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Towards a ANZ Hip Fracture Registry “Quality Care Costs Less”

Towards a ANZ Hip Fracture Registry “Quality Care Costs Less”. Hip fractures due to falls Males and females, Australia 1999-2007. Source: Bradley C. 2011. Hospitalisations due to falls by older people, Australia 2006–07. Injury research and statistics series no. 56. Cat. no. INJCAT 132.

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Towards a ANZ Hip Fracture Registry “Quality Care Costs Less”

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  1. Towards a ANZ Hip Fracture Registry“Quality Care Costs Less”

  2. Hip fractures due to fallsMales and females, Australia 1999-2007 Source: Bradley C. 2011. Hospitalisations due to falls by older people, Australia 2006–07. Injury research and statistics series no. 56. Cat. no. INJCAT 132. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, Canberra.

  3. Fragility hip fracture rates by year, WA, 1999-2009 Average yearly change: Indigenous, +6.9% (95%CI 2-12%) vs non-Indigenous, -3.6% (95%CI 3-4%)

  4. Falls and fracture care and preventionA road map for a systematic approach Stepwise implementation - based on size of impact Objective 1: Improve outcomes and improve efficiency of care after hip fractures Hip fracture patients Objective 2: Respond to the first fracture, prevent the second – through Fracture Liaison Services in acute and primary care Non-hip fragility fracture patients Objective 3: Early intervention to restore independence – through falls care pathway linking acute and urgent care services to secondary falls prevention Individuals at high risk of 1st fragility fracture or other injurious falls Objective 4: Prevent frailty, preserve bone health, reduce accidents – through preserving physical activity, healthy lifestyles and reducing environmental hazards Older people 1. DH Prevention Package for Older People

  5. Falls and fracture care and preventionA road map for a systematic approach High volume, high cost Evidence around model/s of care Evidence of clinical variation in practice Evidence of sub-optimal care Evidence that data can be used to drive change Stepwise implementation - based on size of impact Objective 1: Improve outcomes and improve efficiency of care after hip fractures Hip fracture patients Objective 2: Respond to the first fracture, prevent the second – through Fracture Liaison Services in acute and primary care Non-hip fragility fracture patients Objective 3: Early intervention to restore independence – through falls care pathway linking acute and urgent care services to secondary falls prevention Individuals at high risk of 1st fragility fracture or other injurious falls Objective 4: Prevent frailty, preserve bone health, reduce accidents – through preserving physical activity, healthy lifestyles and reducing environmental hazards Older people 1. DH Prevention Package for Older People

  6. Inter-professional collaboration 2004-2007

  7. Six Blue Book standards – monitored by NHFD All patients with hip fracture should be admitted to an acute orthopaedic ward within 4 hours of presentation All patients with hip fracture if medically fit should have surgery within 48 hours of admission, during normal working hours All patients with hip fracture should be assessed and cared for to minimise risk of a pressure ulcer All patients presenting with a fragility fracture should be managed on an orthopaedic ward with routine access to orthogeriatric medical support from admission All fragility fracture patients should be assessed for need of antiresorptive therapy to prevent future osteoporotic fractures All fragility fracture patients should be offered multidisciplinary assessment and intervention to prevent future falls

  8. UK NHFD Reports: 2008-2011 2011 - ALL eligible hospitals registered 191/191 Individual reports for 26 hospitals Analysis on 12,983 records from 64 hospitals Analysis on 36,556 records from 129 hospitals Analysis on 53,443 records from 176 hospitals

  9. 2011 National Hip Fracture Database ReportKey metrics Surgery within 36 hours Pre-op medical assessment Acute Length of Stay NHFD 2011 National Report. Available from www.nhfd.co.uk

  10. Three-year trend data: 30,022 patients from 28 hospitals Binomial test p-value <0.001 for all trends; average mortality at 30 days fell from 9.4% to 8%.

  11. National Steering Group States and Territories LHDs Hospitals Registry Policy Models of Care Safety & Quality System Redesign Training / Education Resourcing models of care Local training / support Implementing best practice Measuring performance National Guidelines Quality Indicators Consumer Manifesto

  12. National Hip Fracture Database 82% of predicted hip fractures • Employs 4 people and now funded by DOH • Now has got 189 of 191 hospitals sending data (England, Wales, Northern Ireland) • Annual reporting since 2008 • 2008: ? patients from 26 hospitals • 2009: 12,983 patients from 64 hospitals • 2010: 36,556 patients from 129 hospitals • 2011: 56,000 patients from 176 hospitals

  13. National Hip Fracture Database • Total hip fracture records = 137,933 • Reports process indicators and case-mix adjusted outcomes (e.g. 30 day mortality) • All hospitals identified in reports

  14. Best Practice Tariff

  15. Best Practice Tariff • Aims • To reduce unexplained variation in quality • To universalise best practice • Key indicators • Surgery within 36 hours • Involvement of Geriatricians • Balanced Scorecard for Hip Fractures

  16. BPT - Payment • All criteria must be met • Tariff • Reduced previous average payment by 10% • If criteria met – get old payment + extra • Extra = £445 • If doing 300 / yr = £134,000 = $270,000 per yr • From 2011: £890 = £267,000 = $530,000 per yr • Enough to allow investment in change, improvement and data collection

  17. How System Works Notify BPT compliance Commissioners National Hip Fracture Database Pay additional funds quarterly Provide NHI and individual patient data Local Hospital Importance of “trust” in each segment of system

  18. So why have a registry? • Improve patient outcomes • Death, dependency and institutionalisation • Safety and quality • e.g. timely and appropriate interventions • Reduce inequalities • Local organisational, rural remote • Driver for organisational change • Use the data to shape practice • Undertake additional research

  19. Australia and New Zealand Hip Fracture Database • Inaugural Meeting October 2011 • Working Group Established • Strong support from HQSC – NZ & Aust • Professional Societies • OA NZ & Aust

  20. Progress with a National Registry • Auditing at facility level – NSW, NZ, WA • Piloting at patient level in NSW • WA/CMDHB have started electronic database • Guidelines and quality indicators to be completed in 2012 • Consumer manifesto – 2012 • Conversations re build and operation of a national database

  21. Progress • NZ Workshop planned May 2012 led by HQSC, NZ with NZ stakeholders participating • (ACC, MOH, NHB, IT board, CNBU)

  22. Discussion • Thank you

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