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Less is More 2.0: Implementing the High Value Care Curriculum

Less is More 2.0: Implementing the High Value Care Curriculum. Jessica Dine, KeryLyn Gwisdalla, Darilyn Moyer, Jason Post and Sara Wallach. Disclosures. Darilyn Moyer ACP Governor SE Pennsylvania and Chair Elect Board Of Governors Sara Wallach-Pfizer Stock. Learning Objectives.

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Less is More 2.0: Implementing the High Value Care Curriculum

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  1. Less is More 2.0: Implementing the High Value Care Curriculum Jessica Dine, KeryLyn Gwisdalla, Darilyn Moyer, Jason Post and Sara Wallach

  2. Disclosures Darilyn Moyer ACP Governor SE Pennsylvania and Chair Elect Board Of Governors Sara Wallach-Pfizer Stock

  3. Learning Objectives • Describe the AAIM/ACP High Value Care Curriculum Ver. 2.0 • Practice a small group activity from the curriculum • Identify how this material should be integrated into existing program curriculum • Practice using tools to assess milestones related to HVC

  4. Workshop Outline • Introduction and overview of curriculum • Practice small group case and activity from the curriculum • Small discussion group on best practices in curricular implementation • Describe the curriculum toolbox • Small group activity practicing using the assessment tools • Wrap-up

  5. High Value Care Definition Care that balances clinical benefit with cost and harms with the goal of improving patient outcomes

  6. Quick Poll and Group Feedback • Are you aware of the AAIM/ACP High Value Care Curriculum? • Has it been incorporated into your program? • What worked? What didn’t work?

  7. What is the problem?1 • We spend too much on healthcare – 17% of U.S. GDP • Since 1970, healthcare spending is rising 2.4% faster than GDP • Estimated $700 billion of “healthcare waste” annually • Physicians responsible for 87% of wasteful spending • Within the current healthcare system, no real disincentive to curb providers’ ordering practices • Physicians must lead in addressing these problems – and we are! (Choosing Wisely campaign) • Trainees (YOU) must be at the front lines

  8. Healthcare Waste2 • Estimated $700 Billion of “Healthcare waste” annually • $250-325B in “Unwarranted use” • $75-100B in “Provider inefficiency and errors” • $25-50B in “Lack of care coordination”

  9. Ordering more services3… • Two areas of greatest expenditures and mostrapid growth: imaging and tests Tests Imaging

  10. Shifting focus Get physicians to understand and focus on health care value Before using a test or treatment, they should consider the potential benefits and potential harms and costs. More care is better care High value, customized care is better care

  11. IM Resident Curriculum 2.0 Overview • FREE, off-the-shelf curriculum • Based on a simple, step-wise framework • Six, one-hour presentations • Small group activities involving actual cases and bills to engage learners • Facilitator’s guide accompanies each presentation to help faculty prepare • Program Director’s toolbox

  12. Presentation 1: Eliminating Healthcare Waste and Over-ordering of Tests • Define and emphasize importance of HVC • Introduce 5 step model • Introduce Choosing Wisely Campaign • Cases: Headache, heart failure, deep venous thrombosis

  13. Steps Toward High Value Care4 • Step one: Understand the benefits, harms, and relative costs of the interventions that you are considering • Step two: Decrease or eliminate the use of interventions that provide no benefits and/or may be harmful • Step three: Choose interventions and care settings that maximize benefits, minimize harms, and reduce costs (using comparative-effectiveness and cost-effectiveness data) • Step four: Customize a care plan with the patient that incorporates their values and addresses their concerns • Step five: Identify system level opportunities to improve outcomes, minimize harms, and reduce healthcare waste

  14. Presentation 2:Healthcare Costs and Payment Models • Explain basics of health insurance and coverage • Weigh impact of insurance on health care access • Discuss how reimbursement models can affect HVC • Cases: Appendicitis, sports injury, osteomyelitis

  15. Presentation 3: Utilizing Biostatistics in Diagnosis, Screening and Prevention • Review basics of statistical concepts • Explore benefits and harms of routine screening • Use tools to identify high value preventive care • Cases: Chest pain, periodic health examination, chemoprevention

