Scenario
You are the risk manager for a local, long-term care facility. Part of your role is to develop processes that fosters an environment that prioritizes patient safety. Conduct a comparative analysis of two of the most widely published briefs from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in recent years – To Err is Human and Crossing the Quality Chasm. According to the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering Medicine (2018), To Err is Human illuminated how tens of thousands of Americans die each year from medical errors and effectively put the issue of patient safety and quality on the radar screen of public and private policymakers. The Quality Chasm report described broader quality issues and defines six aims—care should be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient and equitable—and 10 rules for care delivery redesign.
Instructions
In a comparative analysis, discuss the significance of each report on recent quality initiatives implemented by entities such as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), and the Joint Commission. Your comparative analysis should also contain an examination of the quantitative data collection methods used in each report. Make a recommendation based on your analysis on how your organization and similar organizations can utilize the findings from the reports to assist in continuous quality improvement of operations and the achievement of organizational goals.
Reference
National Academies of Sciences and Engineering (2018). Crossing the Quality Chasm: The IOM Health Care Quality Initiative. Health and Medicine Division. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK535657
To err is human: Building a safer health system. (2000). National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/9728
HSA6100CBE Section 01CBE Healthcare Operations Management
Deliverable 4 – Comparative Analysis
Competency
Explain the role and impact of data analytics on decision-making processes in a selected healthcare setting.
Scenario
You are the risk manager for a local, long-term care facility. Part of your role is to develop processes that fosters an environment that prioritizes patient safety. Conduct a comparative analysis of two of the most widely published briefs from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in recent years – To Err is Human and Crossing the Quality Chasm. According to the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering Medicine (2018), To Err is Human illuminated how tens of thousands of Americans die each year from medical errors and effectively put the issue of patient safety and quality on the radar screen of public and private policymakers. The Quality Chasm report described broader quality issues and defines six aims—care should be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient and equitable—and 10 rules for care delivery redesign.
Instructions
In a comparative analysis, discuss the significance of each report on recent quality initiatives implemented by entities such as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), and the Joint Commission. Your comparative analysis should also contain an examination of the quantitative data collection methods used in each report. Make a recommendation based on your analysis on how your organization and similar organizations can utilize the findings from the reports to assist in continuous quality improvement of operations and the achievement of organizational goals.
Reference
National Academies of Sciences and Engineering (2018). Crossing the Quality Chasm: The IOM Health Care Quality Initiative. Health and Medicine Division. Retrieved from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK535657
To err is human: Building a safer health system. (2000). National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/9728
Resources
· For assistance on completing a comparative analysis, please visit the Rasmussen College Answers page.
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Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century (2001)
360 pages | 6 x 9 | HARDBACK
ISBN 978-0-309-07280-9 | DOI 10.17226/10027
Committee on Quality of Health Care in America; Institute of Medicine
Institute of Medicine. 2001. Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/10027.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Crossing the Quality Chasm
A New Health System for the 21st Century
Committee on Quality of Health Care in America
INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE
NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS Washington, D.C.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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NATIONAL ACADEMY PRESS • 2101 Constitution Avenue, N.W. • Washington, DC 20418
NOTICE: The project that is the subject of this report was approved by the Governing Board of the National Research Council, whose members are drawn from the councils of the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Institute of Medicine. The members of the committee responsible for the report were chosen for their special competences and with regard for appropriate balance.
Support for this project was provided by: the Institute of Medicine; the National Research Council; The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; the California Health Care Foundation; the Com- monwealth Fund; and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Care Financing Admin- istration and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The views presented in this report are those of the Institute of Medicine Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America and are not necessarily those of the funding agencies.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Crossing the quality chasm : a new health system for the 21st century / Committee on Quality Health Care in America, Institute of Medicine. p. ; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-309-07280-8 1. Medical care—United States. 2. Health care reform—United States. 3. Medical care—United States—Quality control. I. Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Committee on Quality of Health Care in America. [DNLM: 1. Health Care Reform—methods—United States. 2. Quality of Health Care—United States. WA 540 AA1 C937 2001] RA395.A3 C855 2001 362.1′0973—dc21
2001030775
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Copyright 2001 by the National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
The serpent has been a symbol of long life, healing, and knowledge among almost all cultures and religions since the beginning of recorded history. The serpent adopted as a logotype by the Institute of Medicine is a relief carving from ancient Greece, now held by the Staatliche Museen in Berlin.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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Shaping the Future for Health
“Knowing is not enough; we must apply. Willing is not enough; we must do.” —Goethe
INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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The National Academy of Sciences is a private, nonprofit, self-perpetuating society of distinguished scholars engaged in scientific and engineering research, dedicated to the furtherance of science and technology and to their use for the general welfare. Upon the authority of the charter granted to it by the Congress in 1863, the Academy has a mandate that requires it to advise the federal government on scientific and technical matters. Dr. Bruce M. Alberts is president of the National Academy of Sciences.
The National Academy of Engineering was established in 1964, under the charter of the National Academy of Sciences, as a parallel organization of outstanding engineers. It is autonomous in its administration and in the selection of its members, sharing with the National Academy of Sciences the responsibility for advising the federal government. The National Academy of Engineering also sponsors engineering programs aimed at meeting national needs, encourages education and research, and recognizes the superior achieve- ments of engineers. Dr. William A. Wulf is president of the National Academy of Engi- neering.
The Institute of Medicine was established in 1970 by the National Academy of Sciences to secure the services of eminent members of appropriate professions in the examination of policy matters pertaining to the health of the public. The Institute acts under the responsibility given to the National Academy of Sciences by its congressional charter to be an adviser to the federal government and, upon its own initiative, to identify issues of medical care, research, and education. Dr. Kenneth I. Shine is president of the Institute of Medicine.
The National Research Council was organized by the National Academy of Sci- ences in 1916 to associate the broad community of science and technology with the Academy’s purposes of furthering knowledge and advising the federal government. Func- tioning in accordance with general policies determined by the Academy, the Council has become the principal operating agency of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering in providing services to the government, the public, and the scientific and engineering communities. The Council is administered jointly by both Academies and the Institute of Medicine. Dr. Bruce M. Alberts and Dr. William A. Wulf are chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of the National Research Council.
National Academy of Sciences National Academy of Engineering Institute of Medicine National Research Council
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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v
COMMITTEE ON QUALITY OF HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA
WILLIAM C. RICHARDSON (Chair), President and CEO, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Battle Creek, MI
DONALD M. BERWICK, President and CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Boston, MA
J. CRIS BISGARD, Director, Health Services, Delta Air Lines, Inc., Atlanta, GA
LONNIE R. BRISTOW, Former President, American Medical Association, Walnut Creek, CA
CHARLES R. BUCK, Program Leader, Health Care Quality and Strategy Initiatives, General Electric Company, Fairfield, CT
CHRISTINE K. CASSEL, Professor and Chairman, Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY
MARK R. CHASSIN, Professor and Chairman, Department of Health Policy, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY
MOLLY JOEL COYE, Senior Fellow, Institute for the Future, and President, Health Technology Center, San Francisco, CA
DON E. DETMER, Dennis Gillings Professor of Health Management, University of Cambridge, UK
JEROME H. GROSSMAN, Senior Fellow, Center for Business and Government, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Boston, MA
BRENT JAMES, Executive Director, Intermountain Health Care Institute for Health Care Delivery Research, Salt Lake City, UT
DAVID McK. LAWRENCE, Chairman and CEO, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc., Oakland, CA
LUCIAN L. LEAPE, Adjunct Professor, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA
ARTHUR LEVIN, Director, Center for Medical Consumers, New York, NY RHONDA ROBINSON-BEALE, Executive Medical Director, Managed Care
Management and Clinical Programs, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, Southfield
JOSEPH E. SCHERGER, Associate Dean for Primary Care, University of California, Irvine College of Medicine
ARTHUR SOUTHAM, President and CEO, Health Systems Design, Oakland, CA
MARY WAKEFIELD, Director, Center for Health Policy, Research, and Ethics, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
GAIL L. WARDEN, President and CEO, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI
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Study Staff
JANET M. CORRIGAN Director, Quality of Health Care in America Project Director, Board on Health Care Services
MOLLA S. DONALDSON, Project Codirector LINDA T. KOHN, Project Codirector SHARI K. MAGUIRE, Research Assistant KELLY C. PIKE, Senior Project Assistant
Auxiliary Staff
ANTHONY BURTON, Administrative Assistant MIKE EDINGTON, Managing Editor JENNIFER CANGCO, Financial Advisor
Consultant/Editor
RONA BRIERE, Briere Associates, Inc.
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vii
Reviewers
The report was reviewed by individuals chosen for their diverse perspectives and technical expertise in accordance with procedures approved by the National Research Council’s Report Review Committee. The purpose of this independent review is to provide candid and critical comments to assist the authors and the Institute of Medicine in making the published report as sound as possible and to ensure that the report meets institutional standards for objectivity, evidence, and responsiveness to the study charge. The content of the review comments and the draft manuscript remain confidential to protect the integrity of the deliberative process. The committee wishes to thank the following individuals for their par- ticipation in the report review process:
TERRY CLEMMER, Intermountain Health Care, Salt Lake City, UT SUSAN EDGMAN-LEVITAN, The Picker Institute, Boston, MA ANN GREINER, Center for Studying Health System Change, Washington, D.C. DAVID LANSKY, The Foundation for Accountability, Portland, OR DAVID MECHANIC, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey,
New Brunswick, NJ L. GORDON MOORE, Brighton Family Medicine, Rochester, NY DAVID G. NATHAN, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (Emeritus), Boston, MA VINOD K. SAHNEY, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI WILLIAM STEAD, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN EDWARD WAGNER, Group Health Center for Health Studies, Seattle, WA
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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viii REVIEWERS
Although the reviewers listed above have provided many constructive comments and suggestions, they were not asked to endorse the conclusions or recommenda- tions nor did they see the final draft of the report before its release. The review of this report was overseen by WILLIAM H. DANFORTH, Washington Univer- sity, St. Louis, Missouri, and EDWARD B. PERRIN, University of Washington and VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington. Appointed by the National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine, they were respon- sible for making certain that an independent examination of this report was carried out in accordance with institutional procedures and that all review com- ments were carefully considered. Responsibility for the final content of this report rests entirely with the authoring committee and the institution.
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ix
Preface
This is the second and final report of the Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America, which was appointed in 1998 to identify strategies for achieving a substantial improvement in the quality of health care delivered to Americans. The committee’s first report, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, was released in 1999 and focused on a specific quality concern—patient safety. This second report focuses more broadly on how the health care delivery system can be designed to innovate and improve care.
This report does not recommend specific organizational approaches to achieve the aims set forth. Rather than being an organizational construct, rede- sign refers to a new perspective on the purpose and aims of the health care system, how patients and their clinicians should relate, and how care processes can be designed to optimize responsiveness to patient needs. The principles and guidance for redesign that are offered in this report represent fundamental changes in the way the system meets the needs of the people it serves.
Redesign is not aimed only at the health care organizations and professionals that comprise the delivery system. Change is also required in the structures and processes of the environment in which those organizations and professionals function. Such change includes setting national priorities for improvement, cre- ating better methods for disseminating and applying knowledge to practice, fos- tering the use of information technology in clinical care, creating payment poli- cies that encourage innovation and reward improvement in performance, and enhancing educational programs to strengthen the health care workforce.
The Quality of Health Care in America project is supported largely by the income from an endowment established within the Institute of Medicine by the
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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x PREFACE
Howard Hughes Medical Institute and income from an endowment established for the National Research Council by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. Generous support was provided by the Commonwealth Fund for a workshop on applying information technology to improve the quality of clinical care, by the Health Care Financing Administration for a workshop aimed at exploring the relationship between payment policy and quality improvement, by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation for a survey of exemplary systems of care, by the California Health Care Foundation for a workshop to explore methods for communicating with the public about quality in health care, and by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality for a workshop on the relationship between patient outcomes and provider volume.
Although the committee takes full responsibility for the content of this re- port, many people have made important contributions. The Subcommittee on Designing the Health System of the 21st Century, under the direction of Donald Berwick, combined a depth of knowledge and creativity to propose a vision on how health care could be delivered in the 21st century. The Subcommittee on Creating an External Environment for Quality, under the direction of J. Cris Bisgard and Molly Joel Coye, provided expert guidance and a wealth of experi- ence on how the external environment could support improved delivery of care. Lastly, the IOM staff, under the direction of Janet Corrigan, have provided excel- lent research, analysis and writing.
Now is the right time for the changes proposed in this report. Technological advances make it possible to accomplish things today that were impossible only a few years ago. Patients, health care professionals, and policy makers are becoming all too painfully aware of the shortcomings of our current care delivery systems and the importance of finding better approaches to meeting the health care needs of all Americans. The committee does not offer a simple prescription, but a vision of what is possible and the path that can be taken. It will not be an easy road, but it will be most worthwhile.
William C. Richardson, Ph.D. Chair March 2001
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xi
Foreword
This is the second and final report of the Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America. Response to the committee’s first report, To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health System, has been swift, positive, and ongoing from many health care organizations, practitioners, researchers, and policy makers.
The present report addresses quality-related issues more broadly, providing a strategic direction for redesigning the health care delivery system of the 21st century. Fundamental reform of health care is needed to ensure that all Ameri- cans receive care that is safe, effective, patient centered, timely, efficient, and equitable.
As this report is being released, we are reflecting on the recent loss of a great 20th-century leader in the field of health care quality. Avedis Donabedian, member of the Institute of Medicine, leaves behind a rich body of work on the conceptualization and measurement of quality. His extraordinary intellectual con- tributions will continue to guide efforts to improve quality well into the coming century.
The Quality of Health Care in America project continues the Institute of Medicine’s long-standing focus on quality-of-care issues. The Institute’s Na- tional Roundtable on Health Care Quality has described the variability of the quality of health care in the United States and highlighted the urgent need for improvement. The report Ensuring Quality Cancer Care issued by the Institute’s National Cancer Policy Board, offers the conclusion that there is a wide gulf between ideal cancer care and the reality experienced by many Americans. And a forthcoming report from the Institute’s Committee on the National Quality
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xii FOREWORD
Report on Health Care Delivery will offer a framework for periodic reporting to the nation on the state of quality of care.
This report reinforces the conviction of these and other concerned groups that we cannot wait any longer to address the serious quality-of-care challenges facing our nation. A comprehensive and strong response is needed now.
Kenneth I. Shine, M.D. President, Institute of Medicine March 2001
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xiii
Acknowledgments
The Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America first and foremost acknowledges the tremendous contribution by the members of two subcommit- tees, both of which spent many hours working on exceedingly complex issues. Although individual subcommittee members put forth differing perspectives on a variety of issues, there was no disagreement on the ultimate goal of providing the leadership, strategic direction, and analytic tools needed to achieve a substantial improvement in health care quality during the next decade. We take this oppor- tunity to thank each subcommittee member for his or her contribution.
Subcommittee on Creating an Environment for Quality in Health Care: J. Cris Bisgard (Cochair), Delta Air Lines, Inc.; Molly Joel Coye, (Cochair), Institute for the Future; Phyllis C. Borzi, The George Washington University; Charles R. Buck, General Electric Company; Jon Christianson, University of Minnesota; Mary Jane England, Washington Business Group on Health; George J. Isham, HealthPartners; Brent James, Intermountain Health Care; Roz D. Lasker, New York Academy of Medicine; Lucian L. Leape, Harvard School of Public Health; Patricia A. Riley, National Academy of State Health Policy; Gerald M. Shea, American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations; Gail L. Warden, Henry Ford Health System; and A. Eugene Washington, Univer- sity of California, San Francisco School of Medicine.
Subcommittee on Building the 21st Century Health Care System: Don M. Berwick (Chair), Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Christine K. Cassel, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Rodney Dueck, HealthSystem Minnesota;
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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xiv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Jerome H. Grossman, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Univer- sity; John E. Kelsch, Consultant in Total Quality; Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania; Arthur Levin, Center for Medical Consumers; Eugene C. Nelson, Hitchcock Medical Center; Thomas Nolan, Associates in Process Im- provement; Gail J. Povar, Cameron Medical Group; James L. Reinertsen, CareGroup; Joseph E. Scherger, University of California, Irvine; Stephen M. Shortell, University of California, Berkeley; Mary Wakefield, George Mason University; and Kevin Weiss, Rush Primary Care Institute. Paul Plsek served as an expert consultant to the subcommittee.
In addition, a number of people willingly and generously contributed their time and expertise as the committee and both subcommittees conducted their deliberations.
The planning committee for the Workshop on Using Information Tech- nology to Improve the Quality of Care did an excellent job of organizing the workshop. This committee consisted of E. Andrew Balas, University of Missouri School of Medicine; Don E. Detmer, University of Cambridge; Jerome H. Grossman, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; and Brent James, Intermountain Health Care. The participants in this workshop provided a great deal of useful information that is reflected in this report. These participants were E. Andrew Balas, University of Missouri School of Medicine; David W. Bates, Brigham Internal Medicine Associates; Mark Braunstein, Pa- tient Care Technologies; Charles R. Buck, General Electric Company; Maj. Gen. Paul K. Carlton, Jr., Air Force Medical Operations Agency; David C. Classen, University of Utah; Paul D. Clayton, Intermountain Health Care; Kathryn L. Coltin, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care; Louis H. Diamond, The MEDSTAT Group; J. Michael Fitzmaurice, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; Janlori Goldman, Georgetown University; Jerome H. Grossman, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; David Gustafson, University of Wisconsin- Madison; Betsy L. Humphreys, U.S. National Library of Medicine; Brent James, Intermountain Health Care; John T. Kelly, AETNA/U.S. Healthcare; David B. Kendall, Progressive Policy Institute; Robert Kolodner, Department of Veterans Affairs; George D. Lundberg, Northwestern University; Robert Mayes, Health Care Financing Administration; Ned McCulloch, IBM, formerly Office of Sena- tor Joseph Lieberman; Elizabeth A. McGlynn, The RAND Corporation; Blackford Middleton, MedicaLogic; Gregg S. Meyer, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; Arnold Milstein, Pacific Business Group on Health; Donald Moran, The Moran Company; Michael Nerlich, University of Regensburg; William C. Richardson, W. K. Kellogg Foundation; Richard D. Rubin, Foundation for Health Care Quality; Charles Saunders, Healtheon/WebMD; Joseph E. Scherger, Uni- versity of California, Irvine; Kenneth Smithson, VHA, Inc.; William W. Stead, Vanderbilt University; Stuart Sugarman, Mount Sinai/NYU Health; Paul C. Tang,
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv
Palo Alto Medical Clinic; and Jan H. van Bemmel, Erasmus University Rotterdam.
The technical advisory panel on the Communication of Quality of Care Information organized a successful Workshop on Communicating with the Pub- lic About Quality of Care. This panel consisted of Mary Wakefield (Chair), George Mason University; Robert J. Blendon, Harvard School of Public Health and Kennedy School of Government; Charles R. Buck, General Electric Com- pany; Molly Joel Coye, Institute for the Future; Arthur Levin, Center for Medical Consumers; Lee N. Newcomer, Vivius, Inc., formerly with United HealthCare Corporation; and Richard Sorian, Georgetown University. Participants in the Workshop on Communicating with the Public about Quality of Care pro- vided many useful insights reflected in this report. They included Lisa Aliferis, Dateline NBC; Carol Blakeslee, News Hour with Jim Lehrer; Robert J. Blendon, Harvard School of Public Health and Kennedy School of Government; Charles R. Buck, General Electric Company; Christine Cassel, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Molly Joel Coye, Institute for the Future; W. Douglas Davidson, Foun- dation for Accountability; Susan Dentzer, News Hour with Jim Lehrer; Mason Essif, HealthWeek Public Television; David Glass, Kaiser-Permanente; Ann Greiner, Center for Studying Health System Change; Madge Kaplan, WGBH Radio; Richard Knox, Boston Globe; Arthur Levin, Center for Medical Consum- ers; Trudy Lieberman, Consumer Reports; Lani Luciano, Money Magazine; Laura Meckler, Associated Press; Duncan Moore, Modern Healthcare; Lee N. New- comer, Vivius, Inc., formerly with United HealthCare Corporation; William Richardson, W.K. Kellogg Foundation; Marty Rosen, New York Daily News; Sabin Russell, San Francisco Chronicle; Stuart Schear, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Richard Sorian, Georgetown University; Abigail Trafford, Washington Post; Mary Wakefield, George Mason University; Lawrence Wallack, Portland State University; Michael Weinstein, New York Times; and Ronald Winslow, Wall Street Journal.
The technical advisory panel on the State of Quality in America, through their findings, based on a commissioned paper from Mark Schuster at RAND, provided important input to the committee’s deliberations. The panel included Mark R. Chassin, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Arnold Epstein, Harvard School of Public Health; Brent James, Intermountain Health Care; James P. Logerfo, University of Washington, Seattle; Harold Luft, University of Califor- nia, San Francisco; R. Heather Palmer, Harvard School of Public Health; and Kenneth B. Wells, University of California, Los Angeles.
Participants in the one-day Workshop on the Effects of Financing Poli- cies on Quality of Care also provided important input to the committee’s delib- erations. They included Robert Berenson, Health Care Financing Administra-
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xvi ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
tion; Don Berwick, Institute for Healthcare Improvement; J. Cris Bisgard, Delta Air Lines, Inc.; Phyllis Borzi, The George Washington University; David Brad- ley, Sentinel Health Partners Inc.; Lonnie Bristow, Former President, American Medical Association; Charles R. Buck, General Electric Company; Kathleen Buto, Health Care Financing Administration; Lawrence Casalino, The University of Chicago; Molly Joel Coye, Institute for the Future; Rick Curtis, Institute for Health Policy Solutions; Charles Cutler, American Association of Health Plans; Geraldine Dallek, Georgetown University; Irene Fraser, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Jerome H. Grossman, John F. Kennedy School of Govern- ment, Harvard University; Sam Ho, PacifiCare Health Systems; Thomas Hoyer, Health Care Financing Administration; Brent James, Intermountain Health Care; Glenn D. Littenberg, Practicing Gastroenterologist; James Mortimer, Midwest Business Group on Health; Don Nielsen, American Hospital Association; Ann Robinow, Buyers Health Care Action Group; Gerald Shea, AFL–CIO; David Shulkin, DoctorQuality.com; Bruce Taylor, GTE Service Corporation; and Gail R. Wilensky, Project Hope & MedPAC.
Participants in a workshop held to explore the relationship between volume and outcomes made valuable contributions to this study as well. They included Richard Bae, University of California San Francisco; Colin Begg, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Donald M. Berwick, Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Bruce Bradley, General Motors; Mark R. Chassin, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Steve Clauser, Health Care Financing Admin- istration; Jan De la Mare, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Suzanne DelBanco, The Leapfrog Group; R. Adams Dudley, University of California, San Francisco; John Eisenberg, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Irene Fraser, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Robert Galvin, General Electric Company; Ethan Halm, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Edward Hannan, State University of New York, Albany; Norman Hertzer, Cleveland Clinic; Bruce Hillner, Virginia Commonwealth University; Sam Ho, PacifiCare Health Systems; George J. Isham, HealthPartners; Clara Lee, The Mount Sinai School of Medicine; Arthur Levin, Center for Medical Consumers; Arnold Milstein, William M. Mercer, Inc.; Peggy McNamara, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Don Nielsen, American Hospital Association; Diana Petitti, Kaiser Permanente of Southern California; Joseph Simone, Huntsman Cancer Foundation and Institute; Jane Sisk, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; and Ellen Stovall, National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship.
