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Patient Centered Medical Home PCMH: Communication and Care Coordination

Communication and Care Coordination in a PCMH. Advanced Electronic CommunicationCare CoordinationE-prescribing. Glossary. EHR: Electronic Health RecordWeb Portal (or Patient Portal):Application that allows patients to view their medical records over the InternetIn Basket: Electronic messaging s

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Patient Centered Medical Home PCMH: Communication and Care Coordination

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    1. Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH): Communication and Care Coordination Phillip Roemer, MD Assistant Professor of Medicine General Internal Medicine Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University

    2. Communication and Care Coordination in a PCMH Advanced Electronic Communication Care Coordination E-prescribing

    3. Glossary EHR: Electronic Health Record Web Portal (or Patient Portal): Application that allows patients to view their medical records over the Internet In Basket: Electronic messaging system Messages are sent to inform a user of something in the system Messages are manually or automatically sent

    4. Relevant PCMH Standards (NCQA) Advance E-Communication Test Tracking Referral Tracking Promote Patient Self-Management Electronic Prescribing

    5. Clinician to Clinician Electronic Communication

    6. Inpatient Care Leveraged With Electronic Communication PCP notified in EHR upon presentation in ED ED note posted in real time At admission, text page is sent to the PCP Discharge summary and instructions forwarded to PCP Pending results after discharge forwarded to the PCP Admission text page is considered a back-up Direct handoff from hospitalist to PCP still priorityAdmission text page is considered a back-up Direct handoff from hospitalist to PCP still priority

    7. Patient - Clinician Electronic Communication

    8. Patients Access their EHR Via a Web-Based Portal View test results Review active medications Request prescription refills, referrals, appointments Send secure messages to their physicians’ offices Promotes Self managementPromotes Self management

    9. Value of a Web Portal Patients: Fast, convenient, asynchronous messaging Promotes self-management Access to medication lists, results, messaging Patient proxy available Physicians: Enhanced efficiency Practice: Cost effective

    10. Efficiencies for Physicians Using a Web Portal Test results sent instantly by physician or nurse Easy workflow Reduced calls for results by patients Messaging No messages go directly to physicians!!! Phone staff bypassed - messages written in the patient’s own words Messages become part of the patient’s record Asynchronous Data on Tele MessagesData on Tele Messages

    11. Web Portal – Cost Savings Workflows streamlined Communicating Test Results Electronically is less expensive Estimated FY 2008 savings in GIM = $13,500-15,000 20% of GIM patients have active MyChart accounts Total results: 5000-6000/month Electronic message Currently 1300-1500 test results are released per month in GIM at essentially no cost (~25% of all results) Letter - Approximately $3.00 per letter (postage, paper, ink, staff time) Savings (assumption of 3-4 results per letter) 375-500 letters/month x $3.00 = $1125-1500/month 20% of GIM patients have active MyChart accounts Total results: 5000-6000/month Electronic message Currently 1300-1500 test results are released per month in GIM at essentially no cost (~25% of all results) Letter - Approximately $3.00 per letter (postage, paper, ink, staff time) Savings (assumption of 3-4 results per letter) 375-500 letters/month x $3.00 = $1125-1500/month

    12. Costs and Challenges of a Patient Portal Support issues Central Support Model Help Desk Cultural change - Serving patients, as well as internal users Higher volume of calls Workflow questions If it is easier for patients to contact us, will we receive more messages? Is this desirable in a PCMH? Will it be easier for physicians to contact patients? Clinicians may need to manage e-messages differently (than telephone)? MD – Resist urge to answer every e-message directly, leverage nursing as with Tele (don’t always answer pt directly Nurses – address messages similarly to Tele, don’t just pass throughMD – Resist urge to answer every e-message directly, leverage nursing as with Tele (don’t always answer pt directly Nurses – address messages similarly to Tele, don’t just pass through

    13. Future Revenue Online consultations Managing lower complexity problems outside of the office visit may higher average LOS Patient Self-management support Greater EHR transparency – access to more of their health record Further access to reliable health information Examples:Examples:

    14. Communication and Care Coordination in a PCMH Advanced Electronic Communication Care Coordination Using automated systems to support and improve care coordination in a PCMH E-prescribing

    15. Patient Care Coordination in a PCMH Using automated systems and electronic communication to support and improve care coordination in a PCMH

    16. Contents of In Basket Test results Real time interface with the lab Abnormal values are flagged in red CC’d Results Results that were pending at the time of hospital discharge for the PCP’s patients Patient Telephone and Web Portal messages forwarded from nursing

    17. EHR In Basket (cont’d) Messages from clinicians and staff CC’d Charts: Referral tracking – Consultations from specialists Progress notes from other GIM physicians Transcriptions for the PCP’s patients

    18. In Basket

    19. PCP Field Drives Flow of Results

    20. Test Results File in an Electronic In Basket Results ordered by the PCP and supervised residents Results manually copied to the PCP by another ordering physician Transcriptions for the PCP’s patients Operative reports, Nuclear cardiology Colonoscopies/EGD’s Neurological testing (EEG, sleep studies) PFT’s Challenges: Contributed services/private physicians on staff do NOT have full access to EHR Who is responsible for test results ordered by clinicians outside of the PCMH when results are cc’d and often viewed by the PCP first?Challenges: Contributed services/private physicians on staff do NOT have full access to EHR Who is responsible for test results ordered by clinicians outside of the PCMH when results are cc’d and often viewed by the PCP first?

    21. In Basket Challenges Inconsistent use EHR users only Who is responsible for results viewed by multiple physicians? PCP field is not 100% completed or accurate Some internal users are Some internal users are

    22. Electronic Prescribing Use of EHR to write prescriptions Efficient, particularly with multiple refills Legible, patient-friendly sigs Safety checks – automated allergy and medication interaction alerts

    23. Future – E-prescribing Electronic transmission of prescriptions from the clinician to the pharmacy Bidirectional flow of information Electronic refill requests from pharmacy Confirmation of filled prescriptions Individual patient formulary information at point of care

    24. Potential Benefits of E-prescribing Improved patient care and safety Reduction in phone calls and faxing with pharmacies Streamlined refill requests and authorization Increased patient adherance Increased patient convenience Automated process less prone for errors, more accurate med list – more effective interaction checker Automated process less prone for errors, more accurate med list – more effective interaction checker

    25. Challenges of E-prescribing Collecting preferred pharmacy name(s) and fax number(s) for each patient Workflow changes Refusing refill requests from pharmacy Obtaining Medication Dispense History consent form Adding medications to EHR from Dispense History query Errors E-prescribing errors Other refill errors Medication Dispense history consent by patient E-prescribing errors are technical, eg. Prescription was not received by pharmacy Other refill errors (eg. Patient ID not found) Med Dispense History consent: Before medication information can be downloaded, patient must provide consentE-prescribing errors are technical, eg. Prescription was not received by pharmacy Other refill errors (eg. Patient ID not found) Med Dispense History consent: Before medication information can be downloaded, patient must provide consent

    26. Summary Good processes are necessary to drive effective and efficient care Communication with patients and between clinicians can be greatly enhanced with electronic tools Automated systems support and improve care coordination in a PCMH

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