Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013 NAHC October 2013 1 Utilize Patient-Centric Standardized Care Processes Meet ACO’s Needs: Standardized Care Processes and Sustain Exceptional Outcomes with Clinical Pathways National Association for Home Care & Hospice October 2013 Presented by: Lisa Van Dyck, RN MSN Eventium, LLC, VP, formerly VNA First / IHCS Cindy Nyquist, RN MSN President, CEO Upper Peninsula Home Health, Hospice & Private Duty Introductions Cindy Nyquist, RN MSN President, CEO U P i l Upper Peninsula Home Health, Hospice, Private Duty - Agency Description Lisa Van Dyck RN MSN, Eventium Formerly VNA First / Innovative Healthcare Solutions
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Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 1
Utilize Patient-Centric Standardized Care Processes
Meet ACO’s Needs:
Standardized Care Processes and Sustain Exceptional Outcomes with Clinical
Pathways
National Association for Home Care & Hospice October 2013p
Presented by:Lisa Van Dyck, RN MSN Eventium, LLC, VP, formerly VNA First / IHCSCindy Nyquist, RN MSN President, CEO Upper Peninsula Home Health, Hospice & Private Duty
Introductions
Cindy Nyquist, RN MSN President, CEO U P i lUpper Peninsula Home Health, Hospice, Private Duty
- Agency Description
Lisa Van Dyck RN MSN, EventiumFormerly VNA First / Innovative Healthcare Solutions
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 2
AgendaHealthcare
Reform-ACOs
Key Concepts
HHome Care’s Role
“Must have” Qualities &
Tools
Clinical Pathway’s
Role
Step by Step Patient Education
Tools
VNA FirstHome Care
Steps®
Pathways
D t PCase Study
Data Pre-Post
Clinical Pathways
Pathways & Results,
Marketing
Q/A
HHS National Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care
• 0.3% Hospital Payments DRG ↓ based 0.3% Hospital Payments
2014• 2% cut max• Same conditions
• 3% cut cap
on hospital ratio of
expected to actual
readmissions
2015
3% cut cap• Adding COPD, CABG, PTCA & Other
Vascular, Hip and Knee surgery• 2012 – added Central line infection, Safety
composite measure and Medicare spending/beneficiary efficiency measure
2007 MedPAC Report and http://insidehealthpolicy.com/Inside-Health-General/Public-Content/final-ipps-rule-has-three-new-value-based-purchasing-measures-finalizes-readmissions-factors/menu-id-869.html
ACO Core Competencies Deloitte’s Perspective
• Care Management:• Ability to manage clinical pathway adherence by
care teams• Ability to design and align population-based health
management processes with evidence-based guidelines
• Ability to coordinate care across patient conditions, services, and settings over time
• Ability to manage patient behavior and implement patient outreach, adherence and self-care
Proposed and Final Rules – don’t include “home care” in the language
Hospitals and Physicians likely to be in control
H i ttiHomecare agencies are getting nervous
Need to Partner NOW to help manage and control post- acute / community care
How? Alignment – Strong Relationships
Physicians Hospitals ACOsHOME CARE
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 9
Get in the Door. . .Talk the TalkEHR
How you can HELP THEM improve their outcomes and prevent loss save $$$$!outcomes and prevent loss, save $$$$!
30 Day Readmission Penalties
Offer to take their frequent flyers
Care Transition Tools
ACO PCMH
HOSPITALS
Standardized Care – clinical pathways
Chronic Disease Management Programs
Home Care Reduces READMISSIONS SHOW THE DATA!
Study: Medicare Savings and Reductions in Rehosp’s Associated with Home Health Use
20,426 fewer hospital readmissions (CHF, COPD, Diabetes) VS. SNF, Other post-acute
$2.81 billion reduction Medicare Part A (2006-2009)
Estimated $2.07 billion additional reduction if received Home Care vs Other Post Acute service
Source: Study by: Avalere Healthcare, LLC, Reported in Remington Report (Sept/Oct 2011)
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 10
Study Cont: % Discharge to Post Acute Care
• Home Care10%
• LTC13%
• On “discharge” questions (CAHPS)
Lower satisfactions scores (CAHPS)scores
• NO CARE! yet many with multiple chronic diseases, wound, not homebound?
