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Washington State 7 Best Practices Dr. Stephen H. Anderson, MD, FACEP

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Washington State 7 Best Practices. Dr. Stephen H. Anderson, MD, FACEP. The State Budget. Presented at WSHA Safe Table – ER is for Emergencies 9/24/12. Problem Statement. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Washington State 7 Best PracticesDr. Stephen H. Anderson, MD, FACEP

Page 2: Washington State  7  Best Practices

The State Budget

2Presented at WSHA Safe Table – ER is for Emergencies 9/24/12

Page 3: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Problem StatementWashington State elected not to

cover more than three visits off of

a list of over 700+ conditions

including chest pain, shortness of

breath, abdominal pain, and so

much more

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Page 4: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Rationale #1

• Emergency departments

are filled with “non-

emergent visits” that

would be better treated

in their PCP office.

• What Percentage?

4

8%

Page 5: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Rationale #2

• Emergency Department

costs are exorbitant and

burden the healthcare

system.

• What Percentage of all

healthcare dollars are spent

in the ED?

5

2%

Page 6: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Rationale #3

• “Emergency Physicians and hospitals have been abusing their privilege for years billing the state for non-emergent care.”– Jeff Thompson, CMO of

Medicaid, Seattle Times, 2/2012

• What is the reimbursement for a level 1 billing by Medicaid?

6

$12.28

Page 8: Washington State  7  Best Practices

“Non-emergent conditions”

• Retrospective denials for:

– Chest pain

– Shortness of breath

– Hemorrhage in pregnancy

– Sudden loss of vision

– Gallstones

– Diverticulitis

– Cholecystitis

– Asthma

– COPD

– Sprains/Strains/Burns8

Page 9: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Legal Issues: EMTALA

Rep. Peter Stark, D-CA

• Passed in 1986

• Required– Medical Screening

– Evaluation to determine if an emergency medical condition exists

– Stabilization such that no material deterioration is likely to occur

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Page 10: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Prudent Layperson Prudent layperson, who

possesses an average knowledge of health and medicine, could reasonably expect the absence of immediate medical attention to result in a condition

(a)placing the health of the individual, or with respect to a pregnant woman, the health of the woman or her unborn child, in serious jeopardy,

(b)serious impairment to bodily functions, or

(c) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.

RCW 48.43.005(12).

10Included in the ACA in all States in 2014

Page 11: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Parties Involved• HCA

– Jeffrey Thompson

– Doug Porter

• WA ACEP

– Team of 3

• WSHA

• WSMA

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Page 12: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Three Visit Rule Process

HCA Policy

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Regulatory Media

Legal

Legislative

CMSCongress

Patient Advocates

Lay Public

Page 13: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Victories Along The Way?• November 10, 2011

• Stay granted by Superior

Court Judge for Failure to

Follow Proper Rulemaking

• HCA halted implementation.

– Prior denials halted

– No lost payment

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Page 14: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services

• Met with Marilyn Tavenner,

acting director of CMS

• Met with Steve Cha, MD, head

of Medicaid

• “We agree with you in

principle, but we prefer to

have you work it out at a

state level at this time”…

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Page 15: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Return to the TableFocus on Priorities• Improving health outcomes

• Preserving Prudent Layperson

Protection & access to Emergency

Services

• Coordinating care for the highest

utilizers

• Meeting the State’s budget

requirements

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Page 16: Washington State  7  Best Practices

We Won!• Governor Suspended Three

Visit Limit policy April 1st, 2012

• Moved forward with

alternative plan in budget

proviso on April 10th, 2012

• June 15th, deadline for

implementation

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Page 17: Washington State  7  Best Practices

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The Seven Best

Practices

Presented at WSHA Safe Table – ER is for Emergencies 9/24/12

Page 18: Washington State  7  Best Practices

A) Electronic Health Information

Goal: Exchange patient

information among Emergency

Departments

• Identify frequent users

• Get access to treatment plans

• Use in providing care

• Exceptions for CAHs with

financial burden

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Page 19: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Emergency Department Information Exchange

EDIE Alert with Care Plan during MSE

Case Management

Registration to the cloud

Page 20: Washington State  7  Best Practices

B) Patient EducationGoal: Help patients

understand and use

appropriate sources of

care

• Active distribution of

educational materials

• WSHA/WSMA/ACEP

brochure

• Discharge instructions

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Page 21: Washington State  7  Best Practices

“The Poster” 2.0Not to supplant or interfere with Medical Screening Exam

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Page 22: Washington State  7  Best Practices

WarningWhat about my Press-Gainey

Scores?

