1 / 52

Improving the Quality of Health Care for Mental and Substance-Use Conditions

Improving the Quality of Health Care for Mental and Substance-Use Conditions. A Report in the Quality Chasm Series Ann Page RN, MPH Study Director Institute of Medicine. The Crossing the Quality Chasm Series. To Err is Human (1999)

dusty
Download Presentation

Improving the Quality of Health Care for Mental and Substance-Use Conditions

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. Improving the Quality of Health Care for Mental and Substance-Use Conditions A Report in the Quality Chasm Series Ann Page RN, MPH Study Director Institute of Medicine

  2. The Crossing the Quality Chasm Series To Err is Human (1999) Crossing the Quality Chasm - A New Health System for the 21st Century (2001) Leadership by Example (2002) Fostering Rapid Advances in Health Care (2002) Priority Areas for National Action (2003) Health Professions Education (2003) Keeping Patients Safe– Transforming the Work Environment of Nurses (2004) Patient Safety – Achieving a New Standard for Care (2004) Quality through Collaboration – the Future of Rural Health (2005) Improving the Quality of Health Care for Mental and Substance-use Conditions (2005) www.nap.edu

  3. Crossing the Quality Chasm “Quality problems occur typically not because of failure of goodwill, knowledge, effort or resources devoted to health care, but because of fundamental shortcomings in the ways care is organized” Trying harder will not work: changing systems of care will! a new HEALTH system for the 21st century (IOM, 2001)

  4. Six Aims of Quality Health Care • Safe –avoids injuries from care • Effective – provides care based on scientific knowledge and avoids services not likely to help • Patient-centered – respects and responds to patient preferences, needs, and values

  5. Six Aims (cont.) • Timely – reduces waits and sometimes harmful delays for those receiving and giving care • Efficient –avoids waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas and energy • Equitable – care does not vary in quality due to personal characteristics (gender, ethnicity, geographic location, or socio-economic status)

  6. Old Rules Care is based on visits. Professional autonomy drives variability. Professionals control care. 4. Information is a record. 5. Decisions are based upon training and experience. New Rules Care is based on continuous healing relationships. 2. Care is customized to patient needs and values. 3. The patient is the source of control. 4. Knowledge is shared and information flows freely. 5. Decision making is evidence-based. Ten Rules for Achieving the Aims

  7. Old Rules “Do no harm” is an individual clinician responsibility. Secrecy is necessary. The system reacts to needs. Cost reduction is sought. Preference for professional roles over the system. New Rule Safety is a system responsibility. Transparency is necessary. Needs are anticipated. Waste is continuously decreased. Cooperation among clinicians is a priority. Ten Rules for Achieving the Aims

  8. Six Critical Pathways for Achieving Aims and Rules • News ways of delivering care • Effective use of information technology (IT) • Managing the clinical knowledge, skills, and deployment of the workforce • Effective teams and coordination of care across patient conditions, services and settings • Improvements in how quality is measured • Payment methods conducive to good quality

  9. Study Sponsors • Annie E. Casey Foundation • CIGNA Foundation • National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism • National Institute on Drug Abuse • Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration • Robert Wood Johnson Foundation • Veterans Health Administration

  10. Charge to the IOM • Explore the implications of the Quality Chasm report for mental health and substance-use conditions; • Examine barriers and facilitators to significantly improving quality ― including environmental factors such as payment, benefits coverage and regulatory issues, as well as health care organization and delivery issues. • Based on the evidence, develop an “agenda for change.”

  11. Two Findings Critical to an Agenda for Change • Co-occurrence of mental, substance-use, and general health conditions • The differences in M/SU health services delivery compared to general health care

  12. Mental and substance-use conditions Pervasive • More than 33 million Americans treated annually • 20 % of all working age adults (18-54) • 21 % of adolescents • Millions more fail to receive care Frequently intertwined • 15 - 40 % co-occurrence of M and SU illnesses Often influence general health • frequently accompany chronic illnesses; e.g., cancer, diabetes, and heart disease • 20% of heart attack patients suffer from depression, tripling risk of death • associated with leading causes of outpatient visits; e.g., headache, fatigue and pain

  13. Mental, substance-use, & general health CONCLUSION Improving care delivery and outcomes for any one of the above depends upon improving care and outcomes for the other two. OVERARCHING RECOMMENDATION Health care for general, mental, and substance-use problems and illnesses must be delivered with an understanding of the inherent interactions between the mind/brain and the rest of the body.

