Transcript Document
Bridging the Gap Between Routine Primary Care and Urgent Care A teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School Scot B. Sternberg, MS, Candace Reynolds, RN, Katherine Chiulli, RN, Kim Ariyabuddhiphongs, MD, Louise Mackisack, MA, Vasudev Mandyam, MD Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA Problem: BIDMC’s HealthCare Associates (HCA) is an academic adult primary care practice – over 41,000 patients and 100,000 visits per year. A large number of “episodic" patient visits, for acute complaints including shortness of breath, dehydration, and cellulitis. There had been no infrastructure to provide acute treatments in the clinic and potentially bypass an Emergency Department visit. Objective: Develop an Acute Treatment Service (ATS) within HCA to provide the right care at the right time. Treat low-acuity patients who may otherwise need to be sent to the ED. Continue to expand services and treatments offered, to progress towards capturing a wider array of conditions and acuity. Description of the Intervention, including context Identified three treatments to provide: IV fluids, IV antibiotics, and nebulizers. Implementation included retro-fitting of existing space; providing enhanced training for nursing staff; setup of on-site medications; standardized treatment and discharge plans. Nursing staff provides treatments, overseen by a physician provider. Developed a database to measure and track ATS interventions, disposition, and time spent. Patients discharged home are also tracked for 7 days following the visit for any subsequent ED visit and/or hospitalization. The Results/Progress to Date: Findings to date: HCA Acute Treatment Service Apr-Jun 2014 July-Sept 2014 Oct-Dec 2014 Summary Total Visits 33 24 37 94 Treatments IV Fluids 16 16 20 52 Nebulizer 17 7 16 40 IV Antibiotics 1 1 2 Disposition Home 30 21 33 84 89.4% ED/Home 1 2 2 5 ED/Inpatient¹ 2 1 2 5 Outcome 7 days later² Home 30 22 30 82 92.1% ED/Home 1 3 4 ED/Inpatient¹ 1 2 3 ¹ED and then inpatient or observation ²Outcome within 7 days for patients who were discharged home from ATS or ATS/ED Key Lessons Learned Patients who have accessed ATS have received it very favorably. Data shows HCA can offer these acute services integrated into the primary care setting using existing resources and can avoid unnecessary ED visits. Multidisciplinary debriefs and case reviews highlight opportunities to streamline care and broaden utilization. Next Steps Continue to monitor utilization, discharge, and 7-day outcomes Standardize discharge instructions and follow-up protocol Apply QI principles to continuously re-evaluate and improve the quality and process of acute care delivery Expand potential diagnoses and treatments available by ATS ¹Special recognition and acknowledgement to the HCA nurses who staff the ATS, including Anne Bassler, RN; Arvetta Boykins, RN; Kathy Chiulli, RN; Melissa Cote, RN; Sue Dinneen, RN; Michelle Fiorenzo, RN; Janet Greene, RN; Cathy Ivkovic, RN; Barbara Luker, RN; Maureen Mamet, RN; Deb Schissler, RN; Tarsha Soares, RN; Kristine Sullivan, RN; Francine Theberge, RN; Jan Woodruff, RN For More Information, Contact Vasudev Mandyam,, MD/ [email protected]