72% Routine
Source: AHRQ, Reported in Remington Report (Sept/Oct 2011)
Premier Post-Acute Partner
EHR / EMR
Home Care, Hospice, Private Duty, Transitional Care
Medicare/State Surveys; No issues with ADRs, Pay Packs
HHQI – Outcomes – top 20%• **Hospitalization indicator• **Hospitalization indicator
• Better than the national and state rates
HHQI – Process – top 20%
HHCAPHS Satisfaction measures – top 30%
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 11
Low Risk Partner - Sustainability
MUST be able to DEMONSTRATE ABILITY TO SUSTAIN OUTCOMES with:
EVIDENCE – BASED, BEST PRACTICE
STANDARDIZED CARE PROCESSES
PROACTIVE CARE PREDICTIVE CARE
OUTCOME - DRIVEN
PATIENT CENTERED UNIQUE CARE
INTEGRATED VISIT NOTE
EBP & Best Practices
Transitional Care, Teach Back, Transition Coaches
Condition Specific EBP ADA AHA etcCondition Specific EBP - ADA, AHA, etc
HHQI – OASIS Outcome & Process Indicators
CAHPS – Satisfaction - 30% process related
Chronic Disease Management Programs
ACO, Payer & Accreditation Requirements
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 12
HOW to Demonstrate Low Risk?
Clinical Pathways – outcome-driven, step by step model: • VNA FIRST Home Care Steps® Pathways &
CoSteps
Patient Education Tools – outcome-driven, Step by Step model:• Step by Step Patient Education Guides
Care Plans VS Pathways
List of
Care Plan
• List of Interventions & Outcomes BY EPISODE
Pathway
• List of Interventions & Outcomes BY VISIT / ENCOUNTER
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 13
CHF Care Plan (Interventions – episode)
E l t k l d f S/S t t t RN/Ph i i d th th t d
PLAN for VISIT: Routine Visit, continue CHF Care Plan per care manager
Evaluate knowledge of S/S to report to RN/Physician and those that need immediate medical attention. (Refer to Zone/Red Flag Plan. Use Teach Back Method to determine comprehension. Ask patient to repeat in Their OWN WORDS. Instruct on definition of disease process and basic treatment goals.Instruct on importance of good skin care to edematous areas; s/s of skin breakdown and what to report.I t t f d l d d t t l dInstruct on causes of pedal edema and measures to control or reduce edema.Evaluate ability to assess pedal edema and to appropriately notify physician/RN. Instruct to record weight daily and to report weight gain of > 2 lbs. in 24 hours, > 3 lbs. in 48 hours, > 5 lbs. in 7 days or as per physician order.Evaluate ability to take pulse, demonstrate as needed.
Each clinician pick and choose from the list to assess, teach, etc
CHF Care Plan (Interventions – episode)Evaluate knowledge of S/S to report to RN/Physician and those that need immediate medical attention. (Refer to Zone/Red Flag Plan. Use Teach Back Method to determine comprehension. Ask patient to repeat in Their OWN WORDS. Instruct on definition of disease process and basic treatment goals.Instruct on importance of good skin care to edematous areas; s/s of skin breakdown and what to report.Instruct on causes of pedal edema and measures to control or reduce edema.Evaluate ability to assess pedal edema and to appropriately notify physician/RNphysician/RN. Instruct to record weight daily and to report weight gain of > 2 lbs. in 24 hours, > 3 lbs. in 48 hours, > 5 lbs. in 7 days or as per physician order.Evaluate ability to take pulse, demonstrate as needed.
PLAN FOR NEXT VISIT? “As per care plan”, “As per case manager”
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 14
Step by Step Example – CHF Pathway
• Instruct on diet/ fluid restrictions
Nut/Hyd/Elim
√SafetyStep 2
Instruct on diet/ fluid restrictions• Verbalizes general dietary restrictions
Step 5
• Instruct on how to calculate sodium content of food/fluids• Verbalizes how to calculate sodium content of food/fluids• Demonstrates compliance with diet/fluid requirements
√ Disease Control
y
Step 8• Instruct on selection of appropriate restaurant foods • Verbalizes knowledge of appropriate restaurant food choices√ Health
Promotion
CHF Step 2
Disease ProcessInterventions >> see allPatient Education >>
CHF Pathway Step 2 Interventions
Outcomes >> see all
PLAN for VISIT: Advance to: CHF Step 2
V Assess/verify patient identity with name and date of birth, if new to homecare associate.