  14. Increased stigma, discrimination, & coercion Patient decision-making ability not as anticipated / supported Diagnosis more subjective A less developed quality measurement & improvement infrastructure More separate care delivery arrangements Less involvement in the NHII and use of IT More diverse workforce and more solo practice Differently structured marketplace M/SU Health Care Compared to General Health Care

  15. Six Problems in the Quality of M/SU Health Care ― and Their Solutions

  16. Problem 1: Threats to Patient-Centered Care • Residual stereotypes: • impaired decision-making • dangerousness • drug dependence as solely volitional • Resulting stigma and discrimination • by health care providers • in public policy • Wrongful application of coercion

  17. Evidence Contradicts Stereotypes • Great diversity in decision-making capacity (DMC). • DMC more affected by cognitive ability than psychotic symptoms; DMC can be improved with interventions. • Inappropriate to make conclusions about DMC based on diagnosis. • Vast majority of individuals with mental illnesses and no concurrent substance useareat no greater risk of violent behavior than those without M/SU illnesses. • Contribution of people with mental illnesses to violence is small. • Drug dependence reflects neurological changes; not simply volitional. • Patients can have a voice even when care is coerced.

  18. Stereotypes, stigma and discrimination impair quality by: • Lessening patient ability to manage their illness and achieve recovery; • Encouraging non-therapeutic clinician attitudes and behaviors; and • Fostering discriminatory public policies that create barriers to recovery.

  19. Lessened patient ability to manage illness & achieve recovery Stigma pathway to decreased outcomes: Stigma → ↓ self-esteem → ↓ self efficacy → ↓ ability to manage → ↓ health outcomes / chronic illness recovery

  20. Discriminatory public policies create barriers to recovery • Insurance discrimination • Less benefit coverage – especially for children and SU • Higher co-pays • Loss of child custody solely to secure coverage • Punishment added to criminal sanctions for non-alcohol substance convictions: • Decreased access to student loans **** (revised per 2005 Budget bill) • Potential lifetime ban on food stamps and welfare

  21. Problem 2: Weak quality measurement & improvement infrastructure • Inefficient production of the evidence base • Treatments not codified and captured in administrative datasets; • Outcome measurement not widely applied; • Evidence not mined from observational and other non-RCT study designs • Dissemination of advances often fails to use effective strategies and available resources; e.g., CDC; • Performance measurement for M/SU health care receives insufficient attention in the private sector; public sector efforts have not yet achieved consensus. • QI methods not permeating day-to-day operations of providers of M/SU services.

  22. Five–part strategy to strengthen the QM/I Infrastructure: • Fill gaps in the evidence base via: • Alternate study designs • Standardizing and coding interventions for capture in administrative data sets • Outcome measurement • Coordinating initiatives analyzing the evidence; • Evidence-based approaches to disseminate evidence; • Improved diagnosis and assessment; • An infrastructure to measure & report on quality; • Quality improvement practices at locus of care.

  23. Problem 3: Poor linkages across separations in care • Greater separation of M/SU specialty care from general health care; • Separation of mental and substance-use health care from each other; • Society’s reliance on the education, child welfare, and other non-health care sectors to deliver M/SU care; and • Location of services needed by individuals with more severe illnesses in public sector programs apart from private sector. • Unclear accountability for coordination

  24. Mechanisms for Coordinating Care • Routine sharing of patient information between providers with patient knowledge and consent. • Targeted screening of patients for comorbid mental, substance-use, and general medical problems. • Evidence-based coordination–linkage mechanisms • High level policy coordination mechanisms that achieve and model collaboration at the federal and state levels.

  25. Evidence-based coordination–linkage mechanisms • Clinical integration of services • Co-location of services • Shared patient records • Case management • Formal agreements with external providers

  26. Problem 4: Lack of involvement in the National Health Information Infrastructure Involvement needed in design of: • Electronic health records (EHRs) • Platform for the exchange of info across clinical settings • Data standards

  27. M/SU care falling behind in IT In AHRQ’s 2004 awards of $139 million in grants and contracts to promote the use of health information technology, health care for M/SU conditions was not strongly represented in either the applicants or awardees. Of the nearly 600 applications for funding, only “a handful” had any substantial behavioral health content, and of the 103 grants awarded, only one specifically targeted M/SU health care.