A steering group that provided invaluable advice and review of the design of the microsystems study included Paul B. Batalden, Dartmouth Medi- cal School; Donald M. Berwick, Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Eugene C. Nelson, Dartmouth Medical Center; Thomas Nolan, Associates in Process Improvement; and Stephen M. Shortell, University of California, Berkeley. The
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xvii
assistance of Susan B. Hassimiller, Project Officer at The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation was critical to the undertaking of this study. The following indi- viduals provided assistance in formulating interview questions and identify- ing study sites: E. Andrew Balas, University of Missouri-Columbia School of Medicine; Connie Davis, Center for Health Studies of the Group Health Coopera- tive of Puget Sound; Joanne Lynn, Center to Improve Care of the Dying; and Charles M. Kilo, Institute for Health Care Improvement. The committee also wishes to thank the individuals at the study sites who gave their time to provide information on their practice settings.
Several other individuals made important contributions to the com- mittee’s work. They include John Demakis and Lynn McQueen, Health Ser- vices Research and Development Service, Department of Veterans Affairs; Joy Grossman, Center for Studying Health System Change; Stephanie Maxwell, the Urban Institute; and Ann Gauthier, Academy for Health Services Research and Health Policy.
Support for this project was provided by the Institute of Medicine, the National Research Council, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Study of Micro-Systems), the California Health Care Foundation (Workshop on Commu- nicating with the Public about Quality of Care), the Commonwealth Fund (Work- shop on Using Information and Technology to Improve the Quality of Care), and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Care Financing Adminis- tration (Workshop on the Effects of Financing Policy on Quality of Care), and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (Volume/Outcomes Workshop).
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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xix
Contents
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1 A NEW HEALTH SYSTEM FOR THE 21ST CENTURY . . . . . . . 23 The Quality Gap, 23 Underlying Reasons for Inadequate Quality of Care, 25 Agenda for the Future and Road Map for the Report, 33
2 IMPROVING THE 21ST-CENTURY HEALTH CARE SYSTEM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Six Aims for Improvement, 41 A Vision of Future Care, 54
3 FORMULATING NEW RULES TO REDESIGN AND IMPROVE CARE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Health Care Organizations as Complex Adaptive Systems, 63 Ten Simple Rules for the 21st-Century Health Care System, 66
4 TAKING THE FIRST STEPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 The Value of Organizing Around Priority Conditions, 92 Applications of Priority Conditions, 96 Criteria for Identifying Priority Conditions, 103 Providing the Resources Needed to Initiate Change, 103
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xx CONTENTS
5 BUILDING ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORTS FOR CHANGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Stages of Organizational Development, 112 Key Challenges for the Redesign of Health Care Organizations, 117 Leadership for Managing Change, 137
6 APPLYING EVIDENCE TO HEALTH CARE DELIVERY . . . . . . 145 Background, 147 Synthesizing Clinical Evidence, 148 Using Computer-Based Clinical Decision Support Systems, 152 Making Information Available on the Internet, 155 Defining Quality Measures, 157
7 USING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164 Potential Benefits of Information Technology, 166 Automated Clinical Information, 170 Need for a National Health Information Infrastructure, 176
8 ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181 Incentives of Current Payment Methods, 184 Barriers to Quality Improvement in Current Payment
Methods, 191 Adapting Existing Payment Methods to Support Quality
Improvement, 199 Need for a New Approach, 201
9 PREPARING THE WORKFORCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207 Clinical Education and Training, 208 Regulation of the Professions, 214 Legal Liability Issues, 218 Research Agenda for the Future Health Care Workforce, 219
APPENDIXES A Report of the Technical Panel on the State of Quality to the Quality of
Health Care in America Committee, 225 B Redesigning Health Care with Insights from the Science of Complex
Adaptive Systems, 309
INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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Crossing the Quality Chasm
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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1
Executive Summary
The American health care delivery system is in need of fundamental change. Many patients, doctors, nurses, and health care leaders are concerned that the care delivered is not, essentially, the care we should receive (Donelan et al., 1999; Reed and St. Peter, 1997; Shindul-Rothschild et al., 1996; Taylor, 2001). The frustration levels of both patients and clinicians have probably never been higher. Yet the problems remain. Health care today harms too frequently and routinely fails to deliver its potential benefits.
Americans should be able to count on receiving care that meets their needs and is based on the best scientific knowledge. Yet there is strong evidence that this frequently is not the case.1 Crucial reports from disciplined review bodies document the scale and gravity of the problems (Chassin et al., 1998; Institute of Medicine, 1999; Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry, 1998). Quality problems are everywhere, affecting many patients. Between the health care we have and the care we could have lies not just a gap, but a chasm.
The Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America was formed in June 1998 and charged with developing a strategy that would result in a substan- tial improvement in the quality of health care over the next 10 years. In carrying out this charge, the committee commissioned a detailed review of the literature on the quality of care; convened a communications workshop to identify strate- gies for raising the awareness of the general public and key stakeholders of quality concerns; identified environmental forces that encourage or impede ef-
1See Appendix A of this report for a review of the literature on the quality of care.
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forts to improve quality; developed strategies for fostering greater accountability for quality; and identified important areas of research that should be pursued to facilitate improvements in quality. The committee has focused on the personal health care delivery system, specifically, the provision of preventive, acute, chronic, and end-of-life health care for individuals. Although the committee recognizes the critical role of the public health system in protecting and improv- ing the health of our communities, this issue lies beyond the purview of the present study.
The committee has already spoken to one urgent quality problem—patient safety. In our first report, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, we concluded that tens of thousands of Americans die each year from errors in their care, and hundreds of thousands suffer or barely escape from nonfatal injuries that a truly high-quality care system would largely prevent (Institute of Medicine, 2000b).
As disturbing as the committee’s report on safety is, it reflects only a small part of the unfolding story of quality in American health care. Other defects are even more widespread and, taken together, detract still further from the health, functioning, dignity, comfort, satisfaction, and resources of Americans. This report addresses these additional quality problems. As the patient safety report was a call for action to make care safer, this report is a call for action to improve the American health care delivery system as a whole, in all its quality dimen- sions, for all Americans.
WHY ACTION IS NEEDED NOW
At no time in the history of medicine has the growth in knowledge and technologies been so profound. Since the first contemporary randomized con- trolled trial was conducted more than 50 years ago, the number of trials con- ducted has grown to nearly 10,000 annually (Chassin, 1998). Between 1993 and 1999, the budget of the National Institutes of Health increased from $10.9 to $15.6 billion, while investments by pharmaceutical firms in research and devel- opment increased from $12 to $24 billion (National Institutes of Health, 2000; Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, 2000). Genomics and other new technologies on the horizon offer the promise of further increasing longevity, improving health and functioning, and alleviating pain and suffering. Advances in rehabilitation, cell restoration, and prosthetic devices hold potential for improving the heath and functioning of many with disabilities. Americans are justifiably proud of the great strides that have been made in the health and medical sciences.
As medical science and technology have advanced at a rapid pace, however, the health care delivery system has floundered in its ability to provide consis- tently high-quality care to all Americans. Research on the quality of care reveals
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3
a health care system that frequently falls short in its ability to translate knowledge into practice, and to apply new technology safely and appropriately. During the last decade alone, more than 70 publications in leading peer-reviewed journals have documented serious quality shortcomings (see Appendix A). The perfor- mance of the health care system varies considerably. It may be exemplary, but often is not, and millions of Americans fail to receive effective care. If the health care system cannot consistently deliver today’s science and technology, we may conclude that it is even less prepared to respond to the extraordinary scientific advances that will surely emerge during the first half of the 21st century. And finally, more than 40 million Americans remain without health insurance, de- prived of critically important access to basic care (U.S. Census Bureau, 2000).
The health care system as currently structured does not, as a whole, make the best use of its resources. There is little doubt that the aging population and increased patient demand for new services, technologies, and drugs are contribut- ing to the steady increase in health care expenditures, but so, too, is waste. Many types of medical errors result in the subsequent need for additional health care services to treat patients who have been harmed (Institute of Medicine, 2000b). A highly fragmented delivery system that largely lacks even rudimentary clinical information capabilities results in poorly designed care processes characterized by unnecessary duplication of services and long waiting times and delays. And there is substantial evidence documenting overuse of many services—services for which the potential risk of harm outweighs the potential benefits (Chassin et al., 1998; Schuster et al., 1998).
What is perhaps most disturbing is the absence of real progress toward restructuring health care systems to address both quality and cost concerns, or toward applying advances in information technology to improve administrative and clinical processes. Despite the efforts of many talented leaders and dedicated professionals, the last quarter of the 20th century might best be described as the “era of Brownian motion in health care.” Mergers, acquisitions, and affiliations have been commonplace within the health plan, hospital, and physician practice sectors (Colby, 1997). Yet all this organizational turmoil has resulted in little change in the way health care is delivered. Some of the new arrangements have failed following disappointing results. Leaders of health care institutions are under extraordinary pressure, trying on the one hand to strategically reposition their organizations for the future, and on the other to respond to today’s chal- lenges, such as reductions in third-party payments (Guterman, 1998), shortfalls in nurse staffing (Egger, 2000), and growing numbers of uninsured patients seeking uncompensated care (Institute of Medicine, 2000a).
For several decades, the needs of the American public have been shifting from predominantly acute, episodic care to care for chronic conditions. Chronic conditions are now the leading cause of illness, disability, and death; they affect almost half of the U.S. population and account for the majority of health care
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4 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
expenditures (Hoffman et al., 1996; The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). As the need for community-based acute and long-term care services has grown, the portion of health care resources devoted to hospital care has declined, while that expended on pharmaceuticals has risen dramatically (Copeland, 1999). Yet there remains a dearth of clinical programs with the infrastructure required to provide the full complement of services needed by people with heart disease, diabetes, asthma, and other common chronic conditions (Wagner et al., 1996). The fact that more than 40 percent of people with chronic conditions have more than one such condition argues strongly for more sophisticated mechanisms to communicate and coordinate care (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). Yet physician groups, hospitals, and other health care organizations operate as silos, often providing care without the benefit of complete information about the patient’s condition, medical history, services provided in other settings, or medi- cations prescribed by other clinicians. For those without insurance, care is often unobtainable except in emergencies. It is not surprising, then, that studies of patient experience document that the health system for some is a “nightmare to navigate” (Picker Institute and American Hospital Association, 1996).
QUALITY AS A SYSTEM PROPERTY
The committee is confident that Americans can have a health care system of the quality they need, want, and deserve. But we are also confident that this higher level of quality cannot be achieved by further stressing current systems of care. The current care systems cannot do the job. Trying harder will not work. Changing systems of care will.
The committee’s report on patient safety offers a similar conclusion in its narrower realm. Safety flaws are unacceptably common, but the effective rem- edy is not to browbeat the health care workforce by asking them to try harder to give safe care. Members of the health care workforce are already trying hard to do their jobs well. In fact, the courage, hard work, and commitment of doctors, nurses, and others in health care are today the only real means we have of stemming the flood of errors that are latent in our health care systems.
Health care has safety and quality problems because it relies on outmoded systems of work. Poor designs set the workforce up to fail, regardless of how hard they try. If we want safer, higher-quality care, we will need to have rede- signed systems of care, including the use of information technology to support clinical and administrative processes.
Throughout this report, the committee offers a strategy and action plan for building a stronger health system over the coming decade, one that is capable of delivering on the promise of state-of-the-art health care to all Americans. In some areas, achieving this ideal will require crossing a large chasm between today’s system and the possibilities of tomorrow.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5
AN AGENDA FOR CROSSING THE CHASM
The need for leadership in health care has never been greater. Transforming the health care system will not be an easy process. But the potential benefits are large as well. Narrowing the quality chasm will make it possible to bring the benefits of medical science and technology to all Americans in every community, and this in turn will mean less pain and suffering, less disability, greater longev- ity, and a more productive workforce. To this end, the committee proposes the following agenda for redesigning the 21st-century health care system:
• That all health care constituencies, including policymakers, purchas- ers, regulators, health professionals, health care trustees and management, and consumers, commit to a national statement of purpose for the health care system as a whole and to a shared agenda of six aims for improvement that can raise the quality of care to unprecedented levels.
• That clinicians and patients, and the health care organizations that support care delivery, adopt a new set of principles to guide the redesign of care processes.
• That the Department of Health and Human Services identify a set of priority conditions upon which to focus initial efforts, provide resources to stimulate innovation, and initiate the change process.
• That health care organizations design and implement more effective organizational support processes to make change in the delivery of care possible.
• That purchasers, regulators, health professions, educational institu- tions, and the Department of Health and Human Services create an environ- ment that fosters and rewards improvement by (1) creating an infrastruc- ture to support evidence-based practice, (2) facilitating the use of information technology, (3) aligning payment incentives, and (4) preparing the workforce to better serve patients in a world of expanding knowledge and rapid change.
The committee recognizes that implementing this agenda will be a complex process and that it will be important to periodically evaluate progress and re- assess strategies for overcoming barriers.
Establishing Aims for the 21st-Century Health Care System
The committee proposes six aims for improvement to address key dimen- sions in which today’s health care system functions at far lower levels than it can and should. Health care should be:
• Safe—avoiding injuries to patients from the care that is intended to help them.
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• Effective—providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit and refraining from providing services to those not likely to benefit (avoiding underuse and overuse, respectively).
• Patient-centered—providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions.
• Timely—reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive and those who give care.
• Efficient—avoiding waste, including waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy.
• Equitable—providing care that does not vary in quality because of per- sonal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socio- economic status.
A health care system that achieved major gains in these six dimensions would be far better at meeting patient needs. Patients would experience care that was safer, more reliable, more responsive, more integrated, and more available. Patients could count on receiving the full array of preventive, acute, and chronic services from which they are likely to benefit. Such a system would also be better for clinicians and others who would experience the satisfaction of providing care that was more reliable, more responsive to patients, and more coordinated than is the case today.
The entire enterprise of care would ideally be united across these aims by a single, overarching purpose for the American health care system as a whole. For this crucial statement of purpose, the committee endorses and adopts the phrasing of the Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry (1998).
Recommendation 1: All health care organizations, professional groups, and private and public purchasers should adopt as their explicit purpose to continually reduce the burden of illness, injury, and disability, and to improve the health and functioning of the people of the United States.
Recommendation 2: All health care organizations, professional groups, and private and public purchasers should pursue six major aims; specifically, health care should be safe, effective, patient-cen- tered, timely, efficient, and equitable.
Additionally, without ongoing tracking to assess progress in meeting the six aims, policy makers, leaders within the health professions and health organiza- tions, purchasers, and consumers will be unable to determine progress or under- stand where improvement efforts have succeeded and where further work is most needed. The National Quality Report has the potential to play an important role
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 7
in continuing to raise the awareness of the American public about the quality-of- care challenges facing the health care system. Public awareness of shortcomings in quality is critical to securing public support for the steps that must be taken to address these concerns.
Recommendation 3: Congress should continue to authorize and appropriate funds for, and the Department of Health and Human Services should move forward expeditiously with the establishment of, monitoring and tracking processes for use in evaluating the progress of the health system in pursuit of the above-cited aims of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity. The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services should report annually to Congress and the President on the quality of care provided to the American people.
The committee applauds Congress and the Administration for their current efforts to establish a National Quality Report for tracking the quality of care. Ongoing input from the many public- and private-sector associations, profes- sional groups, and others involved in quality measurement and improvement will contribute to the success of these efforts. The establishment of specific goals for each of the six aims could further enhance the usefulness of this monitoring and tracking system as a stimulus for performance improvement. Continued funding for this activity should be ensured, as well as regular reports that communicate progress to all concerned. It should be noted that although this report focuses only on health care for individuals, the above overarching statement of purpose and six aims for improvement are sufficiently robust that they can be applied equally to decisions and evaluations at the population–health level.
Formulating New Rules to Redesign and Improve Care
As discussed earlier, improved performance will depend on new system designs. The committee believes it would be neither useful nor possible for us to specify in detail the design of 21st-century health care delivery systems. Imagi- nation and valuable pluralism abound at the local level in the nation’s health care enterprise. At the same time, we believe local efforts to implement innovation and achieve improvement can benefit from a set of simple rules to guide the redesign of the health care system.
In formulating these rules, the committee has been guided by the belief that care must be delivered by systems that are carefully and consciously designed to provide care that is safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equi- table. Such systems must be designed to serve the needs of patients, and to ensure that they are fully informed, retain control and participate in care delivery whenever possible, and receive care that is respectful of their values and prefer- ences. Such systems must facilitate the application of scientific knowledge to
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practice, and provide clinicians with the tools and supports necessary to deliver evidence-based care consistently and safely.
Recommendation 4: Private and public purchasers, health care organizations, clinicians, and patients should work together to rede- sign health care processes in accordance with the following rules:
1. Care based on continuous healing relationships. Patients should receive care whenever they need it and in many forms, not just face-to-face visits. This rule implies that the health care system should be responsive at all times (24 hours a day, every day) and that access to care should be provided over the Internet, by tele- phone, and by other means in addition to face-to-face visits.
2. Customization based on patient needs and values. The system of care should be designed to meet the most common types of needs, but have the capability to respond to individual patient choices and preferences.
3. The patient as the source of control. Patients should be given the necessary information and the opportunity to exercise the de- gree of control they choose over health care decisions that affect them. The health system should be able to accommodate differences in patient preferences and encourage shared decision making.
4. Shared knowledge and the free flow of information. Patients should have unfettered access to their own medical information and to clinical knowledge. Clinicians and patients should communicate effectively and share information.
5. Evidence-based decision making. Patients should receive care based on the best available scientific knowledge. Care should not vary illogically from clinician to clinician or from place to place.
6. Safety as a system property. Patients should be safe from injury caused by the care system. Reducing risk and ensuring safety require greater attention to systems that help prevent and mitigate errors.
7. The need for transparency. The health care system should make information available to patients and their families that al- lows them to make informed decisions when selecting a health plan, hospital, or clinical practice, or choosing among alternative treat- ments. This should include information describing the system’s performance on safety, evidence-based practice, and patient satis- faction.
8. Anticipation of needs. The health system should anticipate patient needs, rather than simply reacting to events.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 9
9. Continuous decrease in waste. The health system should not waste resources or patient time.
10. Cooperation among clinicians. Clinicians and institutions should actively collaborate and communicate to ensure an appro- priate exchange of information and coordination of care.
The above rules will lead the redesign effort in the right direction, guiding the innovation required to achieve the aims for improvement outlined earlier. Widespread application of these ten rules, each grounded in both logic and vary- ing degrees of evidence, will represent a new paradigm for health care delivery. As the redesign effort moves forward, it will be important to assess not only progress toward meeting the aims, but also the specific effects attributable to the new rules and to adapt the rules as appropriate.
Design ideas are not enough, however. To initiate the process of change, both an action agenda and resources are needed.
Taking the First Steps
The committee recognizes the enormity of the change that will be required to achieve a substantial improvement in the nation’s health care system. Although steps can be taken immediately to apply the ten rules set forth above to the redesign of health care, widespread application will require commitment to the provision of evidence-based care that is responsive to individual patients’ needs and preferences. Well-designed and well-run systems of care will be required as well. These changes will occur most rapidly in an environment in which public policy and market forces are aligned and in which the change process is sup- ported by an appropriate information technology infrastructure.
To initiate the process of change, the committee believes the health care system must focus greater attention on the development of care processes for the common conditions that afflict many people. A limited number of such condi- tions, about 15 to 25, account for the majority of health care services (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1999; Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2000; Ray et al., 2000). Nearly all of these conditions are chronic. By focusing attention on a limited number of common conditions, the committee believes it will be possible to make sizable improvements in the quality of care received by many individuals within the coming decade.
Health care for chronic conditions is very different from care for acute epi- sodic illnesses. Care for the chronically ill needs to be a collaborative, multidisci- plinary process. Effective methods of communication, both among caregivers and between caregivers and patients, are critical to providing high-quality care. Personal health information must accompany patients as they transition from home to clinical office setting to hospital to nursing home and back.
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10 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
Carefully designed, evidence-based care processes, supported by automated clinical information and decision support systems, offer the greatest promise of achieving the best outcomes from care for chronic conditions. Some efforts are now under way to synthesize the clinical evidence pertaining to common chronic conditions and to make this information available to consumers and clinicians on the Web and by other means (Lindberg and Humphreys, 1999). In addition, evidence-based practice guidelines have been developed for many chronic condi- tions (Eisenberg, 2000). Yet studies of the quality of care document tremendous variability in practice for many such conditions. Given these variations and the prevalence of chronic conditions, these conditions represent an excellent starting point for efforts to better define optimum care or best practices, and to design care processes to meet patient needs. Moreover, such efforts to improve quality must be supported by payment methods that remove barriers to integrated care and provide strong incentives and rewards for improvement.
To facilitate this process, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality should identify a limited number of priority conditions that affect many people and account for a sizable portion of the national health burden and associated expenditures. In identifying these priority conditions, the agency should consider using the list of conditions identified through the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (2000). According to the most recent survey data, the top 15 priority conditions are cancer, diabetes, emphysema, high cholesterol, HIV/AIDS, hyper- tension, ischemic heart disease, stroke, arthritis, asthma, gall bladder disease, stomach ulcers, back problems, Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, and depression and anxiety disorders. Health care organizations, clinicians, purchas- ers, and other stakeholders should then work together to (1) organize evidence- based care processes consistent with best practices, (2) organize major prevention programs to target key health risk behaviors associated with the onset or progres- sion of these conditions, (3) develop the information infrastructure needed to support the provision of care and the ongoing measurement of care processes and patient outcomes, and (4) align the incentives inherent in payment and account- ability processes with the goal of quality improvement.
Recommendation 5: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Qual- ity should identify not fewer than 15 priority conditions, taking into account frequency of occurrence, health burden, and resource use. In collaboration with the National Quality Forum, the agency should convene stakeholders, including purchasers, consumers, health care organizations, professional groups, and others, to develop strate- gies, goals, and action plans for achieving substantial improvements in quality in the next 5 years for each of the priority conditions.
Redirecting the health care industry toward the implementation of well- designed care processes for priority conditions will require significant resources.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 11
Capital will be required to invest in enhancing organizational capacity, building an information infrastructure, and training multidisciplinary care teams, among other things. The committee believes it is appropriate for the public sector to take the lead in establishing an innovation fund to seed promising projects, but not to shoulder the full burden of the transition. Private-sector organizations, including foundations, purchasers, health care organizations, and others, should also make investments. High priority should be given to projects that are likely to result in making available in the public domain new programs, tools, and technologies that are broadly applicable throughout the health care sector.
Recommendation 6: Congress should establish a Health Care Qual- ity Innovation Fund to support projects targeted at (1) achieving the six aims of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, ef- ficiency, and equity; and/or (2) producing substantial improvements in quality for the priority conditions. The fund’s resources should be invested in projects that will produce a public-domain portfolio of programs, tools, and technologies of widespread applicability.
Americans now invest annually $1.1 trillion, or 13.5 percent, of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) in the health care sector (Health Care Financing Administration, 1999). This figure is expected to grow to more than $2 trillion, or 16 percent of GDP, by 2007 (Smith et al., 1998). The committee believes a sizable commitment, on the order of $1 billion over 3 to 5 years, is needed to strongly communicate the need for rapid and significant change in the health care system and to help initiate the transition. Just as a vigorous public commitment has led to the mapping of human DNA, a similar commitment is needed to help the nation’s health care system achieve the aims for improvement outlined above.
Building Organizational Supports for Change
Supporting front-line teams that deliver care are many types of health care organizations. Today, these are hospitals, physician practices, clinics, integrated delivery systems, and health plans, but new forms will unquestionably emerge. Whatever those forms, care that is responsive to patient needs and makes consis- tent use of the best evidence requires far more conscious and careful organization than we find today.
Organizations will need to negotiate successfully six major challenges. The first is to redesign care processes to serve more effectively the needs of the chronically ill for coordinated, seamless care across settings and clinicians and over time. The use of tools to organize and deliver care has lagged far behind biomedical and clinical knowledge. A number of well-understood design prin- ciples, drawn from other industries as well as some of today’s health care organi- zations, could help greatly in improving the care that is provided to patients.
