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Multiple Methods of Implementing Evidence Based Best Practices: Examples from QUERI Health Services Research Developm

Overview. Macro ContextBrief description of the Veterans Health Administration and QUERIEvidenceThe case for lipid management in ischemic heart diseaseSmaller Scale ContextPre-intervention assessment, Round 1aFollow up, Round 1cFacilitationInterventions, Round 1b. VHA Is a Large, Integrated

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Multiple Methods of Implementing Evidence Based Best Practices: Examples from QUERI Health Services Research Developm

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    1. Multiple Methods of Implementing Evidence Based Best Practices: Examples from QUERI Health Services Research & Development Service Department of Veterans Affairs Knowledge Utilization International Conference Quebec, Canada September 25, 2003

    2. Overview Macro Context Brief description of the Veterans Health Administration and QUERI Evidence The case for lipid management in ischemic heart disease Smaller Scale Context Pre-intervention assessment, Round 1a Follow up, Round 1c Facilitation Interventions, Round 1b

    3. VHA Is a Large, Integrated System Over 1300 facilities spread across the United States 163 Medical Centers 850 Ambulatory Care and Community Based Outpatient Clinics 206 Counseling Centers 137 Nursing Homes 43 Domiciliaries Over 200,000 employees in the VHA Over $26 billion in health care spending Serve over 6.5 million veterans Out of 26.5 million veterans total in 2000 census Approximately 25% of all veterans use VHA VHA users are older, sicker, and poorer than veterans not using VHA

    4. Benefits Package Preventive services, including immunizations, screening tests, and health education and training classes Primary health care Diagnosis and treatment Surgery, including outpatient surgery Mental health and substance abuse treatment Home health care Respite (inpatient), hospice and palliative care Urgent and limited emergency care Drugs and pharmaceuticals

    5. VHA Is Divided Into 21 VISNs

    6. To enhance the quality and outcomes of VA health care by systematically translating or implementing evidence-based research findings into routine clinical practice The QUERI Mission

    7. Eight QUERI Groups Focused on Specific Health Conditions Chronic Heart Failure (CHF) Diabetes (DM) HIV/AIDS (HIV) Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD) Mental Health (MH) Includes both Schizophrenia and Depression Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) Substance Use Disorder (SUD) Colorectal Cancer (CRC)

    8. The Six-step QUERI Process Identify high risk/high burden conditions Identify best practices Define existing practice patterns in VA and variations from best practices Identify (or develop) and implement programs to promote best practices Document patient outcomes and system improvements Document improvements in health related quality of life

    10. Examples focus on lipid management for secondary prevention in patients with ischemic heart disease Work started in 1999 and is on-going in 2003 Three inter-related projects First-round interventions 1999-2000 Follow up qualitative study 2001 Second-round electronic clinical reminder intervention 2002-2003 (Not described in this talk) Used PARIHS model as a heuristic to guide interventions Post-hoc in earlier projects, concurrent later

    11. Evidence The beneficial effect of simvastatin in individual patients in 4S was determined mainly by the magnitude of the change in LDL-c (1). Each additional 1% reduction in LDL-c reduces MCE (IHD death and nonfatal MI) risk by 1.7% (1). Heart Protection Study: RCT with Simvastatin decreased mortality in a broad range of patients and reduced MI and stroke by one-third (2). Simvastatin Survival Study Group. Lipoprotein changes and reduction in the incidence of major coronary heart disease events in the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (4S). Circ 97:1453-1460; 1998. 2. http://www.ctsu.ox.ac.uk/~hps/

    12. Context: Round 1a Eight VA medical centers in a single VISN VISN 20, Northwest Network Wide variation in size Small, non-tertiary to large, tertiary, teaching Wide variation in number of IHD patients 400 to 4000 per site Wide variation in number of primary care providers 12 to 200

    13. VHA Is Divided Into 21 VISNs

    15. Facilitation: Round 1b Involvement in team selection Trained team members Kick off meetings Offered menu of options for methods of intervening Case management including pharmacist-led lipid clinics (3) Point of care paper-based reminders (2) Audit/feedback + patient education (1) Complex, multi-faceted interventions (2) Teams selected their preferred method Monthly follow up by project manager Quarterly data extraction and reports Monitoring proportion of IHD patients with current LDL measurement, on treatment, and those at goal

    16. Mean LDL for IHD Patients on Statins

    17. Mean LDL values by VAMC

    19. Context: Round 1c Very difficult to measure “success” Clear that some interventions had fallen apart without accomplishing much Clear that some interventions were continuing Unclear what dose there had been of any intervention Massive secular trend Conducted qualitative follow up study ~6 months after intervention phase ended Interviewed “key players” involved in intervention in each facility (54)

    20. Summary of Facilitators Overall Evidence Wide acceptance of evidence-based finding High level of enthusiasm for delivering care based on evidence Context General support from front line clinicians and managers Facilitation High level of interest from active, respected clinicians