V Assess circulatory/cardiac status: VS; heart rate/rhythm; orthostatic BP, weight, edema; note change in status.
V Assess level of dyspnea with activity and at rest, not change in status.
V Evaluate knowledge of S/S to report to RN/Physician and those that need immediate medical attention. (Refer to Zone/Red Flag Plan). Use Teach Back Method to determine comprehension. Ask patient to repeat IN THEIR OWN WORDS
V 1. A. Demonstrates no new, worseningcontinued S/S outside normal range at anytime during the visit
V B. Or since last visit.
V i
2. Demonstrates ability to maintain medical condition in home without hospitalization, ER visit, or unplanned physician visit since last RN visit.
V N 3. Verbalizes S/S to report to RN or physician and those that are an
d i i di t
Step 2 – ALL interventions are expected to be completed. If they are not, then need to indicate reason why with a Variance codeV Assess (since the last visit) if the patient used the ER,
Hospital or unplanned physician office visit.
V (M) Provide contact phone numbers and who to contact during evenings and weekends for symptoms/concerns.
V Instruct on use of oxygen for disease process.
CoStep(s) + Diabetes with Insulin
emergency and require immediate medical attention (i.e., Call 911).
indicate reason why with a Variance code
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 15
CHF Step 2
Disease ProcessInterventions >> see allPatient Education >>
CHF Pathway Step 2 Outcomes
Outcomes >> see all
V N Assess/verify patient identity with name and date of birth, if new to homecare associate.
V N Assess level of dyspnea with activity and at rest, not change in status.
V No e
Evaluate knowledge of S/S to report to RN/Physician and those that need immediate medical attention. (Refer to Zone/Red Flag Plan). Use Teach Back Method to determine comprehension. Ask patient to repeat IN THEIR OWN WORDS
V N 1. A. Demonstrates no new, worseningcontinued S/S outside normal range at anytime during the visit
V N B. Or since last visit.
V Ni
2. Demonstrates ability to maintain medical condition in home without hospitalization, ER visit, or unplanned physician visit since last RN visit.
V N 3. Verbalizes S/S to report to RN or physician and those that are an
d i i di t
Step 2 – All Outcomes are expected to be achieved. If they are not, then need to indicate reason why with a Variance code
V N Assess (since the last visit) if the patient used the ER, Hospital or unplanned physician office visit.
V N (M) Provide contact phone numbers and who to contact during evenings and weekends for symptoms/concerns.
V N Instruct on use of oxygen for disease process.
CoStep(s) + Diabetes with Insulin
emergency and require immediate medical attention (i.e., Call 911).
If Interventions are not done or outcomes met during the encounter, explain WHY – since it is the STANDARD
= ACCOUNTABILITY every visit
PLAN for NEXT VISIT: Advance to Step 3 (unmet outcomes move forward)
Care Plans VS Pathways• Care Plan
• List of Interventions & Outcome BY
• Pathway• Planned Interventions
that GUIDE the care& Outcome BY EPISODE
that GUIDE the care & Outcomes that DRIVE the care BY VISIT / ENCOUNTER
Visit 2Step
1Step
2Step
3
Care Plan
Visit 1 Visit 3
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 16
Early Results
• Care PlansBefore
• Clinical PathwaysAfter
BENEFITS: Decrease & Control Costs
Reduce & Control CostsReduce & Control Costs • Less variability in care and
costs between care providers and clients with similar conditions
• Reduce #Visits & LOSR d H i li i• Reduce Hospitalization
• Less Outliers (↑ predictability & control of costs)
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NAHC October 2013 17
Diabetes Pathway 5 Agency STUDY (mid 90’s)Carolyn Mull, Ph.D., RNAurora University, IL
MHC (2000-2001)Acute Care Hospitalization 31 to 28
↓
Source: Missouri Home Care, Auxi Health CompanyVNA First User Conference Presentation May 2002
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NAHC October 2013 19
ACH – 2002 (23 /32 Ref)
Compared to Reference
↓
Source: Missouri Home Care, Auxi Health CompanyVNA First User Conference Presentation May 2002
Emergent Care Services (21/26)
Compared to Reference
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
30.00%
MHCREF
0.00%
5.00%
% Patients that used ER during services
Source: Missouri Home Care, Auxi Health CompanyVNA First User Conference Presentation May 2002
38
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 20
ACH 4/2011-3/2012, 11%! Medical Professionals
Best Practices, Proactive Outcome Improvement
Integrated into Workflow
It’s not just about the expected or planned action,
it’s about how it gets prompted to be done within the workflow =
checks and balances … on the fly!
