More!

  15. Thank you from all of us at PSPC! For questions and/or more information: Email: patientsafety@hrsa.gov Website: www.Medsmatter.org for general program information www.healthcarecommunities.orgfor team operations and resources

More Related