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A second challenge is making effective use of information technologies to automate clinical information and make it readily accessible to patients and all members of the care team. An improved information infrastructure is needed to establish effective and timely communication among clinicians and between pa- tients and clinicians.
A third challenge is to manage the growing knowledge base and ensure that all those in the health care workforce have the skills they need. Making use of new knowledge requires that health professionals develop new skills or assume new roles. It requires that they use new tools to access and apply the expanding knowledge base. It also requires that training and ongoing licensure and certifi- cation reflect the need for lifelong learning and evaluation of competencies.
A fourth challenge for organizations is coordination of care across patient conditions, services, and settings over time. Excellent information technologies and well-thought-out and -implemented modes of ongoing communication can reduce the need to craft laborious, case-by-case strategies for coordinating patient care.
A fifth challenge is to continually advance the effectiveness of teams. Team practice is common, but the training of health professionals is typically isolated by discipline. Making the necessary changes in roles to improve the work of teams is often slowed or stymied by institutional, labor, and financial structures, and by law and custom.
Finally, all organizations—whether or not health care related—can improve their performance only by incorporating care process and outcome measures into their daily work. Use of such measures makes it possible to understand the degree to which performance is consistent with best practices, and the extent to which patients are being helped.
Recommendation 7: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Qual- ity and private foundations should convene a series of workshops involving representatives from health care and other industries and the research community to identify, adapt, and implement state-of- the-art approaches to addressing the following challenges:
• Redesign of care processes based on best practices • Use of information technologies to improve access to clinical
information and support clinical decision making • Knowledge and skills management • Development of effective teams • Coordination of care across patient conditions, services, and
settings over time • Incorporation of performance and outcome measurements for
improvement and accountability
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 13
Establishing a New Environment for Care
To enable the profound changes in health care recommended in this report, the environment of care must also change. The committee believes the current environment often inhibits the changes needed to achieve quality improvement. Two types of environmental change are needed:
• Focus and align the environment toward the six aims for improvement. To effect this set of changes, purchasers and health plans, for example, should eliminate or modify payment practices that fragment the care system, and should establish incentives designed to encourage and reward innovations aimed at im- proving quality. Purchasers and regulators should also create precise streams of accountability and measurement reflecting achievements in the six aims. More- over, efforts should be made to help health care consumers understand the aims, why they are important, and how to interpret the levels of performance of various health care systems.
• Provide, where possible, assets and encouragement for positive change. For example, national funding agencies could promote research on new designs for the care of priority conditions, state and national activities could be under- taken to facilitate the exchange of best practices and shared learning among health care delivery systems, and a national system for monitoring progress to- ward the six aims for improvement could help improvement efforts remain on track.
Such environmental changes need to occur in four major areas: the infra- structure that supports the dissemination and application of new clinical knowl- edge and technologies, the information technology infrastructure, payment poli- cies, and preparation of the health care workforce.
Changes will also be needed in the quality oversight and accountability processes of public and private purchasers. This issue is not addressed here. The IOM will be issuing a separate report on federal quality measurement and im- provement programs in Fall 2002. In addition, the National Quality Forum has an extensive effort under way to develop a national framework for quality measure- ment and accountability and will be issuing a report in Summer 2001.
Applying Evidence to Health Care Delivery
In the current health care system, scientific knowledge about best care is not applied systematically or expeditiously to clinical practice. An average of about 17 years is required for new knowledge generated by randomized controlled trials to be incorporated into practice, and even then application is highly uneven (Balas and Boren, 2000). The extreme variability in practice in clinical areas in
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which there is strong scientific evidence and a high degree of expert consensus about best practices indicates that current dissemination efforts fail to reach many clinicians and patients, and that there are insufficient tools and incentives to promote rapid adoption of best practices. The time has come to invest in the creation of a more effective infrastructure for the application of knowledge to health care delivery.
Recommendation 8: The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services should be given the responsibility and neces- sary resources to establish and maintain a comprehensive program aimed at making scientific evidence more useful and accessible to clinicians and patients. In developing this program, the Secretary should work with federal agencies and in collaboration with profes- sional and health care associations, the academic and research com- munities, and the National Quality Forum and other organizations involved in quality measurement and accountability.
It is critical that leadership from the private sector, both professional and other health care leaders and consumer representatives, be involved in all aspects of this effort to ensure its applicability and acceptability to clinicians and pa- tients. The infrastructure developed through this public- and private-sector part- nership should focus initially on priority conditions and include:
• Ongoing analysis and synthesis of the medical evidence • Delineation of specific practice guidelines • Identification of best practices in the design of care processes • Enhanced dissemination efforts to communicate evidence and guidelines
to the general public and professional communities • Development of decision support tools to assist clinicians and patients in
applying the evidence • Establishment of goals for improvement in care processes and outcomes • Development of quality measures for priority conditions
More systematic approaches are needed to analyze and synthesize medical evidence for both clinicians and patients. Far more sophisticated clinical deci- sion support systems will be required to assist clinicians and patients in selecting the best treatment options and delivering safe and effective care. Many promis- ing private- and public-sector activities now under way can serve as excellent models and building blocks for a more expanded effort. In particular, the Co- chrane Collaboration and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Evidence-Based Practice Centers represent important efforts to synthesize medi- cal evidence. The growth of the Internet has also opened up many new opportu- nities to make evidence more accessible to clinicians and consumers. The efforts of the National Library of Medicine to facilitate access to the medical literature
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by both consumers and health care professionals and to design Web sites that organize large amounts of information on particular health needs are particularly promising.
The development of a more effective infrastructure to synthesize and orga- nize evidence around priority conditions would also offer new opportunities to enhance quality measurement and reporting. A stronger and more organized evidence base should facilitate the adoption of best practices, as well as the development of valid and reliable quality measures for priority conditions that could be used for both internal quality improvement and external accountability.
Using Information Technology
Health care delivery has been relatively untouched by the revolution in infor- mation technology that has been transforming nearly every other aspect of soci- ety. The majority of patient and clinician encounters take place for purposes of exchanging clinical information: patients share information with clinicians about their general health, symptoms, and concerns, and clinicians use their knowledge and skills to respond with pertinent medical information, and in many cases reassurance. Yet it is estimated that only a small fraction of physicians offer e- mail interaction, a simple and convenient tool for efficient communication, to their patients (Hoffman, 1997).
The meticulous collection of personal health information throughout a pa- tient’s life can be one of the most important inputs to the provision of proper care. Yet for most individuals, that health information is dispersed in a collection of paper records that are poorly organized and often illegible, and frequently cannot be retrieved in a timely fashion, making it nearly impossible to manage many forms of chronic illness that require frequent monitoring and ongoing patient support.
Although growth in clinical knowledge and technology has been profound, many health care settings lack basic computer systems to provide clinical infor- mation or support clinical decision making. The development and application of more sophisticated information systems is essential to enhance quality and im- prove efficiency.
The Internet has enormous potential to transform health care through infor- mation technology applications in such areas as consumer health, clinical care, administrative and financial transactions, public health, professional education, and biomedical and health services research (National Research Council, 2000). Many of these applications are currently within reach, including remote medical consultation with patients in their homes or offices; consumer and clinician ac- cess to the medical literature; creation of “communities” of patients and clini- cians with shared interests; consumer access to information on health plans, participating providers, eligibility for procedures, and covered drugs in a formu- lary; and videoconferencing among public health officials during emergency
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situations. Other applications are more experimental, such as simulation of sur- gical procedures; consultation among providers involving manipulation of digital images; and control of experimental equipment, such as electron microscopes.
The Internet also supports rising interest among consumers in information and convenience in all areas of commerce, including health care. The number of Americans who use the Internet to retrieve health-related information is esti- mated to be about 70 million (Cain et al., 2000). Consumers access health-related Web sites to research an illness or disease; seek information on nutrition and fitness; research drugs and their interactions; and search for doctors, hospitals, and online medical support groups.
The committee believes information technology must play a central role in the redesign of the health care system if a substantial improvement in quality is to be achieved over the coming decade. Automation of clinical, financial, and administrative transactions is essential to improving quality, preventing errors, enhancing consumer confidence in the health system, and improving efficiency.
Central to many information technology applications is the automation of patient-specific clinical information. A fully electronic medical record, including all types of patient information, is not needed to achieve many, if not most, of the benefits of automated clinical data. Sizable benefits can be derived in the near future from automating certain types of data, such as medication orders. Efforts to automate clinical information date back several decades, but progress has been slow (Institute of Medicine, 1991), in part because of the barriers and risks involved. An important constraint is that consumers and policy makers share concerns about the privacy and confidentiality of these data (Cain et al., 2000; Goldman, 1998). The United States also lacks national standards for the capture, storage, communication, processing, and presentation of health information (Work Group on Computerization of Patient Records, 2000).
The challenges of applying information technology to health care should not be underestimated. Health care is undoubtedly one of the most, if not the most, complex sector of the economy. The number of different types of transactions (i.e., patient needs, interactions, and services) is very large. Sizable capital investments and multiyear commitments to building systems will be required. Widespread adoption of many information technology applications will require behavioral adaptations on the part of large numbers of patients, clinicians, and organizations. Yet, the Internet is rapidly transforming many aspects of society, and many health-related processes stand to be reshaped as well.
In the absence of a national commitment and financial support to build a national health information infrastructure, the committee believes that progress on quality improvement will be painfully slow. The automation of clinical, financial, and administrative information and the electronic sharing of such infor- mation among clinicians, patients, and appropriate others within a secure envi- ronment are critical if the 21st-century health care system envisioned by the committee is to be realized.
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Recommendation 9: Congress, the executive branch, leaders of health care organizations, public and private purchasers, and health informatics associations and vendors should make a renewed na- tional commitment to building an information infrastructure to sup- port health care delivery, consumer health, quality measurement and improvement, public accountability, clinical and health services research, and clinical education. This commitment should lead to the elimination of most handwritten clinical data by the end of the decade.
Aligning Payment Policies with Quality Improvement
Current payment methods do not adequately encourage or support the provi- sion of quality health care. Although payment is not the only factor that influ- ences provider and patient behavior, it is an important one.
All payment methods affect behavior and quality. For example, fee-for- service payment methods for physicians and hospitals raise concerns about po- tential overuse of services—the provision of services that may not be necessary or may expose the patient to greater potential harm than benefit. On the other hand, capitation and per case payment methods for physicians and hospitals raise questions about potential underuse—the failure to provide services from which the patient would likely benefit. Indeed, no payment method perfectly aligns financial incentives with the goal of quality improvement for all health care decision makers, including clinicians, hospitals, and patients. This is one reason for the widespread interest in blended methods of payment designed to counter the disadvantages of one payment method with the advantages of another.
Too little attention has been paid to the careful analysis and alignment of payment incentives with quality improvement. The current health care environ- ment is replete with examples of payment policies that work against the efforts of clinicians, health care administrators, and others to improve quality. The follow- ing example, presented at an Institute of Medicine workshop on payment and quality held on April 24, 2000,2 illustrates how payment policies can work against the efforts of clinicians, health care administrators, and others to improve quality:
A physician group paid primarily on a fee-for-service basis instituted a new program to improve blood sugar control for diabetic patients. Specifically, pilot studies suggested that tighter diabetic management could decrease hemoglobin A1c levels by 2 percentage points for about 40 percent of all diabetic patients managed by the physician group. Data from two randomized controlled trials demonstrated that better sugar controls should translate into lower rates of retin- opathy, nephropathy, peripheral neurological damage, and heart disease. The
2 This case study has been excerpted from a paper prepared by and presented at the IOM workshop by Brent James, Intermountain Health Care, Salt Lake City, Utah, April 2000.
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savings in direct health care costs (i.e., reduced visits and hospital episodes) from avoided complications have been estimated to generate a net savings of about $2,000 per patient per year, on average, over 15 years. Across the more than 13,000 diabetic patients managed by the physician group, the project had the potential to generate over $10 million in net savings each year. The project was costly to the medical group in two ways. First, expenses to conduct the project, including extra clinical time for tighter management, fell to the physi- cian group. Second, over time, as diabetic complication rates fell, the project would reduce patient visits and, thus, revenues as well. But the savings from avoided complications would accrue to the insurer or a self-funded purchaser.
The committee believes that all purchasers, both public and private, should care- fully reexamine their payment policies.
Recommendation 10: Private and public purchasers should exam- ine their current payment methods to remove barriers that cur- rently impede quality improvement, and to build in stronger incen- tives for quality enhancement.
Payment methods should:
• Provide fair payment for good clinical management of the types of pa- tients seen. Clinicians should be adequately compensated for taking good care of all types of patients, neither gaining nor losing financially for caring for sicker patients or those with more complicated conditions. The risk of random inci- dence of disease in the population should reside with a larger risk pool, whether that be large groups of providers, health plans, or insurance companies.
• Provide an opportunity for providers to share in the benefits of quality improvement. Rewards should be located close to the level at which the re- engineering and process redesign needed to improve quality are likely to take place.
• Provide the opportunity for consumers and purchasers to recognize qual- ity differences in health care and direct their decisions accordingly. In particular, consumers need to have good information on quality and the ability to use that information as they see fit to meet their needs.
• Align financial incentives with the implementation of care processes based on best practices and the achievement of better patient outcomes. Substantial improvements in quality are most likely to be obtained when providers are highly motivated and rewarded for carefully designing and fine-tuning care processes to achieve increasingly higher levels of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.
• Reduce fragmentation of care. Payment methods should not pose a barrier to providers’ ability to coordinate care for patients across settings and over time.
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To assist purchasers in the redesign of payment policy based on these funda- mental principles, a vigorous program of pilot testing and evaluating alternative design options should be pursued.
Recommendation 11: The Health Care Financing Administration and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, with input from private payers, health care organizations, and clinicians, should develop a research agenda to identify, pilot test, and evaluate various options for better aligning current payment methods with quality improvement goals.
Examples of possible means of achieving this end include blended methods of payment for providers, multiyear contracts, payment modifications to encour- age use of electronic interaction among clinicians and between clinicians and patients, risk adjustment, bundled payments for priority conditions, and alterna- tive approaches for addressing the capital investments needed to improve quality.
Preparing the Workforce
A major challenge in transitioning to the health care system of the 21st century envisioned by the committee is preparing the workforce to acquire new skills and adopt new ways of relating to patients and each other. At least three approaches can be taken to support the workforce in this transition. One is to redesign the way health professionals are trained to emphasize the aims for improvement set forth earlier, including teaching evidence-based practice and using multidisciplinary approaches. Second is to modify the ways in which health professionals are regulated to facilitate the needed changes in care deliv- ery. Scope-of-practice acts and other workforce regulations need to allow for innovation in the use of all types of clinicians to meet patient needs in the most effective and efficient way possible. Third is to examine how the liability system can constructively support changes in care delivery while remaining part of an overall approach to accountability for health care professionals and organiza- tions. All three approaches are important and require additional study.
Recommendation 12: A multidisciplinary summit of leaders within the health professions should be held to discuss and develop strate- gies for (1) restructuring clinical education to be consistent with the principles of the 21st-century health system throughout the con- tinuum of undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education for medical, nursing, and other professional training programs; and (2) assessing the implications of these changes for provider creden- tialing programs, funding, and sponsorship of education programs for health professionals.
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Recommendation 13: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality should fund research to evaluate how the current regula- tory and legal systems (1) facilitate or inhibit the changes needed for the 21st-century health care delivery system, and (2) can be modi- fied to support health care professionals and organizations that seek to accomplish the six aims set forth in Chapter 2.
SUMMARY
The changes needed to realize a substantial improvement in health care involve the health care system as a whole. The new rules set forth in this report will affect the role, self-image, and work of front-line doctors, nurses, and all other staff. The needed new infrastructures will challenge today’s health care leaders—both clinical leaders and management. The necessary environmental changes will require the interest and commitment of payers, health plans, govern- ment officials, and regulatory and accrediting bodies. New skills will require new approaches by professional educators. The 21st-century health care system envisioned by the committee—providing care that is evidence-based, patient- centered, and systems-oriented—also implies new roles and responsibilities for patients and their families, who must become more aware, more participative, and more demanding in a care system that should be meeting their needs. And all involved must be united by the overarching purpose of reducing the burden of illness, injury, and disability in our nation.
American health care is beset by serious problems, but they are not intrac- table. Perfect care may be a long way off, but much better care is within our grasp. The committee envisions a system that uses the best knowledge, that is focused intensely on patients, and that works across health care providers and settings. Taking advantage of new information technologies will be an important catalyst to moving us beyond where we are today. The committee believes that achieving such a system is both possible and necessary.
REFERENCES
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Chassin, Mark R. Is Health Care Ready for Six Sigma Quality? Milbank Quarterly 76(4):575–91, 1998.
Chassin, Mark R., Robert W. Galvin, and the National Roundtable on Health Care Quality. The Urgent Need to Improve Health Care Quality. JAMA 280(11):1000–5, 1998.
Colby, David C. Doctors and their Discontents. Health Affairs 16(6):112–4, 1997. Copeland, C. Prescription Drugs: Issues of Cost, Coverage and Quality. EBRI Issue Brief April(208):
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Shindul-Rothschild, Judith, Diane Berry, and Ellen Long-Middleton. Where Have All The Nurses Gone? Final Results of Our Patient Care Survey. American Journal of Nursing 96(11):25–39, 1996.
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1
A New Health System for the 21st Century
Fundamental changes are needed in the organization and delivery of health care in the United States. The experiences of patients, their families, and health care clinicians, as well as a large body of evidence on the quality of care, have convinced the Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America that the time for major change has come. This chapter sets forth the evidence; the reasons underlying the inability of the health care system to meet patient needs; and the committee’s framework for a new health system, which serves to structure the remaining chapters of this report.
THE QUALITY GAP
The year 1998 was a watershed in the quest for improvement in the quality of health care (Kizer, 2000). In that year, three major reports detailing serious quality-of-care concerns were issued. The Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) Na- tional Roundtable on Health Care Quality documents three types of quality prob- lems—overuse, underuse, and misuse. The report describes the problem as fol- lows:
The burden of harm conveyed by the collective impact of all of our health care quality problems is staggering. It requires the urgent attention of all the stake- holders: the health care professions, health care policymakers, consumer advo- cates and purchasers of care. The challenge is to bring the full potential benefit of effective health care to all Americans while avoiding unneeded and harmful interventions and eliminating preventable complications of care. Meeting this challenge demands a readiness to think in radically new ways about how to
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deliver health care services and how to assess and improve their quality. Our present efforts resemble a team of engineers trying to break the sound barrier by tinkering with a Model T Ford. We need a new vehicle or perhaps, many new vehicles. The only unacceptable alternative is not to change. (Chassin et al., 1998)
The Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality also re- leased a report on quality. That report calls for a national commitment to im- prove quality, concluding: “Exhaustive research documents the fact that today, in America, there is no guarantee that any individual will receive high-quality care for any particular health problem. The health care industry is plagued with overutilization of services, underutilization of services and errors in health care practice” (Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry, 1998).
Finally, the reports of both of these national panels were supported by the results of an extensive literature review conducted by researchers at RAND Cor- poration and encompassing publications in leading peer-reviewed journals be- tween 1993 and mid-1997 (Schuster et al., 1998). The report on those results substantiates the serious and pervasive nature of quality-of-care problems.
In the fall of 1998, the Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America established a Technical Advisory Panel on the State of Quality to review the most recent literature on quality. In collaboration with RAND, the earlier synthesis of the quality literature was updated to include work published between July 1997 and August 1998. The detailed results of this review, now covering 8 years and more than 70 publications, are included in Appendix A. The committee concurs with the findings of the panel that “. . . there is abundant evidence that serious and extensive quality problems exist throughout American medicine resulting in harm to many Americans.”
The literature reviews conducted by RAND encompass studies categorized under the rubric of quality of care. Other reviews that probe more deeply in a specific clinical area (e.g., oncology) or focus on a particular type of quality problem (e.g., errors) provide further evidence of the systemic nature of quality- of-care problems.
One such study, an IOM report examining cancer care, reveals that quality problems occur across all types of cancer care and in all aspects of the process of care (Institute of Medicine, 1999). For example, problems with breast cancer care include underuse of mammography for early cancer detection, lack of adher- ence to standards for diagnosis (such as biopsies and pathology studies), inad- equate patient counseling regarding treatment options, and underuse of radiation therapy and adjuvant chemotherapy following surgery.
In its first report, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, this committee reviewed the literature on a specific type of quality problem—medical errors. We found about 30 publications published during the last 10 to 12 years
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substantiating serious and widespread errors in health care delivery that resulted in frequent avoidable injuries to patients (Institute of Medicine, 2000).
These quality problems occur typically not because of a failure of goodwill, knowledge, effort, or resources devoted to health care, but because of fundamen- tal shortcomings in the ways care is organized. The nation’s current health care system often lacks the environment, the processes, and the capabilities needed to ensure that services are safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable.
UNDERLYING REASONS FOR INADEQUATE QUALITY OF CARE
Four key aspects of the current context for health care delivery help explain the quality problems outlined above: the growing complexity of science and technology, the increase in chronic conditions, a poorly organized delivery sys- tem, and constraints on exploiting the revolution in information technology. Each of these factors plays a role, and each exacerbates the effects of the others.
Growing Complexity of Science and Technology
Health care today is characterized by more to know, more to manage, more to watch, more to do, and more people involved in doing it than at any time in the nation’s history. Our current methods of organizing and delivering care are unable to meet the expectations of patients and their families because the science and technologies involved in health care—the knowledge, skills, care interven- tions, devices, and drugs—have advanced more rapidly than our ability to deliver them safely, effectively, and efficiently (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996).
For more than five decades, investments in biomedical research have in- creased steadily, resulting in an extraordinary expansion of medical knowledge and technology (Blumenthal, 1994). Between 1994 and 1999, the budget of the National Institutes of Health increased from $10.9 to $15.6 billion (National Institutes of Health, 2000), while the investment of pharmaceutical firms in re- search and development increased from about $13.5 to $24 billion (Pharmaceuti- cal Research and Manufacturers of America, 2000). Spending on research and development in the medical device industry, most of which comes from private sources, totaled $8.9 billion in 1998 (The Lewin Group, 2000).
As suggested earlier, quality problems do not generally stem from a lack of knowledge, training, or effort by health professionals. Today, no one clinician can retain all the information necessary for sound, evidence-based practice. No unaided human being can read, recall, and act effectively on the volume of clinically relevant scientific literature. Since the results of the first randomized controlled trial were published more than 50 years ago (Cochrane, 1972; Daniels and Hill, 1952), health care practitioners have been increasingly inundated with
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information about what does and does not work to produce good outcomes in health care. Over the last 30 years, the increase in such trials has been stagger- ing—from just over 100 to nearly 10,000 annually. The first 5 years of this 30- year period accounts for only 1 percent of all the articles in the medical literature, while the last 5 years accounts for almost half (49 percent) (Chassin, 1998), and there is no indication that this rate is slowing. Studies on the effectiveness of medical practice have also become increasingly sophisticated, involving complex issues of patient selection and statistical procedures.
As the knowledge base has expanded, so too has the number of drugs, medi- cal devices, and other technological supports. For example, the average number of new drugs approved per year has doubled since the early 1980s, from 19 to 38 (The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 2000). Between 1990 and 1999, 311 new drugs were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (U.S. Food and Drug Administration, 2000). The cost of pharmaceuticals is the most rapidly growing component of health care expenditures. As clinical science continues to advance, the challenge of managing the use of existing and new pharmaceuticals and health technologies will intensify.
Without substantial changes in the ways health care is delivered, the prob- lems resulting from the growing complexity of health care science and technolo- gies are unlikely to abate; in fact, they will increase. For example, work being done in genomics offers significant promise for disease diagnosis and, eventu- ally, treatment. Engineering advances in miniaturization will place diagnostic, monitoring, and treatment tools directly into the hands of patients as science improves and costs are reduced. And the application of epidemiological knowl- edge to large populations and databases will enable us to understand more and more about the dynamics of wellness and disease.