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 21
HHQI - Public Reported OASIS Outcomes
HOSPITALIZATION
ERER
AMBULATION
TRANSFERRING
BATHING
S
OASIS Outcomes
DYSPNEA
PAIN
SURGICAL WOUND
MEDICATIONS
HHQI Reported OASIS Process Indicators
• MEDICATIONS
• TIMELY CARE
• FLU & PNEUMONIA• WOUND RISK &
PREVENTION • FALL RISK• Heart Failure S/S
TREATEDOASIS
Process• DIABETIC FOOT CARE• PRESSURE ULCER
PREVENTION• PAIN
• DEPRESSION
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 22
HHC CAHPS® Survey & Pathways
• 2. Tell you what services you would get • 9. Did HH providers seem informed/up-
to-dateContinuity /
Plan
• 3. Talk with you about how to set up safe homeSafety
• 4. Talk with you about all prescription and OTC• 5. Ask to see all prescription and OTC meds• 12. Talk about purpose of new/changed meds• 13. Talk about when to take meds• 14. Talk about side effects of meds
MedicationsCAHPS
• 10. Talk about painPain
• 17. Explain things – easy to understandEducation
• Examples - Diabetes• Diabetes Medical Practice Guidelines from the Agency for• Diabetes Medical Practice Guidelines from the Agency for
Healthcare Administration • American Diabetes Association Clinical Practice
Recommendations &Standards of Medical Care for Patients with Diabetes
• American Dietetic Association• American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists
• AHRQ - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (EBP)• CHAP, JCAHO, ACHC• HHQI Outcome and Process CAHPS• HHQI Outcome and Process, CAHPS• QIO, Care Transition, Teach Back, AIM, Project RED, etc
Visit Note: Compliance with best practice
Step by Step: Consistency in care, focused care, predictable care
Source: VNA FIRST Home Care Steps® Protocols
VNA First Disease Management Model
High Level of Self-CareHealth Promotion
Disease Control
Patient Empowerment
Disease Control4-7
Health Promotion8-9
Safety
Safety1-3
Source: VNA FIRST Disease Management Model
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 25
PROMOTE BEST & EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICEWITHIN THE WORKFLOWWITHIN THE WORKFLOW
With Step by StepCLINICAL PATHWAYS
Interventions that GUIDE the Care andInterventions that GUIDE the Care andPATIENT/CG Outcomes that DRIVE the Care
Cli i l P th M d lClinical Pathway Model Workflow Example
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NAHC October 2013 26
Plan for Visit
Plan for Visit: Advance to CHF Step 2 >>T k L b CBC >>
V N Assess level of dyspnea with activity and at rest, not change in status.
V No e
Evaluate knowledge of S/S to report to RN/Physician and those that need immediate medical attention. (Refer to Zone/Red Flag Plan). Use Teach Back Method to determine comprehension. Ask patient to repeat IN THEIR OWN WORDS
V N 1. A. Demonstrates no new, worseningcontinued S/S outside normal range at anytime during the visit
V N B. Or since last visit.
V Ni
2. Demonstrates ability to maintain medical condition in home without hospitalization, ER visit, or unplanned physician visit since last RN visit.
V N 3. Verbalizes S/S to report to RN or physician and those that are an
d i i di tV N Assess (since the last visit) if the patient used the ER, Hospital or unplanned physician office visit.
V N (M) Provide contact phone numbers and who to contact during evenings and weekends for symptoms/concerns.
V N Instruct on use of oxygen for disease process.
CoStep(s) + Diabetes with Insulin
emergency and require immediate medical attention (i.e., Call 911).
