From Dartmouth Health, Lebanon, NH (TEB, DSM, BJO, AE, JR, SH); Department of Community and Family Medicine, Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, NH (TEB, BJO); The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, NH (TEB, BJO); Department of Veterans Affairs National Quality Scholars (VAQS) Fellowship Program (BJO); Department of Medicine, Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, NH (SH); Mongan Institute, Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (SJB).
J Am Board Fam Med. 2022 May-Jun;35(3):537-547. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2022.03.190435.
Transitional Care Management (TCM) is a reimbursable service designed to minimize hospital readmissions. We describe a multifaceted approach to increase TCM services among 107 primary care providers in a rural catchment area of 4250 square miles.
The primary objective was to increase use of TCM phone calls, office visits, and billing codes; the secondary objective was to decrease hospital readmissions.
We utilized a learning health system model, an improvement support team (IST), and a learning collaborative that included webinars and in-person support. The process emphasized user-centered system redesign, coaching, electronic health record (EHR) improvements, and real-time feedback. Analyses included statistical process control charts, box plots, analysis of variance, and -tests.
The IST engaged stakeholders to design and test TCM workflows and EHR prototypes. This resulted in rapid, iterative improvements and system-wide spread of new processes. In the month following implementation, TCM calls and visits quadrupled and increased during 18 subsequent months. Pragmatically, most discharged patients (95% in a subsample) did not receive both the TCM call and visit, serving as a comparison group. The Readmission rate for patients receiving complete TCM services was 5.0% (n = 101) versus 11.9% for comparators (n = 2103, = ). Billing codes increased initially, then returned to baseline.
Our approach led to rapid, sustained scaling of TCM calls and visits in a rural primary care group. Patients who received TCM calls and visits had significantly fewer readmissions. Training of new staff, including PCPs, is required for sustainability. Future research is warranted to increase adoption and evaluate additional outcomes including mortality rates, patient satisfaction, and health care economics.
过渡性护理管理(TCM)是一项可报销的服务,旨在最大限度地减少医院的再入院率。我们描述了一种多方面的方法,以增加在一个 4250 平方英里的农村集水区的 107 名初级保健提供者中 TCM 服务的使用。
主要目的是增加 TCM 电话、门诊和计费代码的使用;次要目标是减少医院再入院率。
我们利用学习健康系统模型、改进支持团队(IST)和学习协作,包括网络研讨会和现场支持。该过程强调以用户为中心的系统重新设计、辅导、电子健康记录(EHR)改进和实时反馈。分析包括统计过程控制图、箱线图、方差分析和 t 检验。
IST 让利益相关者参与设计和测试 TCM 工作流程和 EHR 原型。这导致了快速、迭代的改进和系统范围内新流程的传播。在实施后的一个月内,TCM 电话和就诊量增加了四倍,并在随后的 18 个月内持续增加。实际上,大多数出院患者(在一个子样本中为 95%)没有同时接受 TCM 电话和就诊,作为对照组。接受完整 TCM 服务的患者的再入院率为 5.0%(n=101),而对照组为 11.9%(n=2103,=)。计费代码最初增加,然后恢复到基线。
我们的方法导致了农村初级保健组中 TCM 电话和就诊量的快速、持续增长。接受 TCM 电话和就诊的患者再入院率显著降低。为了可持续性,需要培训新的员工,包括初级保健医生。未来的研究需要增加采用率并评估其他结果,包括死亡率、患者满意度和医疗保健经济学。