  28. Problem 5: Insufficient Workforce Capacity for QI • Greater variation in M/SU workforce and its education / training • Across-the-board deficiencies in education; e.g., re: substance use; no “core knowledge” across disciplines • Variation in licensure /credentialing/continuing education doesn’t assure competency • More solo practice impedes knowledge and technology uptake • Limited preparation for Internet and other communication technologies for service delivery

  29. General health care Physicians Advanced practice nurses Physician assistants M/SU health care Psychiatrists Psychologists Counselors Guidance Addiction Pastoral Other Marriage and family therapists Social Workers Others Greater diversity licensed to diagnose and treat

  30. Problem 6 of 6: A Differently Structured Marketplace • Dominance of government (state and local) purchasers, • Frequent purchase of insurance for M/SU health care separately from other health care (i.e., “carve-out” arrangements), • Tendency of private insurance to avoid covering or to offer more-limited coverage to individuals with M/SU illnesses, and • Government purchasers’ greater use of direct provision and purchase of care rather than insurance arrangements.

  31. Clinicians Health care organizations Health plans Purchasers State policy officials Federal policy officials Congress Accrediting bodies Institutions of higher education Funders of research Improving M/SU health care requires action by:

  32. Recommendation 4-1.To better build and disseminate the evidence base, ‘ • DHHS should strengthen, coordinate, and consolidate the synthesis and dissemination of evidence on effective M/SU treatments and services by SAMHSA, NIMH, NIDA, NIAAA, AHRQ, DOJ, et al. public and private sector entities.

  33. To implement this, DHHS should charge or create one or more entities to: • Describe and categorize available M/SU preventive, diagnostic, and therapeutic interventions (including screening, diagnostic, and symptom-monitoring tools) and develop individual procedure codes and definitions for these interventions and tools for their use in administrative datasets approved under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. • Assemble the scientific evidence on the efficacy and effectiveness of these interventions, including their use in varied age and ethnic groups; use a well-established approach to rate the strength of this evidence, and categorize the interventions accordingly; and recommend or endorse guidelines for the use of the evidence-based interventions for specific M/SU problems and illnesses. • Substantially expand efforts to attain widespread adoption of evidence-based practices through the use of evidence-based approaches to knowledge dissemination and uptake. Dissemination strategies should always include entities that are commonly viewed as knowledge experts by general health care providers and makers of public policy, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, . . . and professional associations and health care organizations.

  34. Recommendation 4-3. To measure quality better, • DHHS, in partnership with the private sector, should charge and financially support an entity similar to the National Quality Forum to convene government regulators, accrediting organizations, consumer representatives, providers, and purchasers exercising leadership in quality-based purchasing for the purpose of reaching consensus on and implementing a common, continuously improving set of M/SU health care quality measures for providers, organizations, and systems of care.

  35. Participants in this consortium should commit to: • Requiring the reporting and submission of the quality measures to a performance measure repository or repositories. • Requiring validation of the measures for accuracy and adherence to specifications. • Ensuring the analysis and display of measurement results in formats understandable by multiple audiences, including consumers, those reporting the measures, purchasers, and quality oversight organizations. • Establishing models for the use of the measures for benchmarking and quality improvement purposes at sites of care delivery. • Performing continuing review of the measures’ effectiveness in improving care.

  36. Recommendation 4-4. To increase quality improvement capacity: • DHHS, in collaboration with other government agencies, states, philanthropic organizations, and professional associations, should create or charge one or more entities as national or regional resources to test, disseminate knowledge about, and provide technical assistance and leadership on quality improvement practices for M/SU health care in public- and private-sector settings.

  37. Recommendation 5-2. To facilitate the delivery of coordinated care by primary care, mental health, and substance-use treatment providers, • government agencies, . . . should implement policies and incentives to continually increase collaboration among these providers to achieve evidence-based screening and care of their patients with general, mental, and/or substance-use health conditions.

  38. The following specific measures should be undertaken to implement this recommendation: • DHHS should fund demonstration programs to offer incentives for the transition of multiple primary care and M/SU practices along a continuum of coordination models. • Purchasers should modify policies and practices that preclude paying for evidence-based screening, treatment, and coordination of M/SU care and require (with patients’ knowledge and consent) all health care organizations with which they contract to ensure appropriate sharing of clinical information essential for coordination of care with other providers treating their patients. • Federal . . . governments should revise laws, regulations, and administrative practices that create inappropriate barriers to the communication of information between providers of health care for mental and substance-use conditions and between those providers and providers of general care.

  39. Recommendation 5-4. To provide leadership in coordination. . . . • DHHS should create a high-level, continuing entity reporting directly to the Secretary to improve collaboration and coordination across its mental, substance-use, and general health care agencies, including the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration; the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and the Administration for Children, Youth, and Families. • DHHS should implement performance measures to monitor its progress toward achieving internal interagency collaboration and publicly report its performance on these measures annually.