    21. Summary of Barriers Overall Evidence Some disagreement about goal statements based on available evidence Context Perceived lack of resources Time, energy, space Relatively low priority for quality improvement “We’re doing well on the EPRP reports” Facilitation Insufficient planning for active, engaged facilitation

    22. www.va.gov/resdev www.hsrd.research.va.gov/research/queri Publications: Newsletters (QUERI Quarterly, other HSR&D) QUERI Fact Sheets Project, publication databases Links to QUERI center websites Grant solicitations, new initiatives

    23. Site A Lipid Clinic Intervention Lipid Clinic opened October 15, 1999 Pharmacist-run clinic based on provider referral Hours were 10-11am and 12-3pm Fridays

    24. Process Variables and Outcomes for Site A Kickoff meeting June 1999 Cardiologists presentation September 1999 Lipid Clinic October 1999Kickoff meeting June 1999 Cardiologists presentation September 1999 Lipid Clinic October 1999

    25. Site B Combined Audit/Feedback Intervention Audit/Feedback: Providers were e-mailed a list of IHD patients ranked by LDL-c level excluding patients without LDL measurement 98 providers in all firms were sent e-mails Pharmacist Case Management: Pharm D Resident identified high-risk patients and intervened with providers and their patients in one clinic. PharmD only intervened with 5 patients during the time of the intervention.

    26. Process Variables and Outcomes for Site B Pharmacist case mngt intervention starts January 2000 Audit/Feedback intervention starts May 2000 and continues until Jan 2001 (add data pt) Pharmacist case management intervention ends June 2000 Pharmacist case mngt intervention starts January 2000 Audit/Feedback intervention starts May 2000 and continues until Jan 2001 (add data pt) Pharmacist case management intervention ends June 2000

    27. Barriers and Facilitators: Site B Prevention is given a low priority in this facility (lack of time) Lack of communication between services No central leadership Good fit between skills and experience and implementers Buy-in was considered “very good” Management was considered supportive

    28. Site C Combined Audit/Feedback Intervention Audit/Feedback Providers were e-mailed a list of IHD patients ranked by LDL-c level; Patient Education IHD patients were sent a letter stating the importance of maintaining a LDL-c cholesterol below 100 mg/dL, a brochure, and two pages of resources

    29. Process and Outcome Variables for Site C Kickoff Meeting in Portland October 1999 Providers were sent an e-mail informing them of the interventions February 2000 Providers were sent a list of IHD patients with rank order of LDL March 2000 632 letters were sent to patients April 2000 632 letters were sent to patients June 2000 Kickoff Meeting in Portland October 1999 Providers were sent an e-mail informing them of the interventions February 2000 Providers were sent a list of IHD patients with rank order of LDL March 2000 632 letters were sent to patients April 2000 632 letters were sent to patients June 2000

    30. Barriers and Facilitators: Site C 20 minute appointment not enough time to address prevention Reluctance by some providers to turn over care to allied health providers Roles were poorly defined Staff time to address patient lists Quality of data in first patient list compromised buy-in from provider staff Chief of Ambulatory care provided strong leadership Kickoff meeting and working meeting were good team building opportunities Compilation of data and expertise of IRM staff

    31. Site D Multiple Interventions Ten proposed interventions, two successful Cardiology Clinic I: Paper POC Reminder: Initiated by Cardiology Coordinator. Continues today Home Site: Computerized Order template adds fasting lipid panels to cardiac cath and cardiology admissions. Continues today

    32. Process Variables and Outcomes for Site D Kickoff Meeting June 1999 In-service at primary care staff meeting at AL July 1999 Paper POC reminder in cardiology clinic at American Lake Clinic September 1999 Fasting lipid panel added to order template in CPRS (cardiology admissions and cath patients) September 1999 CCU informational In-service for nursing staff in Seattle November 1999Kickoff Meeting June 1999 In-service at primary care staff meeting at AL July 1999 Paper POC reminder in cardiology clinic at American Lake Clinic September 1999 Fasting lipid panel added to order template in CPRS (cardiology admissions and cath patients) September 1999 CCU informational In-service for nursing staff in Seattle November 1999

    33. Barriers and Facilitators: Site D Too many interventions proposed Team: no planning/no protocol, no communication, poorly defined roles Limited resources: lack of time of intervention staff Lacked buy-in from nursing staff and management Easy to integrate satellite cardiology clinic intervention into already existing job functions Good working relationships in satellite cardiology clinic I added the ones that I included for the interventions that worked at AL and the ones that didn’t work in Seattle. I did not state in previous slide what did not work but what actually ended up being successful. I added the ones that I included for the interventions that worked at AL and the ones that didn’t work in Seattle. I did not state in previous slide what did not work but what actually ended up being successful.

