1 / 20

Measuring Pharmacy Department Data: Enhancing Productivity Through a Scorecard

Learn about the importance of measuring metrics in a pharmacy department and how to enhance productivity through a scorecard. This presentation will discuss examples of meaningful clinical and operational metrics, driving forces for change, advantages of a pharmacy scorecard, scorecard considerations, establishing performance targets, and monitoring indicators.

dsheila
Download Presentation

Measuring Pharmacy Department Data: Enhancing Productivity Through a Scorecard

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. PSHP Annual Assembly 2015 Importance of Measuring Pharmacy Department Data: How to Enhance Productivity Through a Scorecard Jill Rebuck, Pharm.D., MBA, BCPS, FCCM, FCCP Director of Clinical Pharmacy Services Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

  2. Objectives • Discuss at least 3 examples of meaningful clinical &operational metrics for a health-system pharmacy department

  3. Driving Forces for Change AJHP 2009;66:713

  4. Why Measure Performance? • Shift from volume to value-based care • Accountable Care Act • Value based purchasing • Meaningful use • PPMI leaders believe: • Lack of pharmacy resources is barrier to optimal practice models (83%) • Stakeholders have “insufficient recognition” of pharmacy’s value (73%) PPMI Summit 2010; Accessed via ashp.org

  5. Pharmacy Department Realities • Limited pharmacy staff • Tighter budgets • Rising drug expenses • Expectation to provide highest quality pharmacy services while decreasing total cost of care • Greater accountability to defined patient outcomes

  6. “If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it” - Peter Drucker

  7. Advantages of Pharmacy Scorecard • If adequately constructed & updated frequently: • Represent broad view of performance • Guide for strategic decision making • Improve quality of pharmacy services • Demonstrate impact of pharmacy on organizational alignment Enwere EN, et al. Hosp Pharm 2014;49:579-84

  8. Department Alignment Mission Vision Values Strategic Goals Initiatives Department Performance Metrics Adapted by EnwereEN, et al. Hosp Pharm 2014;49:579-84

  9. Scorecard Considerations • Tactical indicators of performance metrics based on specific goals • Trend data over time (vs. dashboards) • Monthly or quarterly & YTD • Push vs. pull data considerations • Need to be easily monitored • Resource allocation for data collection

  10. Establishing Performance Targets • Obtain institution-specific baseline data • Incorporate external benchmarks • Enhance validity & credibility • Determine frequency of updating info • Monthly, quarterly, annually • Visualization of progress • Evaluate metrics annually

  11. Controversy: Scorecard Content • Pharmacy-centric metrics vs. • Organizational wide metrics Examples: • % Med Rec Completed or 30-day Readmission • % Patients receiving anticoagulation or % DVT/PE • % Patients with pain scores < 5 or % Top Box HCAHPS pain control

  12. Examples of Med-Related Outcomes Numbers above represent fictitious data for illustrative purposes only

  13. Examples: Pharmacy Operations Further consideration on order verification turn-around-time Further consideration of order verification turn-around-time

  14. Examples: Pharmacy Operations Further consideration on order verification turn-around-time Further consideration of order verification turn-around-time

  15. Examples: Financial & Growth Further consideration on order verification turn-around-time

  16. Examples: Employee Talent

  17. Productivity Monitoring Indicators • Worked hours per unit of service • Drug (or labor) cost per admission • Labor expense per 1,000 doses billed • RPh worked hours per order • Tech worked hours per dose • Clinical interventions per RPh shift • RPh:Technician skill mix ratio • Rx cost as % of total hospital cost Adapted from Rough SS, et al. AJHP 2010;67:380-8.

  18. Pharmacy Intensity Score • Resource-based relative value intensity grouping system • Uses pharmaceutical resource consumption data • Produce DRG-specific drug use weights • Generally preferred over CMI • Example: hip replacement vs. kidney transplant Rough SS, et al. AJHP2010;67:300-11.

  19. Scorecards: Summary • Important to promote and justify patient-centered pharmacy services • Update & share regularly with pharmacy employees and stakeholders • Influence ‘right size’ of department

  20. Questions

More Related