Increase in Chronic Conditions
One of the consequences of advances in medical science and technology is that people are now living longer. Although health care is by no means the only factor that affects morbidity and mortality, innovations in medical science and technology have contributed greatly to increases in life expectancy. The average American born today can expect to live more than 76 years (National Center for Health Statistics, 2000). Roughly 1 additional year has been added to life expect- ancy every 5 years since 1965.
Because of changing mortality patterns, those age 65 and over constitute an increasingly large number and proportion of the U.S. population. Today, this age group accounts for approximately 1 in 8 persons, or 13 percent of the population (National Center for Health Statistics, 1999). In 2030, when the large baby boom cohort has entered old age, 1 in 5 persons (20 percent) is expected to be in this age group. These demographic changes have important implications for the organi- zation of the health care delivery system, but we have yet to address them in any
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serious way. One consequence of the aging of the population is an increase in the incidence and prevalence of chronic conditions.
Chronic conditions, defined as illnesses that last longer than 3 months and are not self-limiting, are now the leading cause of illness, disability, and death in this country, and affect almost half of the U.S. population (Hoffman et al., 1996). About 100 million Americans have one or more chronic conditions, and this number is estimated to grow to 134 million by 2020 (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). About 1 in 6 Americans is limited in daily activities in some way as a result of a chronic condition (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). Disabling chronic conditions affect all age groups; about two-thirds of those with such conditions are under age 65.
The majority of health care resources are now devoted to the treatment of chronic disease. In 1990, the direct medical costs for persons with chronic conditions was $425 billion, nearly 70 percent of all personal health care expen- ditures (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). The indirect costs—lost productivity due to premature death or inability to work—added another $234 billion to this figure.
Providing state-of-the-art health care to a population in which chronic condi- tions predominate is complicated by the fact that many of those afflicted have comorbid conditions. About 44 percent of those with a chronic illness have more than one such condition, and the likelihood of having two or more chronic condi- tions increases steadily with age. In 1987, annual medical costs per person were more than twice as high for those with one chronic condition ($1,829) as com- pared with those with acute conditions only ($817) (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996). Annual medical costs per person increase much more for those with more than one chronic condition ($4,672).
Unlike much acute episodic care, effective care of the chronically ill is a collaborative process, involving the definition of clinical problems in terms that both patients and providers understand; joint development of a care plan with goals, targets, and implementation strategies; provision of self-management train- ing and support services; and active, sustained follow-up using visits, telephone calls, e-mail, and Web-based monitoring and decision support programs (Von Korff et al., 1997). Much of the care provided to the chronically ill is given by patients and their families. Activities performed range from the provision of basic support care to active monitoring and management (e.g., self blood glucose monitoring by diabetics, use of peak flow meters by asthmatics). Although some degree of collaborative management is essential to achieve desired outcomes for many chronic conditions, patients vary a great deal in the amount of information they want to receive on their condition and their desire to participate in treatment decisions (Strull et al., 1984). Nonetheless, the collaboration involved in much of the care provided to the chronically ill adds another layer of complexity to the delivery of health care to this growing segment of the population.
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Poorly Organized Delivery System
The current health care delivery system is highly decentralized. In a survey of physicians practicing in community settings, nearly 40 percent were in one- physician practices, and more than four of five practiced in settings with fewer than ten physicians (American Medical Association, 1998). Hospital consolida- tion is occurring in many markets; of the more than 5,000 community hospitals, 3,556 belong to some form of network or system (American Hospital Associa- tion, 2000). The formation of physician organizations is occurring much more slowly, however (Kohn, 2000).
The prevailing model of health care delivery is complicated, comprising layers of processes and handoffs that patients and families find bewildering and clinicians view as wasteful. Patients in a 1996 Picker Survey reported that the health care system is a “nightmare to navigate”—that it feels less like a system than a confusing, expensive, unreliable, and often impersonal disarray (Picker Institute and American Hospital Association, 1996). Care delivery processes are often overly complex, requiring steps and handoffs that slow down the care process and decrease rather than improve safety. These processes waste re- sources; leave unaccountable gaps in coverage; result in the loss of information; and fail to build on the strengths of all health professionals involved to ensure that care is timely, safe, and appropriate.
In a population increasingly afflicted by chronic conditions, the health care delivery system is poorly organized to provide care to those with such conditions. In a review of the literature on chronic care, Wagner et al. (1996) identified five elements required to improve patient outcomes for the chronically ill:
• Evidence-based, planned care. The literature is replete with evidence of the failure to provide care consistent with well-established guidelines for com- mon chronic conditions such as hypertension (Stockwell et al., 1994), asthma (Legorreta et al., 1998; Starfield et al., 1994), and diabetes (Kenny et al., 1993). Successful chronic care programs tend to be ones that incorporate guidelines and protocols explicitly into practice.
• Reorganization of practices to meet the needs of patients who require more time, a broad array of resources, and closer follow-up. Such reorganiza- tion generally involves the delivery of care through a multidisciplinary team, the careful allocation of tasks among the team members, and the ongoing manage- ment of patient contact (appointments, follow-up) (Wagner et al., 1996).
• Systematic attention to patients’ need for information and behavioral change. A review of 400 articles, randomized trials, and observational studies of self-management support interventions (Center for Advancement of Health, 1996), revealed substantial evidence that programs providing counseling, educa- tion, information feedback, and other supports to patients with common chronic conditions are associated with improved outcomes (Brown, 1990; DeBusk et al., 1994; Mullen et al., 1987).
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• Ready access to necessary clinical expertise. Specialized clinical knowl- edge and expertise are important to improved outcomes. Evidence suggests that there are numerous ways to enhance access to such knowledge and expertise, including education of patients and primary care providers (Inui et al., 1976; Sawicki et al., 1993; Soumerai and Avorn, 1990), referrals to specialists, various consultation processes (e.g., teleconferencing, hot line to specialists) (Vinicor et al., 1987), collaborative care models whereby primary care providers and special- ists practice together (Katon et al., 1995; McCulloch et al., 1994), and computer decision support systems (Barton and Schoenbaum, 1990; Litzelman et al., 1993; McDonald et al., 1988).
• Supportive information systems. Patient registries have been used effec- tively in many settings to issue reminders for preventive care and necessary follow-up, and to provide feedback to the provider practice on patient compliance and service use (Glanz and Scholl, 1982; Johnston et al., 1994; Macharia et al., 1992; Mugford et al., 1991; Stason et al., 1994). Mechanisms for sharing clinical and other information among all members of the care team, ranging from patient- carried medical records (Dickey and Petitti, 1992; Turner et al., 1990) to auto- mated patient records, can also improve care.
Thus the American health care system does not have well-organized pro- grams to provide the full complement of services needed by people with such chronic conditions as heart disease, cancer, diabetes, and asthma. Nor do we have mechanisms to coordinate the full range of services needed by those with multiple serious illnesses. And our current health system has only a rudimentary ability to collect and share patient information.
A growing body of evidence for some procedures and conditions suggests that higher volume is associated with better outcomes (Hewitt, 2000). We know little about the underlying factors that produce this relationship (e.g., more effec- tive care processes, better processes for incorporating knowledge into practice, provider skill, effective multidisciplinary team, access to specialized resources). But the results are consistent with the conclusion that the growing complexity of health care necessitates more sophisticated and carefully designed care processes.
The application of engineering concepts to the design of care processes is a critical first step in improving patient safety. Yet few health care organizations have applied the lessons learned by other high-risk industries that have led to very low rates of injury. These lessons include organized approaches to collect- ing data on errors and analyzing their causes, minimizing reliance on human memory, and standardizing routine aspects of care processes (Chassin, 1998; Institute of Medicine, 2000). Patient safety emerges from systems that are skill- fully designed to prevent harm (Cook, 1998). Although many, often simple, steps could be taken now and without great cost, knowledge about such actions has neither been disseminated among health care institutions nor widely imple- mented, probably because there are often no real penalties for failing to do so and
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no real rewards for effective improvements. Although Americans have come to expect high-technology care, they do not demand safety and reliability with the same insistence.
For the most part, health care organizations are only beginning to apply information technology to manage and improve patient care. A great deal of medical information is stored on paper. Communication among clinicians and with patients does not generally make use of the Internet or other contemporary information technology. Hospitals and physician groups operate independently of one another, often providing care without the benefit of complete information on the patient’s condition or medical history, services provided in other settings, or medications prescribed by other providers.
Our attempts to deliver today’s technologies with today’s medical produc- tion capabilities are the medical equivalent of manufacturing microprocessors in a vacuum tube factory. The costs of waste, poor quality, and inefficiency are enormous. If the current delivery system is unable to utilize today’s technologies effectively, it will be even less able to carry the weight of tomorrow’s technolo- gies and an aging population, raising the specter of even more variability in quality, more errors, less responsiveness, and greater costs associated with waste and poor quality.
The challenge before us is to move from today’s highly decentralized, cot- tage industry to one that is capable of providing primary and preventive care, caring for the chronically ill, and coping with acute and catastrophic events. To meet this challenge, there must be a commitment to organizing services around common patient needs and applying information technology and engineering concepts to the design of care processes.
Constraints on Exploiting the Revolution in Information Technology
The advent of the Internet and the World Wide Web has placed us on the threshold of a change that is reshaping virtually all aspects of society, including health care delivery. The Internet supports a rising tide of consumerism, with greater demands for information and convenience in all areas of commerce. And Internet services are becoming cheaper and easier to access.
Four of ten U.S. households had Internet access as of August 2000 (U.S. Department of Commerce, 2000), and it is predicted that 90 percent will have access by 2010 or before (Rosenberg, 1999). Large increases in Internet access have occurred among most groups of Americans, regardless of income, educa- tion, race or ethnicity, location, age, or gender (U.S. Department of Commerce, 2000). Nonetheless, a “digital divide” remains, especially for the disabled and for African Americans and Hispanics.
Large numbers of patients are turning to the Internet for health care informa- tion and advice. An estimated 70 million Americans seek health information online (Cain et al., 2000). It is estimated that there are 10,000 or more health-
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related Web sites (Benton Foundation, 1999), allowing consumers to search for information on specific diseases and treatments, evaluate health plans and clini- cians, pose questions to care providers, manage chronic conditions, participate in discussion groups, assess existing health risks, and purchase health-related prod- ucts (National Research Council, 2000). There is however, much variability in the accuracy and completeness of health information found on the Web (Biermann et al., 1999).
The effect of these trends on health care will be a fundamental transforma- tion in the ways services are organized and delivered and clinicians and patients interact. Individuals are making many of their own decisions about diagnosis and treatment. Increasingly, they are also bringing information to their physicians to obtain help in interpreting or judging its value for themselves.
To better understand how information technology can contribute to improv- ing quality, the Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America held a workshop in September 1999 at which participants identified five key areas in which information technology could contribute to an improved health care deliv- ery system:
• Access to the medical knowledge-base. Through use of the Web, it should be possible to help both providers and consumers gain better access to clinical evidence.
• Computer-aided decision support systems. Embedding knowledge in tools and training clinicians to use those tools to augment their own skills and experi- ence can facilitate the consistent application of the expanding science base to patient care.
• Collection and sharing of clinical information. The automation of pa- tient-specific clinical information is essential for many types of computer-aided decision support systems. Automation of clinical data offers the potential to improve coordination of care across clinicians and settings, which is critical to the effective management of chronic conditions.
• Reduction in errors. Information technology can contribute to a reduc- tion in errors by standardizing and automating certain decisions and by aiding in the identification of possible errors, such as potential adverse drug interactions, before they occur.
• Enhanced patient and clinician communication. Information technology can change the way individuals receive care and interact with their clinicians. Instead of a $65 office visit and a half-day off work, a 2-minute e-mail communi- cation could meet many patients’ needs more responsively and at lower cost. Similarly, patients would be able to go online and obtain test results, inform their clinicians about how they are doing, send pictures and data, participate in interac- tive care management services, receive after-care instructions, and participate in support groups. Appropriately structured e-mail communication between patient
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and provider could also permit continuous monitoring of clinical conditions, especially for patients with chronic conditions that require self-management.
A recent report by the National Research Council of The National Acad- emies, Networking Health, also concludes that “the Internet has great potential to improve Americans’ health by enhancing communications and improving access to information for care providers, patients, health plan administrators, public health officials, biomedical researchers, and other health professionals” (National Research Council, 2000). In recent years, some applications have become com- monplace, such as online searching for health information by patients and provid- ers. Others, such as remote and virtual surgery and simulations of surgical procedures, are in early stages of development.
Although opportunities to improve access, quality, and service abound, the health care industry has been slow to invest in information technology. In 1996, the industry spent only $543 per worker on information technology, compared, for example, with $12,666 spent by securities brokers, and ranked 38th out of 53 industries surveyed (U.S. Department of Commerce, 1999). In a recent survey of 30 health plans, it was found that all had established Web sites to allow patients to obtain certain types of information and interact with the organization (e.g., online provider directory, search formulary, ability to query member services or file a complaint), and about one-half had the capability to conduct some types of transactions online (e.g., enrollment, referral processing, claims submission) (First Consulting Group, 2000). But none had automated entire service functions, such as online medical management, which would require significant changes in busi- ness strategy, involve many employees and/or partners, and entail sizable capital investments.
There are many technical, organizational, behavioral, and public policy chal- lenges to greater use of information technology. Technical challenges include ensuring the security of personally identifiable information; making persistent, reliable broadband connectivity available to many locations, including rural clin- ics and patients’ homes; establishing processes for authentication of the source and recipient of information; and making tools available for locating information of interest and for determining the quality of retrieved information (National Research Council, 2000).
Over the long run, however, organizational challenges may play the greatest role in constraining the adoption of various types of Internet applications. The diverse and highly decentralized structure of the health care industry, as dis- cussed above, makes the business models for new applications complex and difficult, resulting in slow adoption of even highly successful pioneering applica- tions. Efforts to introduce new applications also encounter resistance from health care professionals for a variety of reasons, including uncertainties about how such applications will alter relationships among and between clinicians, patients, and health care organizations (National Research Council, 2000).
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Numerous public policy, payment, and legal issues also must be resolved. Many applications in the public health arena (e.g., videoconferencing during emergency situations, collection of information from local and state public health departments, incident reporting and disease surveillance) are within technical reach at relatively low cost, but are not widely used because of a lack of targeted public-sector funding and organizational barriers (e.g., shortage of adequately trained personnel). Fee-for-service payment, the most common method of pay- ment for physicians, does not compensate clinicians for time spent on e-mail communication. State-based professional licensing requirements and restrictions on practice have stymied widespread use of other applications, such as remote medical consultations. Online access to and transfer of clinical information has also been slow to evolve, in part because of concerns about privacy and confiden- tiality. Chapter 7 reviews in greater detail the use of information technology to improve the quality of health care and some of the barriers to its more widespread adoption.
AGENDA FOR THE FUTURE AND ROAD MAP FOR THE REPORT
Throughout the course of its work, the committee has been cognizant of the fact that the health care system has been in a rapid state of flux for more than 10 years and that this situation is likely to continue. Over the last decade, the primary impetus for change has been a desire to slow the rate of inflation of health care costs. During the coming decades, cost pressures will remain, but the health care system will also be shaped dramatically by broader forces transform- ing society in general, most notably the growth of the Internet and changing population needs for chronic care.
There is little doubt that the health care enterprise has been slow to change. Research documenting safety and quality concerns has been mounting for over a decade. Successful quality improvement initiatives are very slow to spread, and rarely adopted on a widespread basis. For these reasons, the committee believes that a more intense and far-reaching effort will be needed. Substantial improve- ment in quality over the coming decade can be achieved only by engaging the support of patients, clinicians, governing boards and managers of health care organizations, private and public purchasers, state and federal policy makers, regulators, researchers, and others. Change is needed at all levels, including the clinician and patient relationship; the structure, management, and operation of health care organizations; the purchasing and financing of health care; the regula- tory and liability environment; and others.
This report offers general principles, not a detailed blueprint, for the building of a new system. In part, the committee cannot foresee all the new organizations, forces, technologies, needs, and relationships that will develop even in the early years of the 21st century. More than that, however, the committee has come to
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believe that a framework for a new health system should be based on systems that can organize themselves to achieve a shared purpose by adhering to a few well- thought-out general rules, adapting to local circumstances, and then examining their own performance (see Chapter 3 and Appendix B). In reshaping health care, local adaptation, innovation, and initiative will be essential ingredients for suc- cess.
With these precepts in mind, the committee proposes the following agenda designed to bridge the quality gap:
• That all health care constituencies, including policymakers, purchasers, regulators, health professionals, health care trustees and management, and con- sumers, commit to a national statement of purpose for the heath care system as a whole and to a shared agenda of six aims for improvement that can raise the quality of care to unprecedented levels.
• That clinicians and patients, and the health care organizations that support care delivery, adopt a new set of principles to guide the redesign of care pro- cesses.
• That the Department of Health and Human Services identify a set of priority conditions upon which to focus initial efforts, provide resources to stimu- late innovation, and initiate the change process.
• That health care organizations design and implement more effective orga- nization support processes to make change in the delivery of care possible.
• That purchasers, regulators, health professions, educational institutions, and the Department of Health and Human Services create an environment that fosters and rewards improvement by (1) creating an infrastructure to support evidence-based practice, (2) facilitating the use of information technology, (3) aligning payment incentives, and (4) preparing the workforce to better serve patients in a world of expanding knowledge and rapid change.
The succeeding chapters of this report detail in turn the elements of this agenda. Specifically, the report:
• Sets performance expectations or aims for improvement for the 21st- century health care system (Chapter 2).
• Explores the implications of these performance expectations for the inter- actions between patients and clinicians, and develops some simple rules to guide the actions of all stakeholders (Chapter 3).
• Encourages all stakeholders to focus immediate attention on the develop- ment of state-of-the-art care processes for common conditions, and calls for the establishment of a $1 billion innovation fund that can be used to invest in enhanc- ing organizational capacity, building an information infrastructure, and training multidisciplinary teams, among other things (Chapter 4).
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• Addresses the importance of building more effective organizational struc- tures to (1) redesign care processes; (2) use information technologies; (3) man- age knowledge and skills; (4) coordinate care across patient conditions, services, and settings over time; (5) develop effective teams, and (6) implement perfor- mance and outcome measurement for improvement and accountability (Chap- ter 5).
• Identifies critical steps that must be taken to support evidence-based prac- tice, including making evidence more useful and accessible to support the clinical decisions of clinicians and patients, and constructing quality measures for im- provement and accountability (Chapter 6).
• Explains why a more sophisticated information infrastructure is necessary to improve quality, and calls for a renewed national initiative to build such an infrastructure (Chapter 7).
• Illustrates some of the ways current payment policies impede efforts to improve quality, and explains the importance of better aligning payment incen- tives to encourage innovations and reward enhancements in quality (Chapter 8).
• Addresses critical issues related to the culture, education, and training of a health professional workforce prepared to succeed in the 21st-century delivery system (Chapter 9).
The committee’s recommendations in these areas are presented in the re- spective chapters, highlighted in bold print.
In sum, health care is plagued today by a serious quality gap. The current health care delivery system is not robust enough to apply medical knowledge and technology consistently in ways that are safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable. As we strive to close this gap, we must seek health care solutions that are patient-centered, that is, humane and respectful of the needs and preferences of individuals. And, most important, we must build a 21st century health care system that is more equitable and meets the needs of all Americans without regard to race, ethnicity, place of residence, or socioeconomic status, including the nearly 43 million people who currently lack health insurance (U.S. Census Bureau, 2000).
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———. Falling Through the Net: Toward Digital Inclusion. A Report on American’s Access to Technology Tools. Washington DC: Economics and Statistics Administration; National Tele- communications and Information Administration, 2000. Online. Available at: http:// www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/digitaldivide/ [accessed Sept. 19, 2000].
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Von Korff, Michael, Jessie Gruman, Judith Schaefer, Susan J. Curry, and Edward H. Wagner. Collaborative Management of Chronic Illness. Ann Int Med 127(12):1097–102, 1997.
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2
Improving the 21st-Century Health Care System
As discussed in Chapter 1, the American health care system is in need of major restructuring. This will not be an easy task, but the potential benefits are great. To cross the divide between today’s system and the possibilities of tomor- row, strong leadership and clear direction will be necessary. As a statement of purpose for the health care system as a whole, the committee endorses and adopts the phrasing of the Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry (1998).
Recommendation 1: All health care organizations, professional groups, and private and public purchasers should adopt as their explicit purpose to continually reduce the burden of illness, injury, and disability, and to improve the health and functioning of the people of the United States.
It is helpful to translate this general statement into a more specific agenda for improvement—a list of performance characteristics that, if addressed and im- proved, would lead to better achievement of that overarching purpose. To this end, the committee proposes six specific aims for improvement. Health care should be:
• Safe—avoiding injuries to patients from the care that is intended to help them.
• Effective—providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit and refraining from providing services to those not likely to benefit (avoiding underuse and overuse).
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• Patient-centered—providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions.
• Timely—reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive and those who give care.
• Efficient—avoiding waste, in particular waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy.
• Equitable—providing care that does not vary in quality because of per- sonal characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socio- economic status.
Recommendation 2: All health care organizations, professional groups, and private and public purchasers should pursue six major aims; specifically, health care should be safe, effective, patient-cen- tered, timely, efficient, and equitable.
The committee believes substantial improvements in safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity are achievable throughout the health care sector. This opportunity for improvement is not confined to any sector, form of payment, type of organization, or clinical discipline. Problems in health care quality affect all Americans today, and all can benefit from a rededi- cation to improving quality, regardless of where they receive their care.
The committee applauds the Administration and Congress for their current efforts to establish a mechanism for tracking the quality of care. Title IX of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 299 et seq.; Agency for Healthcare Re- search and Quality Part A) provides support for the development of a National Quality Report, which is currently ongoing. Section 913(a)(2) of the act states: “Beginning in fiscal year 2003, the Secretary, acting through the Director, shall submit to Congress an annual report on national trends in the quality of health care provided to the American people.”
Recommendation 3: Congress should continue to authorize and appropriate funds for, and the Department of Health and Human Services should move forward expeditiously with the establishment of, monitoring and tracking processes for use in evaluating the progress of the health system in pursuit of the above-cited aims of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity. The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services should report annually to Congress and the President on the quality of care provided to the American people.
Without ongoing tracking of quality to assess the country’s progress in meet- ing the aims set forth in this chapter, interested parties—including patients, health care practitioners, policy makers, educators, and purchasers—cannot identify
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progress or understand where improvement efforts are most needed. Continued funding for this activity should be ensured.
SIX AIMS FOR IMPROVEMENT
Over the course of a lifetime, individuals have numerous encounters with the health system. Fortunately, many of these encounters are effective and result in good outcomes, but such is not always the case. The following scenario, based on the composite experience of a number of patients, illustrates some of the serious problems facing patients and clinicians, problems that persist despite the widespread dedication of clinicians to providing high-quality care.
Ms. Martinez, January 2000
Ms. Martinez, a divorced working mother in her early 50s with two children in junior high school, was new in town and had to choose an insurance plan. She had difficulty knowing which plan to select for her family, but she chose City- Care because its cost was comparable to that of other options, and it had pediat- ric as well as adult practices nearby.
Once she had joined CityCare, she was asked to choose a primary care physi- cian. After receiving some recommendations from a neighbor and several co- workers, she called several of the offices to sign up. The first two she called were not accepting new patients. Although she knew nothing about the practice she finally found, she assumed it would be adequate.
Juggling repairs on their new apartment, finding the best route to work, getting the children’s immunization records sent by mail, and making other arrange- ments to get them into a new school, Ms. Martinez delayed calling her new doctor’s office for several months. When she called for an appointment, she was told that the first available nonurgent appointment was in 2 months; she hoped she would not run out of her blood pressure medication in the interim.