Condition –Specific EBP
Care Transitions Outcomes:
TEACH BACKSource: VNA FIRST Home Care Steps® Protocols
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 27
CHF Step 2
Interventions >> see allPatient Education >>
CHF Step 2 Interventions & Outcomes
Disease ProcessOutcomes >> see all
V N 4. Verbalizes importance of good skin care and S/S of skin breakdown to report.
V Ne
Instruct on definition of disease process and basic treatment goals.
V No e
Instruct on importance of good skin care to edematous areas; s/s of skin breakdown and what to report.
Tests / TreatmentsV N Perform tests as ordered.
V N Perform treatments as ordered.
MedicationsV N Instruct on strategies to improve medication self-
CAHPSCare
Transitions
V N 5. Verbalizes importance and need for a simple plan/system in place for taking medications.
V No e
6. Verbalizes purpose, action, level of effectiveness, side effects, and when and how to report problems with medication/supplement(s) instructed this visit.
V No
Instruct on strategies to improve medication selfadministration, including pill box and simplification plan to support a manageable system and compliance.
V N Ho
Instruct on any medication/supplement changes; purpose, action and side effects and how to monitor effectiveness of one or two medication/supplements and how and when to report medication problems.
CoStep(s) + Diabetes with Insulin OASIS Outcomes
OASIS Process
Best Practice
Source: VNA FIRST Home Care Steps® Protocols
Plan for Next Visit: autopopulated based on outcomes
Plan for Next Visit: Advance to CHF Step 3 >>T k F ll L b CBC
Care TransitionsSource: Eventium’s Step by Step Guides
Medication Simplification
Best Practice
Step 3 – Continue w S/S & Med FocusTEACH BACK!
S/S
Meds
S/S
CAHPS - Meds
Goals mirror Outcomes within Clinical Pathways
Moving patients from dependent care to independent disease management
Meds
Transitional Care
OASIS Outcomes
OASIS Process
Source: Eventium’s Step by Step Guides
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NAHC October 2013 32
Care Plans VS StepByStep Clinical PathwaysAttribute Care
PlansClinical Pathways
Clinician – Driven √Patient Driven Outcome Driven √Patient – Driven, Outcome – Driven √High level of variance in the care that is provided. Difficult to predict care and care needs. √
Standardized Care – Minimal variance in care, less outliers, controlled cost and more predictable outcomes.
√
Problem Oriented Care √Problem – Oriented Care √Proactive – Preventive Care √Limited ability to evaluate effectiveness of services at the point of care (during visits) √Evaluation of effectiveness of service is done every visit – high level accountability √
Lastly, How Pathways HelpDefend Care through Documentation
Proactive Alerts &
Workflow Alerts if at risk
f t ti
Care Defense
(C P/G T )Alerts & Reports of not meeting
CoPs(CoP/G-Tag)
Report
State Surveys CoPs Integrated Compliance
Avoid Medicare
Fraud Abatement
Efforts
QIC/PSC/ZPIC/ALJ/MAC/
RAC/H.E.A.T
Outcome –Driven =
Care Defense
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 33
Staff Response
QI / Ed Must
OUR Story – Post Clinical Pathway
Upper Peninsula
Home Health,
Hospice & Private
Time Savings
Resource Use / Costs
Marketing Plan /
Experience
have partner
Private Duty
HHQI Process -
MEDSCAHPS -Satisfaction
HHQI Outcomes –
ER, ACH
Upper Peninsula EXPERIENCE
• Pre – Care Plan/Pathway Model and Patient Education tools
Care Models &
• Post – Pathway Model and Patient Education ToolsPatient Ed
Tool
• Difficult to maintain content in current model, costly
• Moving to EMR from paper. EMR Reasons for g p poffered Pathway Model
• Pathway Model in EMR was recognized best practice in the industry
