OUR STORY
STAAR
STATE ACTION ON AVOIDABLE REHOSPITALIZATIONS
Cherelyn Roberts, RN, BSN
• Income is 61% below the state average
• Cardiovascular disease is 278% above the state average
• Poorest municipality in Massachusetts
• 30% of community are tobacco users
• Alcohol and Drug related illnesses are 246% above the state average
• 5th highest rates of suicide
• 2nd highest rate of teen births
• 48.5% of population is Latino, primarily Puerto Rican
• 36% prefer a language other than English
Our Hospital
• Holyoke Medical Center is the largest provider of inpatient and outpatient healthcare services to the poorest community in Massachusetts
• 80% of adult patients admitted to the hospital from the community are cared for by a Hospitalist
• 189 Beds consisting of a MedSurg Unit including Orthopedics , ICU , Telemetry , Birthing, and a Psychiatric Unit
• Our average readmission rate was 14.8% for all causes all payors
STAAR PROGRAM • HMC began working on the STAAR
Program actively in August of 2011.
• The STAAR Program perfectly aligned with other work being done such as Patient Centered Medical Home and Care Transitions
• Four Key Changes were addressed:
1.Perform and Enhanced Assessment of Post Hospital Needs
2. Provide Effective Teaching and Facilitate Enhanced Learning
3. Ensure Post Hospital Care Follow up
4.Provide Real Time Handover Communications
Our Partners
Holyoke Health Center.
HOLYOKE HEALTH CARE CENTER (M) 282 Cabot Street
http://www.rebhc.org
/
Soldiers Home In Holyoke
PCP/Medical Home Providers
• WMPA ( Western Mass Physician Associates)
• Holyoke Health Center
• Valley Medical PCP Offices ,Amherst
Current Members
7 Different Home Health Agencies 14 Facilities consisting of Acute
Hospitals , Skilled Nursing Facilities and Acute Rehabs
Several PCP Offices and Health Clinics 2 Patient/Family Members Other stakeholders such as Pharmacists,
RT, IT as needed per project
Understanding the Continuum of Care
• Primary Care• Acute Care Hospital • LTAC – Long Term Acute Care Hospital• IRF – Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility• SNF/sub-acute/Skilled Nursing Facility / Nursing
Home• LTC – Long Term Care• ALF – Assisted Living Facility• VNA – Home Health Care / Visiting Nurse• Hospice Care – End of life care in various
settings
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The Eyes of the Patient
• The PFAC members keep us tuned in to how the patient is feeling
• We had predicted that waiting for paperwork to be completed was the delay in getting a patient out the door but quickly learned through them that it was something totally different!
OUR TEAM
Rules of Engagement 1. Throw out your old attitudes about work
2. Don’t think of reasons Why it Won’t Work, Think of Ways to Make the New Ideas Work
3. Don’t Make excuses, and Don’t Accept Excuses. Don’t say, “ We can’t”
4. Don’t wait for perfection; 50% ,is fine for starters
5. Correct Problems Immediately
6. Wisdom Arises from Difficulties
7. Ask “Why” at least 5 times until you find the root cause.
8. Better the “Wisdom” of Ten people then the “Knowledge” of One.
9. Improvements are Unlimited. Don’t Substitute Money for Brains.
10. Improvement is Made at the Workplace NOT from the Office.
OUR AIM STATEMENT:
HMC will decrease the monthly readmission rate by 20% from
14.8% and maintain that rate by Dec 2013 by improving the
handoff of critical information to the next provider
May 2010 thru Oct 2013
CHF program
COPD CTEP
Holyoke Medical Center
Accomplishments• Heart Failure and COPD Redesigned Educational Tools shared
across the Continuum
• Teach Back taught and used across the Continuum
• Heart Failure Protocol established in One SNF with Resource RN and spreading to other SNFs
• Identification for High Risk For Readmit
• Warm Handoffs
• Care Transitions Education Project
• Pharmacy Education at the Bedside of HF patients
• PCMH work
• Appts prior to discharge
• Follow up calls
• Priority to HF patients for Home Health Visits
How we established our CCT
• Networking
• Visiting Facilities
• Offering to introduce the STAAR program at the Health Clinic, PCP, offices, VNAs and SNFs
• Asked for frontline staff to join us as they have the most access to our patients and they were the ones that would keep this going and know what needed to be done
Sharing of Information
• Relationships were formed
• Resource RN visited the facility
• Respect for each other’s environment was established
• Realization that we cared for the same patients but with different goals
• How could we, while working together, help the patient succeed?