When she went for her first appointment, she was asked to complete a patient history form in the waiting room. She had difficulty remembering dates and significant past events and doses of her medications. After waiting for an hour, she met with Dr. McGonagle and had a physical exam. Although her breast exam appeared to be normal, Dr. McGonagle noted that she was due for a mammogram.
Ms. Martinez called a site listed in her provider directory and was given an appointment for a mammogram in 6 weeks. The staff suggested that she ar- range to have her old films mailed to her. Somehow, the films were never sent, and distracted by other concerns, she forgot to follow up.
A week after the mammogram, she received a call from Dr. McGonagle’s office notifying her of an abnormal finding and saying that she should make an ap-
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pointment with a surgeon for a biopsy. The first opening with the surgeon was 9 weeks later. By now, she was very anxious. She hated even to think about having cancer in her body, especially because an older sister had died of the disease. For weeks she did not sleep, wondering what would happen to her children if she were debilitated or to her job if she had to have surgery and lengthy treatment. She was reluctant to call her mother, who was likely to imagine the worst, and did not know her new coworkers well enough to confide in them.
After numerous calls, she was finally able to track down her old mammograms. It turned out that a possible abnormal finding had been circled the previous year, but neither she nor her primary care physician had ever been notified.
Finally, Ms. Martinez had her appointment with the surgeon, and his office scheduled her for a biopsy. The biopsy showed that she had a fairly unusual form of cancer, and there was concern that it might have spread to her lymph nodes. She felt terrified, angry, sad, and helpless all at once, but needed to decide what kind of surgery to have. It was a difficult decision because only one small trial comparing lumpectomy and mastectomy for this type of breast cancer had been conducted. She finally decided on a mastectomy.
Before she could have surgery, Ms. Martinez needed to have bone and abdomi- nal scans to rule out metastases to her bones or liver. When she arrived at the hospital for surgery, however, some of this important laboratory information was missing. The staff called and hours later finally tracked down the results of her scans, but for a while it looked as though she would have to reschedule the surgery.
During her mastectomy, several positive lymph nodes were found. This meant she had to see the surgeon, an oncologist, and a radiologist, as well as her primary care physician, to decide on the next steps. At last it was decided that she would have radiation therapy and chemotherapy. She was given the phone number for the American Cancer Society. Before 6 months had gone by, Ms. Martinez found another lump, this time under her arm. Cancer had spread to her lung as well. She was given more radiation, then more chemotherapy. Wherever she went for care, the walls were drab, the chairs uncomfortable, and sometimes she would wait hours for a scheduled appointment.
During her numerous procedures and tests, Ms. Martinez experienced many acts of consideration, empathy, and technical expertise for which she was grate- ful. Yet for Ms. Martinez, who had excellent health insurance and was seen by well-trained and capable clinicians, the system did not work and did not meet her needs. Her care failed on several accounts.
First, it was not safe. Neither she nor her previous primary care doctor had been notified of an abnormal finding on her earlier mammogram. As a result, at least a year elapsed before the abnormality was addressed. Ms. Martinez was never confident that those directing her care had all the information about her previous care and its results. Prior to her surgery, critical laboratory information
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was missing. She was repeatedly required to tell her story, which became longer and more complex as time passed. No one at the hospital followed her course of illness after her discharge.
Second, Ms. Martinez’s care was not effective. She suffered preventable, long-lasting disability—and could have lost her life. It was not clear that her follow-up care consistently used the most up-to-date protocols. She needed consistent, reliable information, based on the best science available. Yet treat- ments tried and proven futile in one admission would be recommended in the next as if they were fresh ideas.
Third, her care was not timely. Repeated, extensive delays occurred between tests and follow-up care, delays that are not at all atypical in today’s health system.
Fourth, her care was not patient-centered. She had little assistance or infor- mation to help her understand the implications of choices about her surgery, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy. Although office and hospital staff focused on immediate medical problems, her discomfort, fear, and uncertainty were never addressed, and she was offered few resources to help her.
Finally, her care was not efficient because much of its complexity and ex- pense came from treating a tumor at a later stage than should have occurred.
Many other individuals experience systems of care that often do not work. This is true even for patients with excellent insurance, in fine institutions, cared for by conscientious and well-trained clinicians. Common, too, is frequent in- ability of patients to make their needs understood, to be treated with respect and compassion, to learn what to expect about their health condition and treatment, and to have caregivers and institutions they can trust. These patients tell stories of fragmented care in which relevant information is lost, overlooked, or ignored; of wasted resources; of frustrated efforts to obtain timely access to services; and of lost opportunities. When clinicians and their families and those steeped in health management become patients, they, too, find that there appears to be no one who can make the systems function safely and effectively (Berwick, 1996, 1999; Khan, 2000; Singer, 2000).
In this chapter, the committee puts forth six specific aims for improvement: health care should be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equi- table. These specific aims are intended to aid in achieving the overarching purpose stated in Recommendation 1 above. These aims are not new; they are familiar and have been valued, arguably for decades, among health care profes- sionals, patients, policy makers, and communities. Yet American health care fails far too often with respect to these aims, despite its enormous cost and the dedication and good efforts of millions of American health care workers. After careful consideration, the committee has concluded that fundamental changes are necessary if our current health system is to achieve these aims. In its current forms, habits, and environment, American health care is incapable of providing the public with the quality health care it expects and deserves.
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The call for such improvement is not an indictment of physicians, nurses, or, indeed, any of the people who give or lead care. The committee asserts, without reservation, that our health care can and should be far better than it is today, but it would be futile to seek that improvement by further burdening an overstressed health care workforce or by exhorting committed professionals to try harder. Instead, the improvements outlined here will require significant changes in the ways health care is organized, in the accessibility and usefulness of clinical evidence, in the environment of payment, and in other incentives that set the context for delivery of care. A redesigned care system can offer the health care workforce what it wants—a better opportunity to provide high-quality care.
The ultimate test of the quality of a health care system is whether it helps the people it intends to help. This rather simple statement, as expanded upon in the following detailed discussion of the six aims for improvement set forth earlier, represents a major shift in thinking about the purpose of health care—a shift in attention from what is done to patients to what is accomplished for them. The IOM has defined quality as “the degree to which health care services for individu- als and populations increase the likelihood of desired outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge” (Institute of Medicine, 1990). The com- mittee believes the health care system should define safety, effectiveness, pa- tient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity using measures determined by the outcomes patients desire, although clinicians should not be asked to com- promise their ethical values. Desirable personal health outcomes include im- provement (and prevention of deterioration) of health status and health-related quality of life, and management of physical and psychological symptoms. Desir- able outcomes also include attention to interpersonal aspects of care, such as patients’ concerns and expectations, their sense of dignity, their participation in decision making, and in some cases reduced burden on family and caregivers and spiritual well-being.
Such outcomes can be described at both the individual level (e.g., improve- ment in individual health status) and the population level (e.g., reduced aggregate burden of illness and injury in a population). The committee recognizes that the health of the public could be greatly improved by attention to and investment in a variety of areas, such as reducing violence and substance abuse and improving nutrition and transportation safety. This report, however, is focused specifically on the improvement of health care services to individuals. For this reason, we describe the six aims for improvement from the perspective of the individual’s— usually a patient’s—experience.
Safety
Patients should not be harmed by the care that is intended to help them, nor should harm come to those who work in health care. The earlier report by this committee, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System (Institute of
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Medicine, 2000b), addresses patient safety in detail. It defines patient safety as freedom from accidental injury. Although not all errors cause injury, accidental injury can be due to error, defined by the IOM (adapted from Reason, 1990) as either (1) the failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or (2) use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim. In health care these errors include, for example, administering the wrong drug or dosage to a patient, diagnosing pneumonia when the patient has congestive heart failure, and failing to operate when the obvious (as opposed to ambiguous) signs of appendicitis are present. Processes also should not harm patients through inadvertent exposure to chemicals, foreign bodies, trauma, or infectious agents.
The health care environment should be safe for all patients, in all of its processes, all the time. This standard of safety implies that organizations should not have different, lower standards of care on nights and weekends or during times of organizational change. In a safe system, patients need to tell caregivers something only once. To be safe, care must be seamless—supporting the ability of interdependent people and technologies to perform as a unified whole, espe- cially at points of transition between and among caregivers, across sites of care, and through time. It is in inadequate handoffs that safety often fails first. Specifi- cally, in a safe system, information is not lost, inaccessible, or forgotten in tran- sitions. Knowledge about patients—such as their allergies, their medications, their diagnostic and treatment plans, and their specific needs—is available, with appropriate assurances of confidentiality, to all who need to know it, regardless of where and when they become involved in the process of giving care.
Ensuring patient safety also requires that patients be informed and partici- pate as fully as they wish and are able. Patients and their families should not be excluded from learning about uncertainty, risks, and treatment choices. The committee believes an informed patient is a safer patient.
When complications occur, caregivers are ethically obligated to fully inform the patient of the event and its causes, assist recovery, and take appropriate action to prevent recurrences. For example, the Code of Ethics (E8.12) of the American Medical Association states, “It is a fundamental ethical requirement that a physi- cian should at all times deal honestly and openly with patients . . . . Situations occasionally occur in which a patient suffers significant medical complications that may have resulted from the physician’s mistake or judgment. In these situations, the physician is ethically required to inform the patient of all the facts necessary to ensure understanding of what has occurred” (American Medical Association, 2000).
In many cases, the best window on the safety and quality of care is through the eyes of the patient. For example, the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, includes patients on their review committees. Other approaches include inviting patients and health care workers to comment on the performance of the health system as they experience it, not solely for the purpose of generating
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satisfaction ratings, but also as a core way of learning about the system’s perfor- mance and how to improve it.
Although Americans continue to trust health care clinicians, including doc- tors and nurses (The Gallup Organization, 2000; The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, 2000), the committee is concerned about Americans’ remarkably low level of confidence in the health care system overall. For example, in July 2000, only four in ten Americans surveyed for one poll reported having a lot or a great deal of confidence in “the medical system,” though it is not clear who or what kinds of settings were encompassed by their answers (Chambers, 2000). Of the 15 major industries included in the poll, the medical system ranked in the bottom half along with public schools, television and print news, and big busi- ness; poll participants reported having greater confidence in banks, the President, and the police. A Harris Poll conducted at the end of 1999 found that only 39 percent of respondents reported having a great deal of confidence in the “people in charge of running medicine” (Taylor, 1999). In 1998, The American Customer Satisfaction Index placed hospitals between the U.S. Postal Service and the Inter- nal Revenue Service in customer satisfaction (Lieber, 1998).
One important route to restoring trust is through a commitment to transpar- ency by all health care systems. Organizations and clinicians that act as though they have nothing to hide become more trustworthy. The health care system should seek to earn renewed trust not by hiding its defects, but by revealing them, along with making a relentless commitment to improve. The transition to open- ness is a difficult one for our often-beleaguered health care organizations, but it is a journey worth making. In the longer run, access to information can inspire trust among patients and caregivers that the system is working effectively to advance health. Such trust involves patient confidence both that those who are respon- sible for care have the information they need—regardless of where that informa- tion was generated—and that those organizations and caregivers will act in patients’ best interests and actively seek to advance their health.
Achieving a higher level of safety is an essential first step in improving the quality of care overall. Improving safety will in turn require systematic efforts from a broad array of stakeholders, including a commitment of clear and sus- tained leadership at the executive and board levels of organizations; a greatly changed culture of health care in which errors are tracked, analyzed, and inter- preted for improvement rather than blame; extensive research on the factors leading to injury; and new systems of care designed to prevent error and mini- mize harm (Institute of Medicine, 2000b).
Effectiveness
Effectiveness refers to care that is based on the use of systematically ac- quired evidence to determine whether an intervention, such as a preventive ser- vice, diagnostic test, or therapy, produces better outcomes than alternatives—
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including the alternative of doing nothing. Evidence-based practice requires that those who give care consistently avoid both underuse of effective care and over- use of ineffective care that is more likely to harm than help the patient (Chassin, 1997).
To say that a health care intervention is effective implies an evidence base. Such evidence-based practice has been defined by Sackett and colleagues and is adapted here (Sackett et al., 1996): evidence-based practice is the integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values. Best research evidence refers to clinically relevant research, often from the basic sciences of medicine, but especially from patient-centered clinical research into the accuracy and precision of diagnostic tests (including the clinical examination); the power of predictive markers; and the efficacy and safety of therapeutic, rehabilitative, and preventive regimens. Clinical expertise means the ability to use clinical skills and past experience to rapidly identify each patient’s unique health state and diagnosis, individual risks and benefits of potential interventions, and per- sonal values and expectations. Patient values refers to the unique preferences, concerns, and expectations that are brought by each patient to a clinical encounter and must be integrated into clinical decisions if the patient is to be served.
Effective care should ensure use of the available, relevant science base. Evidence comes from four main types of research: laboratory experiments, clini- cal trials, epidemiological research, and outcomes research, including analyses of systematically acquired and properly studied case reports involving one or a population of patients (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000). Laboratory experiments—usually on cells or tissues in laboratory animals—are conducted to determine the cause of a disease or how a drug or treatment works. Randomized clinical trials compare outcomes among patients who are randomly assigned to control or treatment groups; other clinical trials compare populations that may be assigned by nonrandom methods. Epidemiological research exam- ines the natural course of disease in particular groups of people; the relationships between people and their health habits, lifestyles, and environment; and risk factors for certain diseases. Outcomes research uses information about how well treatments work in everyday practice settings. The findings of this research sometimes serve as the basis for clinical practice guidelines.
Although the concept of evidence-based practice has come to be regarded by some as implying rigid (even mindless) adherence to the evidence drawn from randomized controlled trials (Grahame-Smith, 1995; The Lancet, 1995), we mean it here to encompass the use of best available clinical evidence from systematic research of many designs and integration of that evidence with clinical exper- tise—the proficiency and judgment that are acquired through experience and applied with knowledge about individual patients and consideration of their pri- orities and values. The committee is well aware that for many aspects of health care, scant or no evidence of either effectiveness or ineffectiveness exists. In other areas, evidence may be available only for certain patient groups or for the
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treatment of patients who do not have coexisting health problems. Thus, it is clearly not possible to base all care on sound scientific evidence, and certainly not exclusively on randomized controlled trials, which narrowly define study popula- tions and exclude or control for factors that are inevitably relevant in real-world care settings. Nonetheless, the committee believes health care organizations and professionals could do a far better job than they do today in determining the most appropriate therapies on the basis of the strength of the scientific evidence; the stakes involved; clinical judgment; and, especially where the evidence is equivo- cal, shared patient and clinician decision making. In the ideal system of the future, the knowledge base about effective care and its use in health care settings will constantly expand through improved methods of accessing, summarizing, and assessing information and making it available at the point of care for the patient.
Knowing which services are likely to be effective also requires that health care systems continuously monitor the results of the care they provide and use that information to improve care for all patients. At a minimum, health care practitioners and organizations could be far more reflective and systematic than is generally the case today in studying their own patterns of care and outcomes, a vision that Codman (1914) had nearly a century ago when he recommended that all surgeons and hospitals carefully follow their patients after discharge from the hospital to learn whether the treatment they had received had been helpful.
Patient-Centeredness
This aim focuses on the patient’s experience of illness and health care and on the systems that work or fail to work to meet individual patients’ needs. Similar terms are person-centered, consumer-centered, personalized, and individualized. Like these terms, patient-centered encompasses qualities of compassion, empa- thy, and responsiveness to the needs, values, and expressed preferences of the individual patient.
Patients and their families are now better educated and informed about their health care than ever before. As noted earlier, the explosive growth in the use of the Internet by Americans of all ages (National Public Radio Online, 2000) includes intense interest in health information (Brown, 1998; Cyber Dialogue, 2000). In an October 1998 survey of Internet users, 27 percent of female and 15 percent of male Internet users said that they accessed medical information weekly or daily (Eysenbach et al., 1999; Georgia Tech Research Corporation, 1998). Increasingly, individuals make many of their own decisions about diagnosis and treatment and bring information to their physicians with the expectation of help in interpreting or judging its value for themselves. These new health care con- sumers represent new opportunities for responding to patient needs and reestab- lishing clinician–patient relationships that are at the heart of good health care.
Many patients have expressed frustration with their inability to participate in
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decision making, to obtain information they need, to be heard, and to participate in systems of care that are responsive to their needs. The Picker Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, has been tracking patients’ experiences in hospitals, clin- ics, and other settings since 1988 (Cleary et al., 1991; Picker Institute and Ameri- can Hospital Association, 1996). In a 1999 report, patients said that, for the most part, doctors, nurses, and medical staff were courteous, and that as patients they were treated with respect and received attention to their basic physical needs. They also reported, however, that hospital discharge often meant an abrupt tran- sition without information on how they should care for themselves, when to resume activities, what side effects of medications should be monitored, or how to have their questions answered. Above all, patients cited difficulty in obtaining the information they wanted, whether in hospitals, clinics, or doctors’ offices. In the scenario presented earlier, little consideration was given to satisfying Ms. Martinez’ preferences or to ensuring that she had sufficient information to make informed decisions.
The evidence bears out these perceptions. The right of patients to be in- formed decision makers is well accepted, but not always well implemented. An analysis of audiotaped encounters between patients and their primary care physi- cians or general and orthopedic surgeons revealed that overall, only 9 percent met the authors’ definition of completely informed decision making (Braddock et al., 1999). In another study of physician–patient interaction during visits to general internal medicine specialists, physicians listened to patients’ concerns for an average of about 18 seconds before interrupting (Beckman and Frankel, 1984).
Gerteis et al. (1993) have identified several dimensions of patient-centered care: (1) respect for patients’ values, preferences, and expressed needs; (2) coordination and integration of care; (3) information, communication, and education; (4) physical comfort; (5) emotional support—relieving fear and anxi- ety; and (6) involvement of family and friends. Each dimension is briefly discussed below.
• Respect for patients’ values, preferences, and expressed needs. Patient- centered care responds precisely to each patient’s wants, needs, and preferences. It gives patients abundant opportunities to be informed and involved in medical decision making, and guides and supports those providing care in attending to their patients’ physical and emotional needs, and maintaining or improving their quality of life to the extent possible. Patient-centered care is highly customized and incorporates cultural competence. Some patients wish to avoid risk; others may choose a risky intervention despite a relatively low likelihood of benefit. Patients’ preferences are likely to change over time and to depend on the clinical problems in question; therefore, the enterprise of shared decision making is a dynamic one, changing as patients and circumstances change.
• Coordination and integration of care. Because of the special vulnerabil- ity that accompanies illness or injury, coordination of care takes on special im-
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portance. Many patients depend on those who provide care to coordinate ser- vices—whether tests, consultations, or procedures—to ensure that accurate and timely information reaches those who need it at the appropriate time. Patient- centered care addresses the need to manage smooth transitions from one setting to another or from a health care to a self-care setting.
• Information, communication, and education. With respect to their health, people tend to want to know (1) what is wrong (diagnosis) or how to stay well, (2) what is likely to happen and how it will affect them (prognosis), and (3) what can be done to change or manage their prognosis. They need answers that are accurate and in a language they understand. Patients are diverse in the way they prefer to interact with caregivers: some seek ongoing personal face-to-face relationships; others prefer to interact with the health care system only when unavoidable and with no substantial interpersonal relationship, being comfortable with e-mail and other Web-based communication technologies. Common to all such interactions is the desire for trustworthy information (often from an indi- vidual clinician) that is attentive, responsive, and tailored to an individual’s needs.
• Physical comfort. Among the committee’s more disturbing findings is the frequency with which patients experience pain, shortness of breath, or some other discomfort. Especially at the end of life, they need not undergo such suffering. Sadly, many patients fail to receive state-of-the-art pain relief or respiratory management (Ingham and Foley, 1998; SUPPORT Principal Investi- gators, 1995). Attention to physical comfort implies timely, tailored, and expert management of such symptoms.
• Emotional support—relieving fear and anxiety. Suffering is more than just physical pain and other distressing symptoms; it also encompasses signifi- cant emotional and spiritual dimensions (Byock, 1998; Cassell, 1991). Patient- centered care attends to the anxiety that accompanies all injury and illness, whether due to uncertainty, fear of pain, disability or disfigurement, loneliness, financial impact, or the effect of illness on one’s family.
• Involvement of family and friends. This dimension of patient-centered care focuses on accommodating family and friends on whom patients may rely, involving them as appropriate in decision making, supporting them as caregivers, making them welcome and comfortable in the care delivery setting, and recogniz- ing their needs and contributions.
Health care should cure when possible, but always help to relieve suffer- ing—both are encompassed by the notion of a healing relationship (Crawshaw et al., 1995; Quill, 1983). To accomplish these goals, both technical care and interpersonal interactions should be shaped to meet the needs and preferences of individual patients (Tressolini and The Pew-Fetzer Task Force, 1994; Veatch, 1991). Because patients are highly variable in their preferences, clinicians cannot assume that they alone can make the best decisions for their patients (Balint, 1993; Barry et al., 1995; Brock, 1991; Emanuel and Emanuel, 1992; Szasz and
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Hollender, 1956; Wagner et al., 1995). Patients increasingly want to obtain information and to be involved in decision making (Deber et al., 1996; Degner and Russell, 1988; Guadagnoli and Ward, 1998; Mansell et al., 2000; Mazur and Hickam, 1997). Moreover, meeting the aim of patient-centeredness can improve the outcomes patients desire (Brown, 1990; DeBusk et al., 1994; Linden and Chambers, 1994; Mullen et al., 1987), at least in part, by increasing their partici- pation in decision making (Greenfield et al., 1985, 1988; Kaplan et al., 1989; Mahler and Kulik, 1991; Orth et al., 1987; Stewart, 1995).
As with communication styles, patients differ in their views about how ac- tive they wish to be in decision making. In some cases, patients want a large role, and in other cases they may delegate most decision making to a clinician. The goal of patient-centeredness is to customize care to the specific needs and cir- cumstances of each individual, that is, to modify the care to respond to the person, not the person to the care.
Timeliness
Timeliness is an important characteristic of any service and is a legitimate and valued focus of improvement in health care and other industries (Fishman, 1999; Fung and Magretta, 1998; Goldsmith, 1989; Kenagy et al., 1999; Maister, 1984; Roach, 1991; Sirkin and Stalk, 1990; van Biema and Greenwald, 1997; Womack et al., 1991). However, long waits are the norm in most doctors’ offices, in emergency rooms, on the telephone, in responses to inquiries, in spe- cialty care, on gurneys in hallways waiting for procedures, and awaiting test results, both in institutions and in the community. In addition to emotional distress, physical harm may result, for example, from a delay in diagnosis or treatment that results in preventable complications. The long waits for appoint- ments described in the scenario presented earlier, which are common today, may have resulted in a much more advanced diagnosis for Ms. Martinez. Lack of timeliness also signals a lack of attention to flow and a lack of respect for the patient that are not tolerated in consumer-centered systems in other service indus- tries. It suggests that care has not been designed with the welfare of the patient at the center.
Waits also plague those who give care. Surgeons know that operations rarely start on time; doctors and nurses wait “on hold” as they try to track down vital information, and delays and barriers involved in referrals eat up the time and energy of both referring doctors and consulting specialists. In the earlier sce- nario, Ms. Martinez’ surgery was nearly cancelled because important information that should have been in her record was missing, and staff spent valuable time finding it and rearranging schedules to avoid having to cancel the operation.
Any high-quality process should flow smoothly. Delays should occur rarely. Waiting times should be continually reduced for both patients and those who give care. Much waiting today appears to result from the presumption that certain
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kinds of face-to-face encounters are required for patients to receive the help or interaction they require. Health systems must develop multiple ways of respond- ing to patients’ needs beyond patient visits, including the use of the Internet. Reducing waiting time does not have to increase expense. Experience has shown repeatedly that in many areas, improving access reduces costs in health care (Barry-Walker, 2000; Cohn et al., 1997; Fuss et al., 1998; Stewart et al., 1997; Tidikis and Strasen, 1994; Tunick et al., 1997) and in other industries (Heskett et al., 1997). Promising work in health care has begun to result in reduced delays by decreasing cycle time and by applying lessons from other industries on continu- ous rather than batch production (Nolan et al., 1996). These approaches are described further in Chapter 7.