  16. Presentation 4: High Value Medication Prescribing • Explore comparative costs of medications (generic vs. non-generic) • Identify medication cost as a barrier to adherence • Identify resources to assist patients with medication costs • Cases: Seasonal allergies, discharge medication reconciliation

  17. Presentation 5: Overcoming Barriers to High Value Care • Weight efficacy and safety of medical interventions to avoid inappropriate use/harm • Practice negotiating a care plan with patients • Frame an effective consult question • Cases: Low back pain, URI, septic joint

  18. Presentation 6: High Value Quality Improvement • Identify QI resources in your institution • Involve residents in local safety and quality programs • Design a project to improve value in the delivery of patient care

  19. Program Director’s Toolbox • Resident survey to measure curricular effectiveness • Tools to help faculty and program directors assess resident competence in high value care milestones • Sample local high value care quality improvement projects- reports, abstracts, posters, slide decks etc…

  20. Curriculum Dissemination • The curriculum has been downloaded over 13,350 times since July 2012 • Over 50% of program directors surveyed have implemented some component of the curriculum to date • 54 programs report the initiation of local high value quality improvement projects from the curriculum

  21. Resident Comments on Specific Modules • “It was brief and to the point; easy to understand” • “Bringing more attention to the insurance issues of patients” • “I particularly enjoyed the case scenarios” • “The presentation helped us to know how to cut down on prescription costs and still prescribe equally effective drugs” • “It is a very important topic that needs to be understood because this can really help our patients. The presentation is good, concise and informative” • “Real life examples help put the cost of brand name drugs in proper perspective”

  22. Curriculum Small Group Activity Divide into 4 small groups Two groups will perform – DVT bill group activity Two groups discuss “best practices” in curriculum implementation Identify a group leader to report back: For the case • Provide a one line summary of the case • Describe the interactive activity • Reflect on the case/activity-Was it helpful? Would you use it in your program?

  23. Case #3: DVT – A tale of two thrombi • Management of DVT • Two patients in an ambulatory setting were suspected to have a DVT • One of the patients was sent to the emergency department and hospitalized for management of the DVT • The other patient was managed as an outpatient Let’s compare costs…

  24. Outpatient Bill

  25. Outpatient Bill

  26. Cost Comparison - Cost difference of $ 22,484.69

  27. Assessing HVC Milestones • Program Director’s Toolbox • Impact survey • Relevant milestones • Resident assessment tools • Small group activity

  28. HVC Curriculum Impact Survey • Retrospective survey • 17 items • Assessing the impact of the curriculum on relevant behavior, culture and knowledge • Takes 5 to 10 minutes to complete

  29. HVC Curriculum Impact Survey 1. How likely are you to do each of the following since participating in the high value care curriculum?

  30. Assessing HVC Milestones

  31. Assessing HVC Milestones

  32. Assessing HVC Milestones • Resident assessment tools • Educational prescription • Audit and feedback • Milestones

  33. Educational prescription

  34. Educational prescription

  35. Audit and feedback • Have learner identify a patient whose care they were involved in (either inpatient or outpatient) • Ask learner to estimate total cost/charge for patient’s care • Provide learner with itemized bill, or access to system to procure this data • Give learner time to review all charges/costs involved in this patient’s episode of care • Learner exercise/reflection

  36. Best Practices Activity • Each group will discuss implementation of curriculum into individual program • What barriers will you encounter? • What adjustments do you anticipate? • Assign a group leader to report

  37. Summary and Wrap-up • AAIM/ACP has developed a FREE six hour curriculum to encourage residents and faculty to practice high value care • Curricular tool box to help assess the high value care milestones and incorporate the framework into daily work flow • Let’s work together to motivate faculty and trainees to eliminate health care waste while improving outcomes

  38. References • Sager A, Socolar D. Health Costs Absorb One-Quarter of Economic Growth, 2000-2005. Boston: Health Reform Program, Boston University School of Public Health; 2005. • Thomas Reuters. Where can $700 billion in waste be cut annually from the U.S Health Care system? October, 2009. • Medicare Payment Advisory Commission Data Book. "Healthcare Spending and the Medicare Program“; 2012. • Adapted from Owens, D. Ann Intern Med. 2011;154:174-180

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