Do Clinical Pathways Influence Outcomes for TURP?
Download
Report
Transcript Do Clinical Pathways Influence Outcomes for TURP?
Measuring the benefits
and outcomes of CM:
Clinical Pathways
Trish White BN MN (dist)
Nurse Practitioner: Adult Urology
Hawke’s Bay DHB
October 2005
Outcomes
Defined as the end result of a process, treatment or
intervention
Traditionally mortality and morbidity – measures of
clinical outcomes and physiology
Modern Parameters:
Physiological
Psychosocial (attitude, mood)
Behavioural (motivation)
Functional (ADL’s)
QOL (symptom control, well being)
Knowledge (medications, diet)
Financial (costs of care)
Satisfaction (patient, staff)
(Kleinpell, 2003)
Why do it?
Improves standard of care
How good is the care we are providing?
Measures the benefit of care
Benchmarking
Promotes continuous quality improvements
Nurses should be critical thinkers
Clearly illustrates benefits of the role
Justify role
Prove impact in a measurable way
Gatekeepers
How I measure outcomes….
Monthly report
Linked to Nursing Council competencies
Clinical data: number of pts seen in ward, OPD, home
Referral sources: Nurse, Urologist, GP, Hospice
Prevented admissions
Teaching sessions
Professional activities: presentations, publication, mentoring
Audits: readmissions, active review, day cases, blood
transfusions, returns to OT
Clinical Pathways: variance monitoring reports
Research
Clinical Pathways
“Documentation of variance – key to
improving patient outcomes”
Sheehan, Nursing Management, Feb 2002
Clinical Pathways: process
IT obtain patient data & enter onto Excel
spreadsheet
Clinical audit of medical records
Manual input of clinical data into spreadsheet
Report generated
Analysis by me
Feedback to clinicians (nursing and medical)
& discussion
Any changes put in place
Hyperemesis Gravidarum
Multidisciplinary CP implemented in
1999: input from nursing, dietitian &
medical staff
HBDHB Quality Award, NZ Gynaecology
Nurses Conference best paper 2002
Replaces daily flow chart
Ability to individualise
HG – Length of Stay
7
6
CP Introduced
5
LOS
days
4
3
2
1
0
98-99
99-00
00-01
01-02
Year
02-03
03-04
04-05
HG – Cost implications
Pre Clinical Pathway
$85,367 per annum
Post Clinical Pathway
$35 – 47,000 per annum
At best $50,000 saving per year
Readmissions
25% of patients readmitted
Aggressive management for readmissions
NG feeding
Case coordination
Ethnicity: July 03 – Dec 04
80
70
60
%
50
40
Admissions
2001 census
30
20
10
0
NZ
Euro
PI
Maori Other
HG – Clinical Indicators
Demographics
Nausea & Vomiting Day 2
Ketones Day 2
Ptyalism
NG feeding
CP completion rates: ED & ward
Potential to be used in PHC
TURP Data
Implemented as guideline in 1998
Variance Monitoring 2001
2002
TURP volumes = 18.2% of surgery
105 case weights = 28% of total
contract
TURP - LOS
5
4.5
4
3.5
3
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
IT
Clinical Audit
2001
2002
2003
2004
Clinical Indicators
Acute
vs Elective
Admission DOS
CBI/MBI
Readmissions
Operating time
Fever
Postop
Hb
TOV
LOS
Histology
Benchmarking
Benchmarking – (ACHS) Australian Council
Healthcare Standards
Each variance has between
60 – 84 Health Care
organisations reporting
figures
Tissue weight, histology, blood
transfusions, operating time,
readmissions
Outcomes – Last report:
Reduced TURP LOS by 0.5 day
Plan to reduce readmissions in place
Frequency of postop blood tests
reviewed
Difference in practice: CBI reviewed
Rate of DOS admissions discussed
HBDHB within Australasian benchmarks
Hysterectomy
Includes: vaginal, abdominal &
laparoscopic
LOS further broken down by type of
surgery & gynaecologist
Benchmarked with ACHS
Hysterectomy - LOS
LOS
days
5
4.5
4
3.5
3
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
2000
2001
2002
Year
2003
2004
Clinical Indicators
Demographics
Readmission rate
Admit DOS
Postop blood work
Intraoperative injury
IDC
Nausea & vomiting
Fever
Bowel function
CP completion rate
Outcomes – last report:
2004-2005 for first time Laparoscopic
Hysterectomy has shortest length of stay
IDC removal and patients tolerating diet on
Day 1 improved
Fever rate >38 increased – no trend noted
HBDHB within ACHS benchmarks
Length of stay reducing
Readmission rate reduced
Conclusions
Clinical indicators selected on potential impact
to quality of care and LOS
Little benefit having clinical pathways without
a robust VM system
Clinical pathway an option even with different
techniques between clinicians
Linking clinical outcomes with data
Provides a guideline for staff
Current method labour intensive
Future link to Trendcare, acuity system
CLINICAL
PATHWAYS
SHOULD NOT REPLACE
CLINICAL JUDGEMENT