Efficiency
In an efficient health care system, resources are used to get the best value for the money spent (Palmer and Torgerson, 1999). The opposite of efficiency is waste, the use of resources without benefit to the patients a system is intended to help. There are at least two ways to improve efficiency: (1) reduce quality waste, and (2) reduce administrative or production costs.
Not all but many types of quality improvements result in lower resource use. This is true for improvements in effectiveness that result from reductions in overuse. It is also true for most improvements in safety, which result in fewer injuries. Quality waste from both overuse (see Appendix A) and errors (Institute of Medicine, 2000b) is abundant in health care and contributes to excess costs.
Some researchers have attempted to quantify administrative costs that con- stitute waste (Woolhandler and Himmelstein, 1997; Woolhandler et al., 1993). Others have identified waste in the work of smaller health care units and sought systematically to reduce such waste through a variety of strategies, including eliminating processes that are not useful (such as tests), multiple entries (such as clerical reentry of physicians’ prescriptions and laboratory orders), classifica- tions that add complexity without adding value (such as types of appointments and job classifications), and layers of control (such as approvals and sign-offs). Waste can also be reduced by recycling and appropriate reuse of resources (such as data and water) and by wise substitutions (Kain et al., 1999; Klein et al., 2000; Langley et al., 1996; Luck and Peabody, 2000; Poplin, 2000; Skillman et al., 2000; Walczak, 2000; Zairi et al., 1999). Other approaches rely on matching supply to demand and using sampling for measurement instead of measuring 100 percent of events. Several of these approaches are described in greater detail in Chapter 7.
Because of the high levels of waste in the current system, the committee sees no immediate conflict in the simultaneous pursuit of lower costs through effi- ciency and better patient experiences through safety, effectiveness, patient-
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centeredness, and timeliness. There is little doubt that current resources can be spent more wisely to pursue the aims set forth in this chapter.
Equity
This chapter began with a statement of purpose for the health system: “to continually reduce the burden of illness, injury, and disability, and to improve the health and functioning of the people of the United States.” The aim of equity is to secure these benefits for all the people of the United States. This aim has two dimensions: equity at the level of the population and equity at the level of the individual. At the population level, the goal of a health care system is to improve health status and to do so in a manner that reduces health disparities among particular subgroups. Equity in care implies universal access, a promise that has yet to be either made or kept. Lack of health insurance has a profound effect on access to appropriate services, and is directly associated with poor functioning, increased morbidity, and increased mortality (American College of Physicians– American Society of Internal Medicine, 2000; Baker et al., 2000; Franks et al., 1993; Haas and Goldman, 1994; Hafner-Eaton, 1993; Kasper et al., 2000). Insti- tutions and health professionals that deliver uncompensated care to uninsured or underserved patients are at risk financially (Institute of Medicine, 2000a), and evidence suggests that the provision of uncompensated care is declining (Cun- ningham et al., 1999; Mann et al., 1997). The committee believes lack of access to care is a very powerful barrier to quality.
With regard to equity in care giving, all individuals rightly expect to be treated fairly by social institutions, including health care organizations. The availability of care and quality of services should be based on individuals’ par- ticular needs and not on personal characteristics unrelated to the patient’s condi- tion or to the reason for seeking care. In particular, the quality of care should not differ because of such characteristics as gender, race, age, ethnicity, income, education, disability, sexual orientation, or location of residence (Ayanian et al., 1999; Canto et al., 2000; Fiscella et al., 2000; Freeman and Payne, 2000; Kahn et al., 1994; Pearson et al., 1992; Philbin and DiSalvo, 1998; Ross et al., 2000; Yergan et al., 1987).
Conflicts Among the Aims
For the most part, the six aims are complementary and synergistic. At times, however, there will be tensions among them. Health care institutions, clinicians, and patients will sometimes need to work together to balance competing or conflicting objectives. Two examples are the potential conflict between the aims of patient-centeredness and effectiveness, and the need to balance the aim of equity as applied to the population with achievement of the other aims at the level of the individual.
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Some readers might question whether a commitment to evidence-based care conflicts with an emphasis on patient-centered care. We emphasize that the commitment to patient-centered care is not intended to imply that clinicians have an obligation to provide unnecessary services merely because patients request them. All unneeded services have the potential to cause harm. For example, false-positive results on a test can lead to a cascade of testing and psychological distress. Because unnecessary services can do harm and offer no benefit, ethical principles dictate that a physician not recommend or prescribe requested treat- ment that is of no known benefit—whether, for example, the request is for antibi- otics, diagnostic tests, or a wide variety of invasive procedures.
A VISION OF FUTURE CARE
The six aims for improvement described in this chapter define the tasks ahead for the health care system, for organizations, and for clinical practices that wish to contribute to the overarching social purpose set forth at the beginning of this chapter. These aims can lead us all to fundamentally better care. Having presented earlier in this chapter a scenario in which almost everything went wrong, we conclude the chapter with a scenario depicting care as it could be if the six aims were realized:
Maureen Waters, January 2002
Maureen Waters, a single working mother with teenage children, was new in town. When the family moved to Southcity, she had to select an insurance plan. She chose CityCare because its cost was comparable to that of other options, and it was associated with a major university-affiliated hospital.
When Ms. Waters joined CityCare, she was asked to choose a primary care physician. After talking with her neighbors and coworkers, she was pleased to confirm some of what she had learned from having online access to profiles and to information on office hours, credentials, patient satisfaction, and outcomes for each physician and group.
Again online, using a secure site, she chose a physician, completed background and health risk appraisal information for herself and her children, and never again had to supply this information. An hour later, her choice of a physician was confirmed by the plan. She also received a reply from her new physician’s office that, on the basis of her health risk appraisal, she should made an ap- pointment to meet with her primary care physician, have her hypertension as- sessed, and obtain medication refills. The reply also included information about blood tests that should be done before her first appointment.
Because she was due for a breast exam and mammogram, a referral to a breast care center was attached to the reply. Also online, she was able to schedule a
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time convenient for her (Sunday afternoon) at one of several locations in South- city.
Since the information for the appointment had already been completed, she went directly to a breast care center, where the exam and mammogram were completed without delay. Before leaving, she learned that a lump discovered during the breast exam had been confirmed by mammogram and sonography, and that she should have a biopsy to determine the nature of the finding. The radiographic results were available to her as digital images that could be e- mailed to her physician.
Because her health profile included hypertension, Ms. Waters needed to see her primary care physician to evaluate her hypertension control and discuss next steps before any further treatment that might include surgery could occur. Dr. Fine had an open scheduling system that allowed Ms. Waters to be seen the next morning.
Dr. Fine explained that although the breast lump was the first issue on the agenda, she was still concerned about Ms. Waters’ other health issues and her preventive care. The doctor therefore suggested that Ms. Waters return after blood work had been done, using the same online open scheduling system that had made it easy for her to be seen that day. Ms. Waters was reassured not only by the process, but also, as a newcomer to the city, by Dr. Fine’s concern about her well-being and role as her advocate, especially because of her concerns about the upcoming biopsy and what it might mean.
During the visit, Dr. Fine was able to give Ms. Waters profiles of surgeons, describe their interpersonal as well as technical skills, and coach her about questions or issues she might want to explore. Ms. Waters also had received information from the groups about their research efforts and the protocols they used. While she was in the primary care office, the staff arranged for her to have the biopsy done early that week by the surgeon she had selected. In a small room containing a computer, she consulted the CHESS database, a National Library of Medicine database for consumers, and Cancerfacts.com for informa- tion about treatment options, the meaning of test results, rates of recurrence, side effects, resources available to her locally, and the names of support groups. She forwarded to her own computer information that she wanted to read and follow up on later and took with her the addresses of several of the Web sites.
The biopsy showed an early-stage cancer. Ms. Waters was able to see her physician the next day to learn about and discuss her options for treatment. She was linked with other patients who had faced similar choices. She immediately began plans for treatment, which was completed without delay.
Throughout this process, Ms. Waters had information available to her in several ways. Although her style was to read as much as she could and ask when she was confused, she spoke with other women who were most comfortable accept- ing what their doctor recommended in terms of treatment, but sought resources for rehabilitation and advice about managing the side effects of their therapy.
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When she felt the need to do so, she spoke with or e-mailed Dr. Fine. At other times she spoke with the nurse practitioner who worked with Dr. Fine. Through- out this process, she could examine her own records, including test results. Ms. Waters had no paperwork to complete, no duplicative questions, and no trouble reaching professionals when she had concerns or questions.
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3
Formulating New Rules to Redesign and Improve Care
Achieving the aims described in Chapter 2 will require profound changes, beginning with a new framework to guide those who undertake those changes. This chapter describes ten new rules to guide the transition to a health system that better meets patients’ needs.
Recommendation 4: Private and public purchasers, health care organizations, clinicians, and patients should work together to rede- sign health care processes in accordance with the following rules:
1. Care based on continuous healing relationships. Patients should receive care whenever they need it and in many forms, not just face-to-face visits. This rule implies that the health care system should be responsive at all times (24 hours a day, every day) and that access to care should be provided over the Internet, by tele- phone, and by other means in addition to face-to-face visits.
2. Customization based on patient needs and values. The system of care should be designed to meet the most common types of needs, but have the capability to respond to individual patient choices and preferences.
3. The patient as the source of control. Patients should be given the necessary information and the opportunity to exercise the de- gree of control they choose over health care decisions that affect them. The health system should be able to accommodate differences in patient preferences and encourage shared decision making.
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4. Shared knowledge and the free flow of information. Patients should have unfettered access to their own medical information and to clinical knowledge. Clinicians and patients should communicate effectively and share information.
5. Evidence-based decision making. Patients should receive care based on the best available scientific knowledge. Care should not vary illogically from clinician to clinician or from place to place.
6. Safety as a system property. Patients should be safe from injury caused by the care system. Reducing risk and ensuring safety require greater attention to systems that help prevent and mitigate errors.
7. The need for transparency. The health care system should make information available to patients and their families that al- lows them to make informed decisions when selecting a health plan, hospital, or clinical practice, or choosing among alternative treat- ments. This should include information describing the system’s per- formance on safety, evidence-based practice, and patient satisfac- tion.
8. Anticipation of needs. The health system should anticipate patient needs, rather than simply reacting to events.
9. Continuous decrease in waste. The health system should not waste resources or patient time.
10. Cooperation among clinicians. Clinicians and institutions should actively collaborate and communicate to ensure an appro- priate exchange of information and coordination of care.
These ten rules translate readily into a set of new patient expectations for health care (see Box 3-1). The committee believes these new expectations are consistent with and reinforce the steps that must be taken to achieve a significant improvement in quality. We also believe they are consistent with the kind of care most clinicians strive to provide each day, but without the support of well-de- signed care systems and absent an environment that nurtures innovation and excellence.
To create a new health care system that more closely matches the purpose and aims described in Chapter 2, it will be necessary, first, to examine old as- sumptions to understand why they have led to our current ineffective health care systems, and second, to consciously craft new operating assumptions embodied in the rules set forth above. As a guide in formulating its agenda for change, the committee used as a framework recent work in understanding complex adaptive systems (Kauffman, 1995; Stacey, 1996; Waldrop, 1992; Weick, 1995; Zimmer- man et al., 1998) and its application to what have become known as “learning organizations” (Senge, 1990) (see Appendix B for an introduction to this field).
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BOX 3-1 What Patients Should Expect from Their Health Care
1. Beyond patient visits: You will have the care you need when you need it . . . whenever you need it. You will find help in many forms, not just in face-to-face visits. You will find help on the Internet, on the telephone, from many sources, by many routes, in the form you want it.
2. Individualization: You will be known and respected as an individual. Your choices and preferences will be sought and honored. The usual system of care will meet most of your needs. When your needs are special, the care will adapt to meet you on your own terms.
3. Control: The care system will take control only if and when you freely give permission.
4. Information: You can know what you wish to know, when you wish to know it. Your medical record is yours to keep, to read, and to understand. The rule is: “Nothing about you without you.”
5. Science: You will have care based on the best available scientific knowledge. The system promises you excellence as its standard. Your care will not vary illogically from doctor to doctor or from place to place. The system will promise you all the care that can help you, and will help you avoid care that cannot help you.
6. Safety: Errors in care will not harm you. You will be safe in the care system. 7. Transparency: Your care will be confidential, but the care system will not keep
secrets from you. You can know whatever you wish to know about the care that affects you and your loved ones.
8. Anticipation: Your care will anticipate your needs and will help you find the help you need. You will experience proactive help, not just reactions, to help you restore and maintain your health.
9. Value: Your care will not waste your time or money. You will benefit from constant innovations, which will increase the value of care to you.
10. Cooperation: Those who provide care will cooperate and coordinate their work fully with each other and with you. The walls between professions and institutions will crumble, so that your experiences will become seamless. You will never feel lost.
Following a brief review of this work, we describe in greater detail the ten rules outlined above.
HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATIONS AS COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS
A health care system can be defined as a set of connected or interdependent parts or agents—including caregivers and patients—bound by a common purpose and acting on their knowledge. Health care is complex because of the great
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number of interconnections within and among small care systems. For example, office practices and critical care units in hospitals are linked to other units (such as laboratories and emergency departments) and are often embedded in even larger “umbrella” organizations such as hospitals, health plans, and integrated delivery systems.
Health care systems are adaptive because unlike mechanical systems, they are composed of individuals—patients and clinicians who have the capacity to learn and change as a result of experience. Their actions in delivering health care are not always predictable, and tend to change both their local and larger environ- ments. The unpredictability of behavior in complex adaptive systems can be seen as contributing to huge variation in the delivery of health care. If such a system is to improve its performance—that is, improve the quality of care it provides— some of these actions need to be specified to the extent possible so they are predictable with a high level of reliability. Other actions are not specifiable because their relationship to outcomes is not well understood (see Figure B-1 in Appendix B).
The task for clinicians and managers, then, is not to treat all situations alike, but to understand when specification and standardization are appropriate and when they are not. The challenge of improving quality lies in understanding that in situations lacking high levels of certainty and clinical agreement, flexibility that results in variation based on patient needs is appropriate. The converse, overspecification, can result in too many handoffs, unnecessary steps, and a lack of the ability to customize.
On the other hand, variation should be minimal in situations in which the levels of certainty and clinical agreement are high and the science base is consis- tent. In health care today, many processes are underspecified and understandard- ized. Many irrational variations in practice cannot be justified as better meeting patients’ needs, and they represent lost opportunities for benefit.
A surprising finding from research on complex adaptive systems is that relatively simple rules can lead to complex, innovative system behavior. An understanding of complex adaptive behavior has been advanced by studies of biological systems, such as the flocking of birds or schooling of fish to avoid predators. These studies and computer models have confirmed that a few simple rules can guide complex behavior toward a goal. Such systems move toward their goals by having (1) a common purpose (in this case, avoiding predators); (2) internal motivation (surviving another day); and (3) some simple rules that guide individual behavior (keeping up with the group, moving toward the center of mass of the group, and avoiding collisions). Two more familiar examples of simple rules that have given rise to great variety and complexity in social systems are the Ten Commandments and the Bill of Rights, both of which have been interpreted flexibly but remain remarkably robust over time. Good rules describe how the system should function, but do not need to specify this functioning in detail. This insight can help inform the work of redesigning health care as well.
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Two particular social systems functioning today illustrate the diverse, cre- ative, and complex actions that can arise from shared aims and general directions (what some writers in the field call a “good enough vision”). The first example is the Internet, which was built to share research data electronically using agreed- upon transfer protocols and conventions. Its explosive growth and adaptation since that time could not have been foreseen, controlled, or designed in detail because the complexity was too great, and individuals who might have wished to do so were unavoidably bound by their old experience. A few simple rules were enough for a functional complex system to emerge on its own.
A second example, the credit card company Visa International, illustrates the power of a few simple rules. As members of a for-profit corporation, banks that issue Visa cards agree to the graphic layout of the card and a common clearing- house that allows any card to be used anywhere worldwide. Its members are otherwise free to compete intensively on all other aspects of business. This design has resulted in huge growth worldwide despite different currencies, cus- toms, and banking systems.
The committee believes these important lessons about simple rules for com- plex adaptive systems can be applied to health care systems as well. In redesign- ing health care, the building blocks are the simple processes that make up the work of small systems of care and their interconnections.
Two preconditions are required to build a new health system that can achieve the aims set forth in Chapter 2: common purpose and simple rules. First, those in the system need a common purpose that builds on the good intentions and internal motivations of the people within the health care community. The statement of purpose and aims set forth in Chapter 2 lay out a common purpose for the health system.
Second, a new set of simple rules is needed to guide behavior in the 21st- century health care system. Identifying these rules is a key task in describing a health care system capable of dramatic changes in quality. To this end, the committee proposes a new set of simple rules to guide behavior in the 21st- century health care system. Each rule is contrasted with the current approach and associated assumption it supercedes. The descriptions of the approaches that are used today are not intended to be pejorative, but to capture common practices and contrast these with the committee’s vision for the future. The descriptions of today’s approaches should be easily recognizable by current clinicians and others in health care. The 21st-century rules we propose, on the other hand, will not be obvious to many of today’s clinicians, leaders, or health care consumers. Rather, they represent the precepts the committee believes should guide the behavior and underlie the actions of health care professionals and others as they design new care systems. The committee believes such a change in the ways that patients and their families, clinicians, and others in health care organizations interact with the health care system can produce major improvements in the quality of care. We believe these rules provide broad latitude for innovative thinking that can move
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the health care system in the direction of being safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable.
Several cautions are in order, however. First, as is in the nature of complex adaptive systems, the rules are interrelated and are, therefore, intended to be applied as a set rather than viewed as a menu of choices. Second, to take any one rule to its extreme is likely to lead to a caricature of the intended performance. This is also true of the descriptions of today’s approaches, which do not capture many of the good practices currently found in health care. The rules and descrip- tions are strong, but common sense must apply to their interpretation. Third, the rules provide guidance applicable to most clinical interactions, but they do not cover every possible clinical decision. Fourth, as with the six aims, rules will occasionally conflict with one another. The responsibility of the clinician is to try to resolve or mediate these conflicts most appropriately for a given patient at a particular time. In some cases, however, conflict among rules will remain. Not- withstanding, tension among rules is a property of a complex adaptive system that can represent an area of creativity and growth.
The rules do not need to be highly specific; as in any complex adaptive system, the workforce will translate the rules into wise local actions. But they do have to be powerful and logically related to the aims. Further, they should feel like changes from prevailing approaches.
TEN SIMPLE RULES FOR THE 21ST-CENTURY HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Table 3-1 summarizes ten simple rules for the 21st-century health care sys- tem. In the following subsections, each rule is described and contrasted with the corresponding current approach. There is not in all cases a strong evidence base indicating that following a rule would result in better patient and population outcomes. Where such evidence is available, it is cited; where it is not, this is indicated, and the rationale for the committee’s espousal of the rule is provided.
Rule 1: Care Based on Continuous Healing Relationships
In the 21st-century health care system, care should be organized and paid for so that all types of health care interactions that improve information transfer and strengthen the healing relationship are encouraged. What patients want and need from their care is relief from suffering and uncertainty—knowledge about what is wrong, what is likely to happen, and what can be done to change or manage that outcome. Sometimes, such relief can be provided only in a face-to-face visit. But many needs can and should be met through other forms of care, all centered on a relationship with the clinician. The current system often requires a visit as the only legitimate format for care, and more important, as the only form of professional work that is compensated and measured in the health care world as
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“productivity.” Under this new rule, care would be available through many new modes of communication, and would be accessible to patients exactly when they need it, any day at any time, not just between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. weekdays. The Internet is likely to be a major platform for such communication.
Face-to-face visits will likely continue to be an important form of clinician and patient interaction; for many people, some direct human contact is critical to establish and maintain a strong healing relationship. Face-to-face visits also allow the clinician to physically examine the patient and observe the patient’s demeanor. But in many cases, face-to-face visits are not wanted by either clini- cian or patient, nor are they truly needed. Substituting other forms of care, such as electronic communication, for some face-to-face visits presents an opportunity not only to improve care—make it safer, more effective, patient-centered, and timely—but also to make it more efficient.
Through the judicious use of electronic and other forms of communication, it may also be possible to make more clinician time available to improve the quality of the face-to-face visits that do occur. In today’s health care system, necessary face-to-face visits are often delayed or rushed. There may be insufficient time during the visit to understand the psychological underpinnings of symptoms or their relationship to other ongoing health problems. And there may be little time to provide the patient and family with information about a health condition and
TABLE 3-1 Simple Rules for the 21st-Century Health Care System
Current Approach New Rule
Care is based primarily on visits. Care is based on continuous healing relationships.
Professional autonomy drives variability. Care is customized according to patient needs and values.
Professionals control care. The patient is the source of control.
Information is a record. Knowledge is shared and information flows freely.
Decision making is based on training and Decision making is evidence-based. experience.
Do no harm is an individual responsibility. Safety is a system property.
Secrecy is necessary. Transparency is necessary.
The system reacts to needs. Needs are anticipated.
Cost reduction is sought. Waste is continuously decreased.
Preference is given to professional roles over Cooperation among clinicians is a priority. the system.
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adequate emotional support for the pain, loneliness, and grief that may accom- pany the illness (Branch, 2000).
The new rule asserts that the product of health care is not visits or “encoun- ters” but healing relationships that allow patients to obtain the trustworthy infor- mation and support they need. A focus on the healing relationship emphasizes that this transfer of trustworthy information is the core product of health care, not something tacked onto a health care visit. In the 21st-century health care system, interaction should be understood in a fundamentally different way. Interaction is not the price of care; it is care (Berwick, 1999). A patient with a question represents an opportunity, not a burden. Time spent in building patients’ skills in self-care is not a way of shifting care; it is care. And access to information is not desirable because it allows care to be completed more quickly or supports com- pliance; it is care.
The new rule calls for continuous access (24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. Three points are critical to understanding how this could be achieved by the 21st-century health care system. First, as suggested above, “access” does not necessarily mean face-to-face contact with a health care professional. Sec- ond, such access would not be a matter of extending the current system; rather, it would involve fundamental redesign, attention to human factors, and respect for the limits of human beings. Third, with information technology, continuous access is possible in health care just as it has become increasingly possible in so many other venues of American society through new forms of electronic commu- nication.
A continuous flow of interactions can span evenings, nights, and weekends if information systems make scheduling, access to medical records, e-mail, and the like available directly to patients. Such interactions would also be more individu- alized, patient-centered, and timely than much of today’s care. Much can be learned in this regard from the financial services industry. Just as banking cus- tomers have been freed from using teller lines that were open only from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. on weekdays, information technology can liberate patient care from the confines of the face-to-face visit. The knowledge and technology now exist to provide many alternatives to visits, including self-care that is strongly sup- ported and unequivocally encouraged (Hart, 1995; Lorig et al., 1993, 1999; Von Korff et al., 1997; Wagner et al., 1996); group visits for patients with like needs, with or without professionals being involved (Beck et al., 1997; Kane and Sands, 1998); use of the Internet for access to scientific information and well-managed discussion groups; and e-mail communication between patients and clinicians (Jadad, 1999; Plsek, 1999; Simon et al., 2000).
We emphasize that this rule cannot be accommodated by the current system working three shifts, nor does it mean that ambulatory settings would never close. Hospitals today rely on back-up double shifts for nursing staff and very long hours for resident physicians, an approach that ignores a large body of work on the effects of fatigue on human performance (Galinsky et al., 1993; Pilcher and
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Huffcutt, 1996; Samkoff and Jacques, 1991; Sawin and Scerbo, 1995). Through the application of sound design concepts (discussed in Chapter 5), a continuous- access system can be safer and more effective (Espinosa and Nolan, 2000; Womack and Jones, 1996; Womack et al., 1991).