  40. Recommendation 6-1. To realize the benefits of the National Health Information Infrastructure for M/SU health care: • The secretaries of DHHS and the Department of Veterans Affairs should charge the Office of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology and SAMHSA to jointly develop and implement a plan for ensuring that the various components of the emerging NHII—including data and privacy standards, electronic health records, and community and regional health networks—address M/SU health care as fully as general health care.

  41. As part of this strategy: • DHHS should create and support a mechanism to engage M/SU health care stakeholders in the public and private sectors in developing recommendations for the data elements, standards, and processes needed to address unique aspects of information management related to M/SU health care. These recommendations should be provided to the appropriate standards-setting entities and initiatives working with the Office of the National Coordinator of Health Information Technology. • Federal grants and contracts for the development of components of the NHII should require and use as a criterion for making awards the involvement and inclusion of M/SU health care. • The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrationshould increase its work with public and private stakeholders to support the building of information infrastructure components that address M/SU health care and coordinate these information initiatives with the NHII. • Policies and information technology infrastructure should be used to create linkages (consistent with all privacy requirements) among patient records and other data sources pertaining to M/SU services received from health care providers and from education, social, criminal justice, and other agencies.

  42. Recommendation 6-4. • (The) Federal . . .government . . . should encourage the widespread adoption of electronic health records, computer-based clinical decision-support systems, computerized provider order entry, and other forms of information technology for M/SU care by:

  43. Offering financial incentives to individual M/SU clinicians and organizations for investments in information technology needed to participate fully in the emerging NHII. • Providing capital and other incentives for the development of virtual networks to give individual and small-group providers standard access to software, clinical and population data and health records, and billing and clinical decision-support systems. • Providing financial support for continuing technical assistance, training, and information technology maintenance. • Including in purchasing decisions an assessment of the use of information technology by clinicians and health care organizations for clinical decision support, electronic health records, and other quality improvement applications.

  44. Recommendation 7-1. To ensure sustained attention to the M/SU health care workforce: • Congress should authorize and appropriate funds to create and maintain a Council on the Mental and Substance-Use Health Care Workforce as a public–private partnership

  45. The Council should develop and implement a comprehensive plan for strengthening the quality and capacity of the workforce by: • Identifying the specific clinical competencies that all M/SU professionals must possess to be licensed or certified and the competencies that must be maintained over time. • Developing national standards for the credentialing and licensure of M/SU providers to eliminate differences in the standards now used by the states. Such standards should be based on core competencies and should be included in curricula and education programs across all the M/SU disciplines. • Proposing programs to be funded by government and the private sector to address and resolve such long-standing M/SU workforce issues as diversity, cultural relevance, faculty development, and continuing shortages of the well-trained clinicians and consumer providers needed to work with children and the elderly, and of programs for training competent clinician administrators.

  46. Cont. • Providing a continuing assessment of M/SU workforce trends, issues, and financing policies. • Measuring the extent to which the plan’s objectives have been met and reporting annually to the nation on the status of the M/SU workforce. • Soliciting technical assistance from public–private partnerships to facilitate the work of the council and the efforts of educational and accreditation bodies to implement its recommendations.

  47. Recommendation 7-3. The federal government should support the development of M/SU faculty leaders . . . • in health professions schools, such as schools of nursing and medicine, and in schools and programs that educate M/SU professionals, such as psychologists and social workers.

  48. Rec. 9-1. DHHS should provide leadership, strategic development support, and additional funding for R&D on improving care quality. • This initiative should coordinate the existing quality improvement research efforts of the NIMH, NIDA, NIAAA, DVA, SAMHSA, AHRQ, and CMS, and develop and fund cross-agency efforts in necessary new research. • To that end, the initiative should address the full range of research needed to reduce gaps in knowledge at the clinical, services, systems, and policy levels and should establish links to and encourage expanded efforts by foundations, states, and other nonfederal organizations.

  49. Rec 9.2 Federal and (other) agencies . . . should create . . . research strategies . . . that address treatment effectiveness and quality improvement in usual settings of care delivery. • To that end, they should develop new research and demonstration funding models that: • encourage local innovation, • Include research designs in addition to randomized controlled trials; • are committed to partnerships between researchers and stakeholders; and • that create a critical mass of interdisciplinary research partnerships involving usual settings of care.

  50. SUMMARY: DHHS to charge or create entities to: • Coordinate the identification of evidence–based practices; • Develop procedure codes for administrative data sets; • Use evidence–based approaches to disseminate and promote uptake of evidence-based practices; • Assure use of general health care opinion leaders (e.g., CDC, AHRQ) in dissemination; • Fulfill essential quality measurement and reporting functions; • Provide leadership in quality improvement activities; and • Improve coordination among federal agencies.

More Related