We started with a Site Visit
• HGA, a long term care facility that also provides short term rehab and adult day care for our patients agreed to trial a Resource Nurse
• Hospital RN spent the day at the Nursing Home after the facility had sent 2 RNs and 2 nurse aides to shadow here on the cardiac unit
Barriers Identified
• Poor Health Literacy
• Time and Access to front line staff
• Inconsistent communication between hospital providers (MDs, RNs) and PCPs
• Limited electronic registers and tools for communication and tracking patients
CHF TOOLS FOR SNF
SNF TOOL FOR CHF PATIENT2GM NA DIET2GM SODIUMDIET
2GM SODIUM DIET
Intake/output
Daily weight
Same way/same time
HF ZONE
Check every shift
Green-yell-red
Notify MD if Yellow zone per protocol
Enhanced Educational Tools
ZONE EDUCATION
CCT MEETINGS
ALL members meet monthly now at different sites!
•We discuss case reviews, each organization presents a readmit and the group brainstorms on:
– “What went wrong?” “what went well?”
– “Was the readmission avoidable?”
– What are we doing to prevent readmits?
Recent Evidence of Success of CCT
• Holyoke VNA Project : “Heart Failure Boot Camp” 5 day program
• Mary’s Meadow Warm handoff progress
• Home Health Transition Coach Tracer
• Care Transitions Education Project
• Forum held with Hospitalists and Community Physicians (next one being planned)
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Care Transitions Education Project
Complement and Leverage Existing Care Transitions Efforts
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Care Transitions Education Project
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• Partners Investing in Nursing’s Future -- Collaborative of Robert Wood Johnson Foundation & Northwest Health Foundation
• Massachusetts Senior Care Foundation• Irene E. & George A. Davis Foundation• Home Care Alliance of MA• Regional Employment Board of Hampden Co.• Healthcare Workforce Partnership of Western MA• United Way of Pioneer Valley• Commonwealth Corporation
Project Co-Investors
Grantee MA Senior Care Foundation
Timeline Sept 1, 2011 – Aug 31, 2014
Budget $450,000
Partners 32 organizations
Care Transitions Education Project
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Nurses are in unique position at every step of the patient’s journey
Equipping nurses to lead effective patient-centered care transitions 31
Care Transitions Education Project
1. Increase competency to lead and improve care transitions
2. Increase mutual respect across care settings
3. Improve coordination and collaboration
4. Demonstrate nurse-led quality improvement
Year 19/11-9/12
Year 2-39/12-12/13
Project Objectives
Year 31/14 - 8/14
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What Causes Adverse Events During Care Transitions?
• We fail to communicate critical information about a person’s care, safety, medications, advance directives, in-home support services and social situation
• We fail to identify issues such as health literacy, cultural barriers and educational issues
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Care Transitions Education Project
The Opportunity:Why This Why Now?
“Improving care transitions can save lives and reduce adverse events
and disability due to gaps or omissions in care.”
Massachusetts Strategic Plan for Care Transitions34
Care Transitions Education Project
Cross Continuum Team Branches
Tobacco education committee
COPD team PulmonaryRehab Team
Heart failure program
Teach back sessions
Community partners
Care Transitons Project
Resource Nurse
Partnering with RT and Pharmacy
PCMH
Chronic Disease Patient Education Tools
Our Relationships Allow Us to
Reach across the Barriers and open up the lines of communication to provide more “patient centered care” that is improving the lives of our patients especially those with chronic illness
CCT in the Community
• Assisted a Public Housing Corporation with smoking cessation support and education sessions in Senior Housing Communities
• Other members of our CCT did the same in their community
• Public Housing was going smoke free and asked us to help
• Great opportunity to reach out to our elders in the community and establish realtionships
STAAR “Bursts”
• We feel the STAAR program has laid the groundwork and ground rules for this Transition Program to take place.
• Everything we have been working on is going to become “real” as the frontline nurses make it happen!
• We are excited to be Pioneers in providing “Patient Centered Care”
Solutions to Organizing a CCT• Start at the top
• Approach the Organization you want to partner with and explain the importance of transition work and what it will mean for the patient and their organization.
• Always bring it back to the patient. We all want what is best for the patient
• Offer to share your knowledge, expertise , time and materials
• Develop tests to trial together
• LISTEN to each other
Future Plans
• Sustain
• Spread
THANK YOU!
Questions?