Box 3-2 presents a scenario that illustrates this new rule.
Rule 2: Customization Based on Patient Needs and Values
In the current health system, autonomy of clinical decision making is a fundamental value. However, a system that holds to this value fails to make the best use of scientific knowledge. Variations in approaches today often reflect different local and individual styles of practice and training that may or may not be consistent with the current evidence base. The new rule states that variations in treatment should be based primarily on differing patient needs and preferences.
Doctors and other clinicians stand to gain a great deal from this change in perspective. The volume of scientific medical literature today far outpaces the capacity of any clinician—whether medical, nursing, or other health profes- sional—to remain up to date. Weed (2000) has pointed out that to ask an indi- vidual practitioner to rely on his or her memory to store and retrieve all the facts relevant to patient care is like asking a travel agent to memorize airline schedules. Information technology can assist by combining probabilities and indicating the likelihood of benefit from myriad possible diagnostic and treatment approaches. The clinician’s brain should be used only when less expensive, creative, and resourceful capacities are insufficient.
BOX 3-2 New Rule 1: Care Based on Continuous Healing Relationships
Henry L. is 24 years old and newly identified as HIV positive. He has an apart- ment in an urban area. Henry e-mails Dr. Sosa at 6:45 a.m.: “I am worried that a rash that just appeared on my left wrist is related to HIV status and may be an early sign that my disease is getting worse. What do you think? I have checked out the computer database, talked to some friends in my HIV chat room, and am still confused.” Dr. Sosa replies at 8:00 a.m. that she would like to have a high-resolu- tion, two-way interactive video–computer visit with Henry at 8:50 a.m. to look at the rash and talk with him.
At 8:50, this video–computer visit takes place. Dr. Sosa examines the rash (using high-resolution optics) and compares it with other dermatological images stored in a database. She prescribes a topical ointment, offers reassurance, and asks Henry to contact her in 3 days for a progress report. She asks whether he has any other questions and whether he has given any more thought to joining a support group.
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The new rule implies that patient values drive variability. Patients differ because of variations in personality, nationality, and ethnicity, and in the beliefs and expectations associated with various religions and cultures (Carrese and Rhodes, 1995; Carrillo et al., 1999; Lavizzo-Mourey, 1996; Smith, 1998). Clini- cians can recognize such variations by sharing with patients the best available information about alternative ways to treat a given condition, what is known about the likely effects of treatment, and the uncertainty associated with different alternatives when applied to the patient’s individual circumstances. For example, patients with prostate disease of a given severity have a choice among prostatec- tomy, other treatments, and watchful waiting. Some men weigh the possibility of adverse side effects from surgery more heavily than others, and this influences their choice of treatment. Other men weigh the likelihood of recurrence more heavily. Similarly, menopausal women may choose whether to take hormone replacement therapy based in part on how concerned they are about its risks as compared with its benefits. For patients with angina, there may be choices among bypass surgery, angioplasty, or medication. All such choices may be influenced by the extent to which patients are bothered by symptoms, as well as their willingness to risk unfavorable outcomes. Both are highly individual judg- ments for which patients need good information to make a decision and support after informed choices have been made (Barry et al., 1995; Mort, 1996; Wagner et al., 1995).
Rule 3: The Patient as the Source of Control
In the current system, control over decisions, access, and information is typically in the hands of caregivers and is ceded to patients only when caregivers choose to do so. For example, patients are often required to obtain permission to see their own medical records, to have visitors, or to participate in treatment decisions. A common practice today is that control over the time, type, and location of care and the information needed to make such decisions resides with professionals. The corresponding new rule asserts that, except in unusual cir- cumstances, control should reside with patients.
This rule represents a significant change in how many clinicians would approach patient care, but it is very consistent with the direction in which the clinician–patient relationship has been evolving (Bastian and Richards, 1999; Harrison, 2000) and with widely understood concepts of informed consent (Tay- lor, 2000). In recent decades, there has been a steady transition from authoritar- ian models of care to approaches that encourage greater patient access to infor- mation and input into decision making, but this transition is far from complete (Emanuel and Emanuel, 1992). The latter approaches correspond to a growing scientific literature in which it is shown that informed patients participating ac- tively in decisions about their own care appear to have better outcomes, lower costs, and higher functional status than those held to more passive roles (Gifford
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et al., 1998; Lorig et al., 1993, 1999; Superio-Cabuslay et al., 1996; Von Korff et al., 1998). Of 21 studies published between 1983 and 1993 that measured whether the quality of physician–patient communication affected patient health outcomes for conditions such as breast cancer, diabetes, peptic ulcer disease, hypertension, and headaches, 16 reported positive outcomes, 4 reported positive (but not sig- nificant) results, and 1 was inconclusive (Stewart, 1995).
A recent review of the literature (Guadagnoli and Ward, 1998) reveals that most patients want to be involved in treatment decisions and to know about available alternatives. In a study of more than 400 elderly veterans offered an invasive medical intervention (Mazur and Hickam, 1997), almost all (93.4 per- cent) wanted their physician to provide them with information about risks. In examining risk disclosure, Degner and Russell (1988) found in a small study of cancer patients that virtually all preferred a “shared control model.” Similarly, among 300 patients presented with vignettes about decision making, the large majority wanted to be involved and supported in the decision-making process (Deber et al., 1996). Yet, physicians typically underestimate the extent to which patients want information about their care (Strull et al., 1984). Even today, patients rarely receive adequate information for informed decision making (Brad- dock et al., 1999), despite strong legal underpinnings and professional acknowl- edgment of its importance.
This new rule is not intended to imply, however, that patients should be forced to share decision making, only that they should be able to exercise the degree of control they wish. Indeed, patients vary in the extent to which they want to be involved in decision making. Arora and McHorney (2000) found that 69 percent of patients with chronic disease (hypertension, diabetes, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, and depression) preferred to delegate their medical decisions to their physicians. These and other researchers have found that the likelihood of preferring an active role increases with level of education, but decreases significantly with age (Stiggelbout and Kiebert, 1997). Evidence indicates further that patient preferences may be related to the nature of the decisions to be made, the type of illness, and its severity (Mansell et al., 2000). A 1989 study revealed, for example, that interest in shared decision making de- clined with increased severity of illness (Ende et al., 1989).
Work by Kaplan and others on patient empowerment (Greenfield et al., 1985, 1988; Kaplan et al., 1989) has demonstrated that it takes time for patients to be included as partners and that in many cases they need to be coached to assume such a role. In settings where this has occurred, however, research has demon- strated the value of the approach. Kaplan et al. (1989) found that patients who had been coached to ask questions during office visits reported fewer functional limitations and had better control of blood sugar and blood pressure than did patients in the control group. Investigators using interactive video to help pa- tients with decision making reported that in a prospective cohort study, patients rated the program very positively in helping them make informed choices about
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surgical intervention for benign prostatic hypertrophy (Barry et al., 1995; Wagner et al., 1995).
Accomplishing the goal of shared decision making does not necessarily require a high-technology approach. Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle, Washington, for example, provides patients with a short form called “Doc Talk” to help them prepare for a visit to their doctor. By reviewing the list of suggested topics before the visit and making notes for themselves, patients are encouraged to ensure that their concerns are addressed (Doc Talk, 1999). A group of Austra- lian investigators used a similar approach with cancer patients and concluded that a question prompt sheet is a simple, inexpensive, and effective means of promot- ing the asking of questions by cancer patients (Brown et al., 1999).
As noted earlier, patients are increasingly able to use the Internet and other interactive technologies to help them make informed decisions about their medi- cal treatment. Examples of such information include (1) patients’ access to their own health records, including laboratory results and diagnostic images; (2) inter- active systems for shared decision making (Barry et al., 1995; Wagner et al., 1995) to help patients understand treatment options and the level of medical uncertainty of each, and integrate their own lifestyles and personal beliefs into their decision making; and (3) direct access by patients to information about clinical trials (such as the National Cancer Institute’s PDQ database of clinical trials), the clinical research literature, and well-prepared syntheses.
Rule 4: Shared Knowledge and the Free Flow of Information
Transfer of information—both scientific and personal—is a key form of care. In the 21st-century health care system, patients should have access to both types of information without restriction, delay, or the need for anyone else’s permission.
Under the current approach, in which the patient visit is the organizing principle, the record is an artifact of that visit. Information is treated as retrospec- tive, archival, passive, and inert. It is used as a record of what has happened or as a tool to defend or prosecute a lawsuit. There is often some barrier to knowledge transfer—whether requiring that the patient call for an appointment or obtain permission—that increases cost without adding value and fails to meet the patient’s need.
The new rule represents a change in this view of the nature of health care information. It treats information as interactive, real-time, and prospective, and holds that information is key to the patient–clinician relationship. This rule is related to Rule 1, which states that care should be understood as a healing rela- tionship that rests primarily on the transfer of knowledge through face-to-face visits and various forms of electronic communication. Information is not inert; rather the transfer of knowledge is care. Patients’ unrestricted access to their health-related information is a key implication of Rule 4. Ensuring such access
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can help make information part of a healing relationship. Patients should also be able to see an audit log, that is, a list of all others who have seen their identifiable data.
Several debates have revolved around issues related to patient access to health information. The question of who owns that information remains a diffi- cult and unsettled question (Institute of Medicine, 1994; Waller and Alcantara, 1998). The clinician or organization (such as a hospital) that creates the record has an obligation to protect it from, for example, destruction, tampering, or disclosure. In many states, patients have the right to access or obtain copies of their records, and they sometimes have the right to correct the information. Gen- erally, however, legislation and practice severely limit the conditions (and some- times impose very high costs for violating those limits) under which these rights are granted. Even where patients have a clear legal right to access their records, the reluctance of some health care organizations and practices may make access- ing or obtaining copies of one’s records very difficult in reality.
Although patients should have unfettered access to their records and should be able to add comments regarding, for example, their accuracy, the committee believes patients should not be allowed to alter, block access to, or delete infor- mation entered in their records by clinicians or others. Medical records are legal as well as patient-care documents. Ensuring that health information is accurate and complete is critical to its use for patient care, research and quality improve- ment, and legal and financial accountability.
Beyond the generally acknowledged right of a patient to know his or her diagnosis and treatment, patients are sometimes given a summary of their care to help them in their self-care. In the current system, patients who request access to their personal medical information are generally given paper copies of either abbreviated or complete versions of their records (Chambers, 1998; Fischbach et al., 1980; Giglio et al., 1978; Shenkin and Warner, 1973; Weed, 1981). Medical records tend to be large, cumbersome, filled with medical jargon, poorly orga- nized, dispersed among many record holders, incomplete, inaccurate, and/or out of date. Paper records make tracking and understanding longitudinal data and their relationship to various interventions quite difficult (Weed, 1991). Informa- tion about the results of care, patient preferences, and patients’ own contributions to their health and health care is sparse or nonexistent.
With the advent of Internet-based applications, it is now possible for medical records to be held physically or digitally in a variety of locations, and to be accessed in whole or in part by the patient or anyone to whom he or she grants permission for purposes of reading only or for reading and entering information (Eysenbach, 2000; Larkin, 1999). It is also possible to store patient records on “smart” cards (Schoenfelt, 1998)—wallet-sized cards with embedded chips that can be accessed with a card reader. Other applications include storage of digital images (such as x-rays) on CD-ROM for patients to keep (Mehta et al., 1999).
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Relatively little is known about patients’ preferences and reactions with regard to having access to their records, but studies have generally shown posi- tive results. Michael and Bordley (1982) found that a majority of patients they surveyed desired access to their medical records. Other studies have revealed that patients appreciate being given all details or a summary of their care (Bronson et al., 1986; Giglio et al., 1978; Gittens, 1986). For example, a pilot study of shared records for people with mental illness revealed enthusiastic acceptance by both patients and health staff (Essex et al., 1990).
Little is known about the extent to which patients understand the information in their medical records. In one study, chronically ill patients who had access to their records reported understanding about half or more of the information they contained (Gittens, 1986). In a study of stroke patients, those having access to their complete medical record reported understanding more about their condition than did control patients who had been given only relevant descriptive medical information (Banet and Felchlia, 1997).
There is some evidence indicating that giving patients greater access to clinical information and their own personal health information improves the pro- cess of care and health outcomes:
• Smokers who had access to their medical records were more likely to state that smoking was a major health concern than were control patients who did not have such access. After 6 months, significantly more patients in the former group had quit smoking (65 percent) compared with those in the latter (29 percent) (Bronson and O’Meara, 1986).
• College students who were given information from their medical record were more likely than controls to increase their adherence to treatment advice (Giglio et al., 1978).
• Elderly patients whose medical records were shared with them were more likely to know their medical problems and treatments (although not more likely to adhere to medication regimens) (Bronson et al., 1986).
• In Australia, Liaw et al. (1998) gave a small set of patients with chronic problems (29 experimental and 22 controls) a computer-generated health record. They found that doing so was practical and well received, and led to positive trends in improved awareness of issues, health promotion, and disease manage- ment.
• Patients with chronic medical conditions who received copies of the progress notes in their medical records reported significant increases in overall physical function and overall health status, greater satisfaction with their care, and more interest in seeing their medical records than patients in a control group who did not receive this information (Maly et al., 1999).
• In a randomized controlled trial of women attending an antenatal clinic, those given their entire record (experimental group) as opposed to a summary
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card (control group) were more likely to report feeling “in control” during preg- nancy, less likely to report feeling anxious and helpless, and more likely to have information on their records explained to them (Homer et al., 1999).
One exception to the above findings is a recent randomized control trial of 650 cancer patients. In that study, no differences in outcomes (i.e., global health status, emotional functioning, cognitive functioning, or satisfaction) were found between the experimental group, which received a supplementary record de- signed to improve communication, and the control group (Drury et al., 2000).
Patients’ full access to their records could, of course, have unwanted effects unless new ways to help them use and learn from the information are devised. Patients may misunderstand or be frightened by such information, as a clinician’s being unsure of a diagnosis and wanting to rule out a serious condition. Clini- cians’ concerns about patients seeing their records could also result in the prepa- ration of “shadow records” for the clinician’s own use or in omission of informa- tion from the record, thus compromising care by others who are unaware of the omitted information. It is unclear, moreover, whether patient access to medical records would increase or decrease liability exposure. These and other unin- tended consequences deserve serious consideration. The committee believes, however, that such circumstances will be the exception rather than the rule (Golodetz et al., 1976) and are not sufficient reason to impede all patients’ access to their records. The potential benefits of such access are illustrated in Box 3-3, which describes a practice that uses patients’ access to their health information in an interactive context.
BOX 3-3 Rule 4: Shared Knowledge and the Free Flow of Information
Mary Chao is a nurse practitioner who works with patients newly diagnosed with diabetes. She explains, “People learn by experience—the more ways they experience something, the better they will learn and retain it. I give each new patient a diary. I tell them, ‘Don’t worry about anything. Just write down your meals and blood sugars. At the next visit we will look at it.’ Pretty soon they are drawing connections between what they are eating and their blood sugars.”
Mary relates that even patients who have little formal education are active par- ticipants. One patient describes his self-management as being like an athlete in training. Most of her elderly patients who have had trouble keeping their blood sugar under control for decades now successfully monitor and manage their dia- betes using their own clinical information, which they generate routinely and is available to them and their clinician in graph, chart, and other forms at the patients’ own Web sites.
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Rule 5: Evidence-Based Decision Making
In today’s health system, it is widely believed that the best care for individu- als is based on the training and experience of professionals. The new rule, on the other hand, could be stated: The best care results from the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence and knowledge of patient values by well-trained, experienced clinicians.
At their best, health care services match knowledge and need. When care does not match knowledge, it may fail to help—either by omission (failing to do what would help) or by waste (doing what cannot help). The health system today is too tolerant of mismatches between knowledge and action; that is, it is too accepting of both omission and waste. As a result, care is too often unreliable, advice and answers are inconsistent, and clinical practice varies without well- founded rationale. The new rule calls for standardization around best practices as appropriate for a given patient or the subpopulation to which a patient belongs. Such evidence-based decision making can free clinicians to make choices that science cannot guide—decisions based on relationship; observation; and the other senses, including touch.
What the new rule calls for is the use of systematically acquired knowledge in all its forms for decision making. The rule does not require that all decisions be based on the results of randomized controlled trials because such results are not always available and because other forms of knowledge exist, such as that derived from epidemiological and population-based data. Neither does the new rule discount clinician experience or the integration of information about a pa- tient’s special circumstances. Rather, it argues that all of these sources of knowl- edge are relevant and valuable when choosing how to apply evidence. The latter process involves four steps that require training and experience (with organiza- tional and other supports): (1) formulation of a clear clinical question, (2) search for the relevant information from the best possible sources, (3) evaluation of the evidence for its validity and usefulness, and (4) implementation of those findings (Davidoff, 1999).
An emphasis on the use of systematically acquired knowledge derives from a field of study known as evidence-based medicine or, more broadly, evidence- based practice, which evolved during the last decade (Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group, 1992; Muir Gray, 1997; Risdale, 1995; Sackett et al., 2000). The approach often involves systematic examinations of clinical questions that includes a comprehensive review of the literature, standard methods of present- ing data, and emphasis on the validity of the research methods. Individual studies are assessed and scored on the basis of their design and execution, including, for example, the selection of patients, the size of the study, and how confounding variables were accounted for (Cook et al., 1997; Lohr and Carey, 1999). Evi- dence-based practice is described in greater detail in Chapter 6.
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The availability of systematic reviews and the resulting clinical guidelines for practicing clinicians (O’Connor et al., 1999) is an essential adjunct to prac- tice. A growing body of evidence demonstrates that the use of clinical practice guidelines with other supportive tools, such as reminder systems, can improve patient care (Cabana et al., 1999; East et al., 1999; Morris, 1993; Thomsen et al., 1994; Wells et al., 2000). Despite the best of intentions, clinicians cannot be expected to process unaided all the details, strengths, and limitations of scientific evidence under normal conditions of practice in which the number of variables to be considered is great, but resources, including time, are severely limited (Weed, 1999).
The commitment to standardizing to excellence—using the best available information—does not begin with a slavish adherence to simplistic practice guide- lines. With today’s information systems, protocols can incorporate variations based on the individual patient’s condition, such as kidney function and the presence of other chronic problems. An example is adult respiratory distress symptom, an extremely serious condition that in the late 1970s resulted in death for nearly 90 percent of intensive care unit (ICU) patients for whom it was diagnosed. A group of investigators at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City was able to generate computer-generated guidelines for concurrent management of the many complex physiological parameters involved in treating this illness, which had resulted in several thousand separate instructions (Thomsen et al., 1994). The new system of computer-generated protocols adapted continuously to the patient’s condition. ICU staff were required to take actions in response to the guidelines, accepting or rejecting the instructions on the basis of their judgment. With use, the instructions become more accurate, and the ICU staff came to trust them more. As a result, in 1991 the ICU reported an unprecedented survival rate for the disease of 45 percent (Suchyta et al., 1991). More recently, other inves- tigators have reported using such clinical algorithms to achieve survival rates as high as 75 percent (East et al., 1999; Lewandowski et al., 1997).
A commitment to evidence-based practice may appear to conflict with Rule 3, according to which patient values should drive variability. A simplistic way of stating the tension between the two is: The patient is always right, but sometimes the doctor knows best. When a patient seeks inappropriate health care services, the challenge for clinicians is to find ways of reducing this conflict and, to the extent possible, resolving it, guided always by efforts to understand and respond to patient needs. If a conflict cannot be resolved through counseling, the clinician should refuse to provide nonbeneficial services. If a patient decides not to accept services that are likely be beneficial, the clinician needs to ensure that the patient understands the implications of his or her choice and support the patient in that choice.
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Rule 6: Safety as a System Property
Patients are injured frequently because of poor system designs. For this reason, a means of accountability that relies on blaming individuals stands little or no chance of achieving significant improvements. The health care system must be able to deliver appropriate care, reliably and without error. The assump- tion underlying the current rule can be stated as: Careful and competent profes- sionals do not, or should not, make errors. If errors occur, the current rule assumes that the problem must be due to a lack of competence or carelessness. It would follow that the best response to error would be to ensure that individuals are trained better, are alerted to the need to attend to safety and follow rules, are motivated to be careful, and are punished if they err.
The assumption underlying the new rule is quite different. This rule might be stated as: Threats to patient safety are the end result of complex causes such as faulty equipment; system design; and the interplay of human factors, including fatigue, limitations on memory, and distraction. The way to improve safety is to learn about causes of error and use this knowledge to design systems of care so as to prevent error when possible, to make visible those errors that do occur (so they can be intercepted), and to mitigate the harm done when an error does reach the patient. Put simply, in the new health care system, procedures, job designs, equipment, communication, and information technology should be configured to respect human factors and to make errors less common and less harmful when they do occur.
Health care is composed of a large set of interacting systems—paramedic, emergency, ambulatory, inpatient, and home health care; testing and imaging laboratories; pharmacies; and so forth—that are connected in loosely coupled but intricate networks of individuals, teams, procedures, regulations, communica- tions, equipment, and devices. These systems function within such diverse and diffuse management, accountability, and information structures that the overall term health system is today a misnomer. Further, despite contractual relation- ships with insurers, many physicians are so tenuously connected to organizations that they do not view themselves as part of a system of care (Freidson, 1975; Pauly, 1980). In these and many other ways, the distinct cultures of medicine (and other health professions) add to its idiosyncrasy among high-risk industries. Nevertheless, experience in other high-risk industries has provided well-under- stood methods for improving safety.
Patient safety emerges from safe designs used in systems that incorporate an understanding of human factors. Such an approach can improve performance, prevent harm when error does occur, help systems recover from error, and miti- gate further harm. Knowledge about human factors must be applied in designing tasks, processes, equipment, rules, and environments. Safety also requires lead- ership—by governing boards and corporate executives and by leaders of clinical
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groups embedded in larger organizations. To create safety systems requires that clinical leaders and managers use and continually contribute to the best knowl- edge about safe designs for tasks, equipment, processes, rules, and environments.
The biggest challenge to moving toward a safer health system is changing the culture from one of blaming individuals for errors to one in which errors are treated not as personal failures, but as opportunities to improve the system and prevent harm. One of the most important barriers to increasing patient safety is a lack of awareness of the extent to which errors occur daily in all health care settings and organizations. In today’s health systems, the vast majority of errors are not reported because personnel fear they will be punished.
The committee’s earlier report (Institute of Medicine, 2000) recommends that health care organizations and the professionals affiliated with them make continually improved patient safety a declared and serious aim by establishing patient safety programs with a defined executive responsibility. That report further recommends that patient safety programs: (1) provide strong, clear, and visible attention to safety; (2) implement nonpunitive systems for reporting and analyzing errors within their organizations; (3) incorporate well-understood safety principles, such as standardizing and simplifying equipment, supplies, and pro- cesses; and (4) establish interdisciplinary team training programs, such as those involving simulation, that incorporate training designed to improve and maintain skills, as well as improve communication among team members. Chapter 5 of this report examines some design principles that organizations can apply to im- prove safety.
Rule 7: Need for Transparency
The health care system should be uncompromising in its defense of patient confidentiality, a matter of great national concern. But the pursuit of confidenti- ality is not a reason for hiding the system’s performance from those who depend on the system for care. This new rule calls for health systems to be accountable to the public; to do their work openly; to make their results known to the public and professionals alike; and to build trust through disclosure, even of the sys- tems’ own problems.
At times, today’s health care system appears to put a premium on secrecy. Although it is critical to safeguard patient confidentiality, poorly designed poli- cies and procedures that limit the sharing of information may be perceived by patients as a series of closed doors, locked cabinets, and private meetings. In the current system, concern about the burden of reporting and oversight, litigation, and blame has generated conflict and mistrust and cast transparency in its most negative light, resulting in resistance to disclosure of all kinds.