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Page 23: Washington State  7  Best Practices

C) Patients Requiring Coordination (PRC)

“Superutilizers”Goal: Ensure hospitals know when they are

treating a PRC patient and treat accordingly• PRC clients = frequent ER users, MOST VULNERABLE. 80%

concomitant mental health & drug & alcohol issues

• Receive and use client list

• Identify patients on arrival

• Develop and coordinate case management programs

• Use care plans

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Page 24: Washington State  7  Best Practices

D&E) PRC Client Care Plans and Follow up

Goal: Assist PRC clients with

their care plans

• Contact the PCP on arrival

• Appointment within 72 hours when

appropriate

• If not needed, notify PCP of visit

• Relay barriers to care

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All clients:

3-4%1-2%

Page 25: Washington State  7  Best Practices

ED Care Plan Standard• Header Information

– Date Plan First Created– Date Plan Last Updated

• Security Alert

• Pain Contract and Scheduled

Prescribing

Page 26: Washington State  7  Best Practices

ED Care Plan Standard

• Primary Care Provider and

Specialist• Past Medical and Surgical History• Substance Use and Abuse History• Mental Health Conditions

Page 27: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Care Plan StandardOptional (Phase 2)

• Optional sections, may be made mandatory

later.

• Barriers to Care Delivery• Radiation Alert• Overdose Alert• Special Care Recommendation• Details

Page 28: Washington State  7  Best Practices

F) Prescription Monitoring

Goal: Ensure coordination of

prescription drug prescribing practices

• Enroll providers in Prescription Monitoring Program:

electronic online database with data on patients

prescribed controlled substances

• Target enrollment for ER providers :

– 75% by June 15, 2012

– 90% by December 31, 2012

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Page 29: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Prescription Monitoring Programs

• Game Changer

• 49 out of 50 states have this, largest network

shares across 25 states

• In WA, 96% of ED providers registered

• “REGISTERED” does not equal “USES”

• ACEP against mandated use…

but imagine Push not Pull, No Bias, part of the

EDIE

Page 30: Washington State  7  Best Practices

G) Use of Feedback Information

Goal: Review reports, ensure

interventions are working

• Designate ER leader and quality manager

to receive, review, and act on utilization

management reports

• Involve executive-level leadership 30

Page 31: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Decrease in ED Prescriptions per month written to PRC Clients in One Hospital

Page 32: Washington State  7  Best Practices

6 Vs. 108, Pills per shift ?

“Dr. Feel-good” Vs. “Grumpy”Find the Best Practice

Page 33: Washington State  7  Best Practices

IN GOD WE TRUST….

All others Bring

Data!

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Page 34: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Reduced ED visits by 9.9%

Jul-12

Aug-12

Sep-12

Oct-12

Nov-12

Dec-12

Jan-13

Feb-13

Mar-13

Apr-13

May-13

Jun-13

Jul-13

3032343638404244464850

Rate of ED Visits per 1000 Medicaid Clients

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Page 35: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Reduced number of visits by frequent clients by 10.7 %

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Page 36: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Reduced visits resulting in a narcotic prescription by 24%

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Page 37: Washington State  7  Best Practices

What does that mean for patients?

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MVA Vs. Overdose Deaths

Overdose Deaths in WA State

Page 38: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Reduced low-acuity visits by 14.2%

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Page 39: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Savings of $33.65 million

were achieved.

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Page 40: Washington State  7  Best Practices

What Did We Learn As Doctors?

• Advocacy is a process

• Relationships are critical

• Teamwork is more effective

– Can be difficult

– Temptation can be the enemy

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?

Page 41: Washington State  7  Best Practices

My Time As Chapter President

Find your Allies

Focus on your Priorities

Believe in Win-Win

Page 42: Washington State  7  Best Practices

Questions?

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