    34. Site E Lipid Clinic Intervention Approved in April 1999 by the PT&N Committee Pharmacist-run clinic based on provider referral Initially daily clinics M-F 1:30 - 3:30 pm PharmacoManagement Clinic started in Jan 2000.

    35. Process Variables and Outcomes for Site E Lipid Clinic Starts April 1999 Kickoff Meeting In Seattle June 1999 CME Meeting: with Dr. Feingold and LMMS Research Staff August 1999 *Clinical pharmacist leaves VA* December 1999 PharmD starts PharmacoManagement Clinic January 2000 ? PharmD receives permission to call patients on Seattle Data list June 2000 Lipid Clinic Starts April 1999 Kickoff Meeting In Seattle June 1999 CME Meeting: with Dr. Feingold and LMMS Research Staff August 1999 *Clinical pharmacist leaves VA* December 1999 PharmD starts PharmacoManagement Clinic January 2000 ? PharmD receives permission to call patients on Seattle Data list June 2000

    36. Barriers and Facilitators: Site E Lack of buy-in from providers Lack of resources: space, time, personnel Patients live far away Team had problem with data from LMMS team Having intervention come from outside source (administrative buy-in) Fellow colleagues who referred patients to clinic

    37. Site F Multiple Interventions ER orders for IHD patients were changed to add lipid profile & LFTs; Start Simvastatin, review ASA, ACE inhibitor, B-blocker use; repeat LFTs & lipids in 6 weeks Admission orders for ICU/ACU changed to include LFTs and statins w/6 week f/u Target education program for nursing staff Pharmacist-run Lipid Clinic

    38. Process and Outcome Variables for Site F Kickoff meeting in Seattle June 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education July 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education August 1999 Addition to computerized order templates to include fasting lipid profile and Simvastatin September 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education February 2000 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education April 2000 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education May 2000 Pharmacist-run Lipid Clinic opens in October 2000 Kickoff meeting in Seattle June 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education July 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education August 1999 Addition to computerized order templates to include fasting lipid profile and Simvastatin September 1999 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education February 2000 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education April 2000 Nursing/Pharmacy/MD Staff IHD Education May 2000 Pharmacist-run Lipid Clinic opens in October 2000

    39. Barriers and Facilitators: Site F Ordering labs and meds can be difficult There are overwhelming demands on providers Need for a centralized leader w/expertise of guidelines Team communication suffered during implementation Strong time and resource limitations Team process good during planning Management support from Chief of Medicine

    40. Site G Paper POC Reminder Intervention Paper POC Reminder A sheet was placed in front of the patient’s chart at the time of the appointment. The sheet contained lab information, pharmacy information and text lines for a provider response to the reminder.

    41. Process and Outcome Variables for Site G Kickoff Meeting in Seattle June 1999 Intervention is presented to Medical Staff July 1999 The Paper POC reminder intervention starts November 1999 QA manager distributed a copy of the LMMS report to providers February 2000 Intervention ends April 2000 Kickoff Meeting in Seattle June 1999 Intervention is presented to Medical Staff July 1999 The Paper POC reminder intervention starts November 1999 QA manager distributed a copy of the LMMS report to providers February 2000 Intervention ends April 2000

    42. Barriers and Facilitators: Site G Appointment times too short to accomplish preventive care No opinion leader No follow-up to promote physician response Lack of intervention team time to promote intervention VA providers are more conscientious about meeting guidelines than private sector providers Multidisciplinary team Buy-in was good because of evidence basis of intervention

    43. Site H Electronic Clinical Reminder Intervention When interventionists returned from Seattle kickoff meeting they presented the electronic clinical reminder to providers during a staff meeting and an e-mail In August 1999 the IHD-PCE reminder was turned on for providers One of the interventionists received patient data in early Jan 2000.

    44. Process and outcome variables in Site H Kickoff Mtg June 1999 Intervention Team presentation July 1999 IHD-PCE Reminders turned on September 1999 Patient List sent from Seattle January 2000Kickoff Mtg June 1999 Intervention Team presentation July 1999 IHD-PCE Reminders turned on September 1999 Patient List sent from Seattle January 2000

    45. Context: Round 2 New VISN VISN 19, Rocky Mountain Network Single intervention Electronic IHD Lipid Reminders Eastern half of VISN received intervention Western half did not Effort to control for secular trend

    46. VHA Is Divided Into 21 VISNs

    47. IHD Lipid Clinical Reminders Development of two national IHD reminders Notifies clinicians if lipid panel due or ?’ed LDL Provides relevant lab & pharmacy data Links directly to lab & lipid lowering med orders and progress notes

    49. Current Status Evaluation of reminder still in progress Preliminary results of provider survey available Suggest that non-intervention sites did not receive intervention With one exception intervention sites did receive intervention Providers in intervention sites are using the reminders

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