• Needed to be able to demonstrate evidence-based, standardized care to potential partners
Reasons for Selecting
New Model of Care
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 34
Implementation & Staff Response
• Reaction• New SNs to home careNew SNs to home care• Seasoned SN
• Issues• Related to hardware issues and connectivity
Results: QI / Education Time Savings
• Training / Orientation of new employees ith NO h h lth i i iwith NO home health experience is easier
– with the use of a standardized care model that directs care at the visit level
• Recruitment tool• Quality reviews are more efficient with the• Quality reviews are more efficient with the
use of a standardized care model within an electronic record
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NAHC October 2013 35
RESOURCE USE
•Cost of Care
↓ Office Patient Care Coordinators
Moved 2 RN FTE’s from office into the fieldfield
Moved patient management from in the office to the field• Pathways provide proactive care management at
i fpoint of care• No delay in identifying need for change in service
or evaluating effectiveness of care• No waiting for a scheduled patient care
conference
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 36
SN Productivity (# Visits per day / FTE)
• In the midst of NEW EMR implementation d NEW Cli i l P th M d land NEW Clinical Pathway Model
implementation• Productivity decreased by only 0.13 visits per
RN FTE
Census Up, SN Visits Down
300
350
180
200
Census 2013 2013 Visits/week
100
150
200
250
60
80
100
120
140
160
HH Census SN Visits HCA Visits
0
50
100
0
20
40
60
1/02
/11-
01/0
8/11
1/16
/11-
01/2
2/11
1/30
/11-
02/0
5/11
2/13
/11-
02/1
9/11
2/27
/11-
03/0
5/11
3/13
/11-
03/1
9/11
3/27
/11-
04/0
2/11
4/10
/11-
04/1
6/11
4/24
/11-
04/3
0/11
5/08
/11-
05/1
4/11
5/22
/11-
05/2
8/11
6/05
/11-
06/1
1/11
6/19
/11-
06/2
5/11
7/03
/11-
07/0
9/11
7/17
/11-
07/2
3/11
7/31
/11-
08/0
6/11
8/14
/11-
08/2
0/11
8/28
/11-
09/0
3/11
9/11
/11-
09/1
7/11
9/25
/11-
10/0
1/11
10/9
/11-
10/1
5/11
0/23
/11-
10/2
9/11
1/06
/11-
11/1
2/11
1/20
/11-
11/2
6/11
2/04
/11-
12/1
0/11
2/18
/11-
12/2
4/11
1/01
/12-
01/0
7/12
1/15
/12-
01/2
1/12
1/29
/12-
02/0
4/12
2/12
/12-
02/1
8/12
2/26
/12-
03/0
3/12
3/11
/12-
03/1
7/12
3/25
/12-
03/3
1/12
4/08
/12-
04/1
4/12
4/22
/12-
04/2
8/12
5/06
/12-
05/1
2/12
5/20
/12-
05/2
6/12
6/03
/12-
06/0
9/12
6/17
/12-
06/2
3/12
7/01
/12-
07/0
7/12
7/15
/12-
07/2
1/12
7/29
/12-
08/0
4/12
8/12
/12-
08/1
8/12
8/26
/12-
09/0
1/12
9/09
/12-
09/1
5/12
9/23
/12-
09/2
9/12
0/07
/12-
10/1
3/12
0/21
/12-
10/2
7/12
1/04
/12-
11/1
0/12
1/18
/12-
11/2
4/12
2/02
/12-
12/0
8/12
2/16
/12-
12/2
2/12
2/30
/12-
01/0
5/13
9/30/2013 Census ave 200, Visit/week ave 290= sustainability of cost effective care
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NAHC October 2013 37
# Visits/Episode, Standard Deviation
SN Direct Costs per Episode
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NAHC October 2013 38
↓ Episode Costs = $avings (Decrease from Q1 2011 to 4Q 2012)
↓ $381/ • x 1472 Episodes (2012)
↓ $381/ Episode
↓ $140 208/• = $560,832/year!
↓ $140,208/Quarter
ADRs
ADRs
• # ADRs: 5• $ Returned: $0
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 39
OASIS - PBQI
PROCESS – Indicators
Med Ed, Vaccines, Depression
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 40
OASIS – PBQI Process Results Q2 2013
• Q2 2013 All Patients Process Quality M R tMeasures Report
HHQI – CAHPS – SATISFACTION
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 41
CAHPS – Medications
CAHPS – Listening, Help, Recommend
Meet ACO Needs with Pathways NAHC October 2013
NAHC October 2013 42
OASIS OBQI
OUTCOMES
Impact of Pathways on ER Use &Impact of Pathways on ER Use & Hospitalizations