In the future health care system, the rule should be: Have no secrets. Make all information flow freely so that anyone involved in the system, including pa- tients and families, can make the most informed choices and know at any time
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whatever facts may be relevant to a patient’s decision making. This new rule is expected to supplement trust in the good training and intentions of health care professionals with trust based on good information and well-designed systems of care.
Although changes in the tort system may be desirable, improving the health care system cannot wait for such change to occur. Some organizations have successfully implemented programs of increased transparency despite the liabil- ity risk (Peterkin, 1990). Indeed, some evidence shows that open disclosure of errors may decrease the likelihood of malpractice loss (Kraman and Hamm, 1999; Pietro et al., 2000; Witman et al., 1990; Wu, 1999).
In the future health care system envisioned by the committee, transparency is the route to accountability—the identification of who is responsible both finan- cially and clinically for the actions of health care organizations and individuals. The committee believes trust will improve in a health care system that poses few barriers to the flow of information, including aggregate (non-personally identifi- able) research data and information about the quality of care. A health care system that operates under a rule of transparency will be more patient-centered and safer because patients will be able to recognize outdated and wrong informa- tion and to share in information that affects their care, such as the results of laboratory tests, medications being taken, and the correct doses.
Rule 8: Anticipation of Needs
Under the current approach, health care resources are marshaled when they are needed. The system works largely in a reactive mode, awaiting complications and underinvesting in prevention. The new system would not wait for trouble. It would use patient registries to track patients and draw them into care. It would use predictive models to anticipate demand and allocate its resources according to those predictions, thereby smoothing workflow. The corresponding 21st- century rule would state: Organize health care to predict and anticipate needs based on knowledge of patients, local conditions, and a thorough knowledge of the natural history of illness. A system that adopted this new rule would be more patient-centered and more effective. It would make and use better predictions about the flow of need and demand, allowing for anticipation of the needs of both individuals and the patient population at risk. Box 3-4 illustrates the new rule and the current approach.
Scenarios similar to the current approach described in Box 3-4 are common today. Crises for older persons occur because anticipatory management of mul- tiple problems is rare. When care hinges on scheduled office visits or emergency room visits, anticipatory management that can prevent acute hospitalization is difficult. Under the new rule, anticipation could include more and better linkages among care teams, linkages among health systems and community resources, and more frequent communication with patients through telephone consultations and
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community services. Notable efforts to adopt this approach in the United States include the innovative On Lok Senior Health Services, first organized in San Francisco’s Chinatown, and its replications in the Program of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly (PACE) (Eng et al., 1997; Rich, 1999). Such programs of care for frail elderly persons in the community have brought together resources likely to be needed by many elderly patients. Other countries, including the United King- dom and Finland, have also focused on such linkages designed to anticipate patient needs (The Ministry of Social Affairs and Health and The Association of Finnish Local and Regional Authorities, 1999).
Rule 9: Waste Continuously Decreased
The current system tries to conserve resources through restrictions and bud- get limits, withholding services and creating queues to drive costs down. This is
BOX 3-4 Rule 8: Anticipation of Needs
Current Approach: React to Needs Pearl Clayton is 86 years old. She has been widowed for 5 years and lives
alone. She has recently shown signs of forgetfulness and has had two recent falls, one of which resulted in a fractured wrist. Her adult daughter and son-in-law would like her to go to a doctor and get a thorough evaluation, particularly of her forget- fulness. They procrastinate and do not get around to taking her. It is difficult to get any advice over the telephone. Finally, Pearl falls, fractures her hip, and is hospi- talized. Her fall is related to a combination of over-the-counter sleeping pills and the use of alcohol, begun during a prolonged period of grief after she became widowed.
During her hospitalization, she suffers hypertension and grand mal seizures during which she aspirates; she develops severe pneumonia and spends 2 weeks intubated in an intensive care unit. At the end of this time, her broken hip finally can be repaired, but she has become so frail and confused that she cannot be transferred home and must go to a nursing home. During her time at the nursing home, her family, caregivers, and those in the hospital where she has periodic acute admissions have no guidance about the use of life-sustaining measures.
New Rule: Anticipation of Needs Under the new rule, anticipatory management results in a mental status evalu-
ation and home visits that make it possible to identify Pearl’s problems in time to prevent the fall that would have led to her hip fracture. Even if the hip fracture had not been completely prevented, clinicians would have had available to them a complete and accurate medical history during Pearl’s hospitalization so that those caring for her would have known to anticipate withdrawal symptoms from her med- ication and alcohol use. She would have received appropriate medical manage- ment, avoided aspiration and intubation, and recovered sufficiently to return to her own home.
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a destructive, short-term approach. A more modern approach would build on a better understanding of the nature of waste itself, identifying expenditures of all types that add no value—unused supplies, rework and redundancy, unhelpful inspection, lost ideas, and unused information—and systematically eliminating that waste. The United States spends over 50 percent more per person on health care than many other Western nations. Yet it does not appear that these vast expenditures are buying reliable levels of quality. The care in some places for some conditions is superb, but such is not the case everywhere, for all people, all the time.
Many of the problems with the current health care system are related to the belief that reducing expenditures alone will increase value. The current rule appears to be: The value of our health care investment is increased by cost reductions, often by rationing services. As a result, systems attempt to continue what they are doing with fewer resources, for example, by stretching staff over larger and larger numbers of tasks and patients. Other efforts to reduce costs have led to arbitrary limits on services such as lengths of stay in a hospital; the kinds of settings that are allowed for care; and the numbers of encounters, such as home health visits.
The committee believes this is not the route to improved value. The new rule states that increased value will not be derived by stressing the current system, that is, by asking people to work harder, faster, and longer, and while doing so, not to make (or admit to) any errors. Rather, increased value will result from systemati- cally developed strategies that focus on the aims of the health care system out- lined in Chapter 2—safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, effi- ciency, and equity—and reduce all forms of waste by eliminating activities or resources that do not add value (Dresser, 1997; Langley et al., 1996; Saphir, 1999). Waste has been described as comprising seven types: (1) overuse of services (see Appendix A); (2) waiting (for example, for a laboratory test to be performed or for its results); (3) transportation (for example, requiring a patient to go to another site or floor for care); (4) processing (more steps than are needed to accomplish results); (5) stock (using more materials than are needed, maintaining unused materials in inventory or unused workforce skills); (6) motion (wasting both energy and time); and (7) defects in production. The latter type of waste has its counterpart in health care delivery in the form of mistakes in execution or lack of proficiency in performing a procedure such that the patient does not receive full benefit.
Many smart cost reductions are achievable as the side effects of improving the process of care. Health care systems need to build on the experience of other industries and the reports that have begun to appear in the literature from groups able to demonstrate gains in efficiency and quality of care and reduced waste and costs (Barry-Walker, 2000; Cohn et al., 1997; Fuss et al., 1998; Stewart et al., 1997; Tidikis and Strasen, 1994; Tunick et al., 1997).
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The committee does not intend to imply that all types of quality improve- ment efforts will result in reduced waste or cost or that only cost-reducing quality improvement efforts should be undertaken. Underuse of health services as a result of barriers to access (e.g., lack of insurance) or provision of care inconsis- tent with the evidence base (e.g., failure to prescribe beta blockers when indicated following an acute myocardial infarction) is also a serious quality problem that must be addressed by the 21st-century health system.
Rule 10: Cooperation Among Clinicians
In the current system, care is taken to protect professional prerogatives and separate roles. The current system shows too little cooperation and teamwork. Instead, each discipline and type of organization tends to defend its authority at the expense of the total system’s function—a problem known as suboptimization. Patients suffer through lost continuity, redundancy, excess costs, and miscommu- nication. Patients and families commonly report that caregivers appear not to coordinate their work, or even to know what others are doing. Suboptimization is seen, for example, in operating rooms that must maintain multiple different surgi- cal tray setups for different doctors performing the same procedure. Each doctor gets what he or she wants, but at the cost of introducing enormous complexity and possible error into the system. In the new system, people will understand the advantage of high levels of cooperation, coordination, and standardization to guarantee excellence, continuity, and reliability.
The current approach focuses on role definition, certification and licensure, or doing one’s own work as the top priority, rather than helping others do their work. It is the basis of professional self-esteem and status and a criterion of competence. That approach also, however, makes defined roles preeminent rather than meeting patients’ needs. It lets the role “trump” the system, and the system suffers as a consequence.
Under the new rule, cooperation in patient care is more important than pro- fessional prerogatives and roles. The new rule emphasizes a focus on good communication among members of a team, using all the expertise and knowledge of team members and, where appropriate, sensibly extending roles to meet pa- tients’ needs (Bulger, 2000). This topic is discussed in more detail in Chapter 5.
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4
Taking the First Steps
The committee recognizes the enormity of the change that is required to achieve substantial improvements in the six major aims set forth in Chapter 2— that health care be safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equi- table. The ten simple rules described in Chapter 3, designed to help guide the actions of clinicians, patients, and others in ways that will lead to such improve- ments, also characterize a fundamental cultural transformation taking place today in the health care sector. This nascent cultural transformation embodies a more explicit commitment to evidence-based practice and patient-centered care, and reflects recognition of the importance of well-designed systems of care.
To achieve the six aims, there must also be a very strong commitment to redesign. The current system will not work. New information technology should be embraced and new systems of care developed. Methods of payment must be modified to encourage and reward quality care. This chapter provides an ap- proach for achieving better alignment of the evidence base, the organization of care, information, payment methods, and quality measurement around patients’ health care needs.
Common chronic conditions should serve as a starting point for the restruc- turing of health care delivery because, as noted in Chapter 1, chronic conditions are now the leading cause of illness, disability, and death in the United States, affecting almost half of the population and accounting for the majority of health care resources used (Hoffman et al., 1996). Chronic conditions affect people of all ages. Although older people are more likely to have a chronic condition, people over age 65 account for only one-quarter of those living in the community with such a condition (The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 1996).
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Today’s health care system is not well designed to meet the needs of patients with common chronic conditions. Some patients receive good-quality care that is well coordinated, with good communication among the various clinicians in- volved. For too many others, however, care for even a single condition is frag- mented across many clinicians and settings with little coordination or communi- cation, and some needs remain undetected and/or unmet.
Given the magnitude of the change that is required, the committee believes that leadership at the national level is required to initiate the process of change by taking two important steps. First, a short list of priority conditions should be promulgated by the Department of Health and Human Services, and all health care stakeholders should then focus attention on making substantial progress toward the establishment of state-of-the-art processes for these conditions in the next 5 years. Second, resources should be provided to seed innovative projects at the delivery system level, especially those projects that have a high likelihood of producing knowledge and tools that can be applied on a widespread basis through- out the health care sector.
The committee believes such a focus on specific common clinical conditions is the best way to achieve the substantial improvement in quality that is required. Such conditions represent the needs around which patients have the greatest interaction with the system and make the most choices about cost and quality (and other issues). This is also the level at which care processes can be designed and refined. Thus, priority conditions offer the best opportunity for undertaking the development of the evidence base for practice; the reorganization of care; the development of supportive information technologies; and the design and refine- ment of quality measures and reporting processes, as well as payment incentives and rewards.
Recommendation 5: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Qual- ity should identify not fewer than 15 priority conditions, taking into account frequency of occurrence, health burden, and resource use. In collaboration with the National Quality Forum, the agency should convene stakeholders, including purchasers, consumers, health care organizations, professional groups, and others, to develop strate- gies, goals, and action plans for achieving substantial improvements in quality in the next 5 years for each of the priority conditions.
Identifying priority conditions represents a starting point to support the orga- nization of care, bring the evidence base into practice, develop information tech- nology and infrastructure to support care, and develop mechanisms to measure and pay for quality care. Instead of defining care by where it is delivered or who delivers it, the system should be designed to optimize care for patients’ needs across the entire continuum of care in the most effective and efficient way possible.
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In identifying priority conditions, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) should consider using the list of conditions identified through the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS), a nationally representative house- hold survey of health care use, expenditures, sources of payment, and insurance coverage conducted by AHRQ and the National Center for Health Statistics that includes information on health conditions (Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2000). MEPS identifies 15 “priority conditions” based on their prevalence, ex- pense, or policy relevance: cancer, diabetes, emphysema, high cholesterol, HIV/ AIDS, hypertension, ischemic heart disease, stroke, arthritis, asthma, gall bladder disease, stomach ulcers, back problems, Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, and depression and anxiety disorders.
The action plan for each priority condition should include strategies for designing and maintaining evidence-based processes; promoting primary, sec- ondary and tertiary prevention; building the necessary information technology infrastructure to support delivery and coordination of care, system design and ongoing management, payment, and accountability; and aligning the incentives inherent in payment and accountability processes with the goals of quality im- provement. AHRQ should also ensure that each action plan is supported by key stakeholders. In identifying and convening stakeholders, AHRQ should work with the National Quality Forum, a public–private partnership charged with de- velopment of a comprehensive quality measurement and public reporting strat- egy. Input should also be obtained from organizations that have made significant efforts to improve quality, such as the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, the Quality Center at the Bureau of Primary Health Care in the Health Resources Services Administration, the Veterans Health Administration, local delivery sys- tems, and others.
Since the identification of priority conditions is a starting point toward achieving the six aims, AHRQ should conduct this work expeditiously. The number of priority conditions identified should grow over time to eventually cover the majority (e.g., 80 percent) of the care provided to patients.
Recommendation 6: Congress should establish a Health Care Qual- ity Innovation Fund to support projects targeted at (1) achieving the six aims of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, ef- ficiency, and equity; and/or (2) producing substantial improvements in quality for the priority conditions. The fund’s resources should be invested in projects that will produce a public-domain portfolio of programs, tools, and technologies of widespread applicability.
Policies, incentives, tools, and technologies will be needed to support the changes required to achieve the six aims and redesign the health care system in accordance with the new rules set forth in Chapter 3. The formation of an innovation fund is one mechanism that can be used to seed projects aimed at redesigning care and developing programs to support the other recommendations
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presented in this report. For example, purchasers and delivery systems should work together to develop innovative programs that integrate the new rules for patient–clinician relationships (Chapter 3) and to redesign care processes for the priority conditions, making best use of information technology and engineering design concepts (Chapters 5 and 7). There must be a strong commitment to evaluating the impact and cost-effectiveness of innovative programs, and to the rapid diffusion of programs proven successful throughout the field. Although an innovation fund should support projects related to the priority conditions, it could also support other redesign projects, especially those relating to greater use of information technology.
The committee is not recommending a specific dollar amount for the pro- posed fund, but believes a sizable commitment, on the order of $1 billion over 3 to 5 years, is necessary given the magnitude of change needed. Just as a vigorous public commitment and an expenditure of approximately $1 billion over a 4-year period has led to the mapping of the human genome, a similar commitment is needed to retool the health care delivery system, or society will never reap the full value of the trillion dollars spent annually on health care services.
THE VALUE OF ORGANIZING AROUND PRIORITY CONDITIONS
Identifying priority conditions can benefit all those involved in using, deliv- ering, planning, or paying for health care. Patients and their families today must try to navigate a fragmented, complex health care system with insufficient infor- mation and an unclear understanding of how to find the best-quality care for their specific needs. Similarly, health professionals face pressures to improve quality and measurable outcomes without having systems in place that can help them easily identify the best practices for a given case or means of arranging for follow-up on a patient’s needs across the entire continuum of care. Purchasers appear to focus more on cost than on quality, but have little outcome or quality information available to them. They may be willing to buy on the basis of quality, but see a health system that produces care inefficiently and is character- ized by errors (or “defects”) that would not be tolerated in their own industries. Regulators struggle with how best to provide oversight in a rapidly changing environment. Many people have an interest in ensuring quality care, but do not have a framework or tools for doing so.
A focus on priority conditions can align the efforts of diverse participants in the health care system, offer a meaningful level of organization to patients, and provide a starting point on which health care professionals and organizations can focus their efforts. Improved alignment between patient needs and the ways care is organized, delivered, measured, and paid for is important because fragmenta- tion and misalignment in the current system inhibit systematic quality improve- ment. For example, patients need information, support, and reassurance to man-
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age a chronic condition independently on a day-to-day basis and to recognize when help is needed from a clinician. However, the current health care system is organized around acute care needs. It does not facilitate the flow of information over time; offers little recognition or reward for coordinating care; and pays mainly for face-to-face (office) visits, not for information and/or reassurance that may be needed at other times. The aims described in Chapter 2 cannot be achieved without better alignment of organization, payment, and measurement with patients’ needs.
A focus on specific conditions may also be more meaningful to patients. Prior research suggests that when people have a health care need, they are inter- ested in comprehensive sets of services provided to people with similar condi- tions (Cleary and Edgman-Levitan, 1997; Fennell and Flood, 1998). Instead of describing their health experiences with one service or one provider, patients describe an episode of care (Cleary and Edgman-Levitan, 1997). For example, a patient who has had a heart attack will describe all components of his or her care, including the emergency room, medical service, surgical service, specialty physi- cian office visit, generalist physician office visit, and rehabilitation care. Al- though the performance of each individual unit is important, simply aggregating the individual units is not sufficient for understanding the quality of health care provided when care involves many people and facilities, as is often the case today (Fennell and Flood, 1998). Additionally, people want information about people “like themselves.” That is, they are seeking information that will tell them how well a health plan or clinical group cares for others with similar conditions (Cleary and Edgman-Levitan, 1997). An approach that facilitates the measure- ment and release of information around specific conditions can provide patients with such information. Also, with appropriately designed incentives and support systems, such an approach can provide an organizing framework for care so that providers have the flexibility to match services along the entire continuum of care to the needs of a specific patient and support continuous care relationships.
Defining care processes around specific conditions can also establish a suit- able level of focus for significant quality improvement in health care. To achieve such improvement, it will be necessary to develop information about the pro- cesses and outcomes of care for specific population groups (Friedman, 1995). Meaningful groupings are required because the quality of care for one set of conditions cannot be generalized to patients with different conditions (Brook et al., 1996). The tasks of examining processes of care, linking those processes to outcomes for populations, comparing the effectiveness of alternative approaches, bringing the evidence base into practice, forming the teams that deliver complex care, and accurately adjusting for differences among patients to permit valid comparisons are difficult to accomplish simply by looking at patients in general. Rather, these tasks can best be accomplished for people with comparable needs. Once care has been defined around people’s needs, meeting those needs becomes the ultimate target for these basic steps of quality improvement.
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It is expected that most priority conditions will be strongly related to chronic conditions. As discussed in Chapter 1, care for people with chronic conditions represents an increasing portion of health care resources in the United States. Four chronic conditions (cardiovascular disease, cancer, chronic obstructive pul- monary disease, and diabetes) account for almost three-quarters of all deaths in the United States (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1999). Compared with people with acute conditions, the annual medical costs per person were more than double for people with one chronic condition and almost six times higher for people with two or more chronic conditions1 (The Robert Wood Johnson Founda- tion, 1996). A study in one health maintenance organization found that 38 percent of enrollees had at least one chronic condition, and their costs averaged twice those of people with no chronic condition (Fishman et al., 1997). A study at another health maintenance organization found that 78 percent of direct medi- cal costs were attributable to just 25 acute and chronic conditions and that three cardiovascular conditions (ischemic heart disease, hypertension, and congestive heart failure) accounted for 17 percent of those costs (Ray et al., 2000). It has been estimated that the top 1 percent of spenders account for 30 percent of health spending, whereas the bottom 50 percent account for only 3 percent of spending (Berk and Monheit, 1992). Given this concentration, the majority of health services utilized can potentially be associated with a definable list of conditions.
Yet the health care system is not well designed to meet the needs of the chronically ill. The current delivery system responds primarily to acute and urgent health problems, emphasizing diagnosis, ruling out serious conditions, and relieving symptoms (Wagner et al., 1996b). Those with chronic conditions are better served by a systematic approach that emphasizes self-management, care planning with a multidisciplinary team, and ongoing assessment and follow- up (Wagner et al., 1996a). As noted in Chapter 1, successful chronic disease management programs:
• Use a protocol or plan that provides an explicit statement of what needs to be done for patients, at what intervals, and by whom, and that considers the needs of all patients with specific clinical features and how their needs can be met. The care plan is a tool that links the multiple visits and contacts that characterize care for chronic illness.
• Redesign practice to incorporate regular patient contact, collection of critical data on health and disease status, and strategies to meet the educational and psychosocial needs of patients who may need to make lifestyle and other changes to manage their disease. Regular follow-up is a hallmark of the design of successful programs.
1Direct medical costs included hospital care, physician services, dental services, other professional services, home health care, prescriptions, medical equipment, emergency services, and nursing home care.
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• Include a strong focus on patient information and self-management so patients and their families acquire skills in self-management and can make needed lifestyle changes. Structured self-management and behavioral change programs improve patient outcomes.
• Ensure the availability of specialized expertise to the primary care prac- tices that frequently have responsibility for managing patients with chronic ill- ness. The traditional mechanism for accessing expertise is through a consultation or referral, which runs the risk of fragmenting care. Alternative approaches for making expertise available include teams with specialized knowledge (e.g., a diabetologist and nurse specialist working with general practitioners who care for diabetic patients); collaborative care arrangements (e.g., where specialists and generalists manage patients together); and, eventually, well-designed computer decision support systems.
• Rely on having good information about patients, their care, and outcomes in order to improve outcomes. Registries inform providers which patients have certain conditions to permit proactive clinical management. Use of reminder systems supports patient participation in explicit plans of care.
Wagner (2000) also notes the implications of such a model for how teams of clinicians work together. Successful teams should bring in new disciplines in medicine, but also nonmedical personnel. Establishment of care plans, good patient involvement, and a strong information base permit members of a care team to work together beyond organizational and practice boundaries.
Although good coordination and communication are essential for all care, they are especially important for chronic care. Patients may move through many settings of care, from home, to clinician office, to hospital, to nursing home, and back. Patients and their families often provide a sizable proportion of routine care, including the administration of medications, performance of some diagnos- tic tests, and compliance with physical therapy and nutritional plans. While the current health care system is built around visits, people with chronic illness need flexible models that provide more time and alternative contacts with the system. Although there are many basic, simple techniques that can be employed today (e.g., telephone follow-up rather than e-mail, or reminder systems that use flags on a chart rather than computerized reminder systems), the committee believes these simple techniques have been available for many years and have not been sufficient to achieve broad-based quality improvements. While any type of progress is welcome, at some point the health care system will need to embrace more automated methods and greater use of information technology to make significant progress.
Unfortunately, there are very few well-tested integrated models of chronic care management (Wagner et al., 1996a). While research may focus on specific components of care, it is more difficult to understand the interrelationship be- tween the components and the influence of the organizational environment. For
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example, the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial demonstrated how to improve clinical management of patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. But the trial required special skills of both patients and clinicians, services that many insurance policies do not cover, and delivery of care by patient-centered teams (Lasker, 1993).
APPLICATIONS OF PRIORITY CONDITIONS
Figure 4-1 illustrates the multiple ways in which the priority conditions, once identified, can be applied. First, they can be used to synthesize the evidence base and delineate practice guidelines. This application is closely linked to and should guide the organization of care and coordination of care around patient needs. The priority conditions can also be applied in developing information systems, reduc- ing suboptimization in payment for services, and simplifying the measurement
FIGURE 4-1 Applications of priority conditions.
Synthesize the evidence and delineate practice
guidelines
Organize and coordinate care around patient
needs (consistent with
the evidence base)
Provide a common base
for the development of
iinformation technology
Reduce suboptimization
in payment
Simplify quality measurement, evaluation of performance, and feedback
Identify priority conditions
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and evaluation of care. Each of these applications is described below. Although some applications may occur more quickly than others, Figure 4-1 is not meant to imply a linear order to their accomplishment. Rather, the priority conditions can be used for any of these applications as soon as they have been identified.
Synthesize the Evidence Base and Delineate Practice Guidelines
The identification of priority conditions provides a framework for synthesiz- ing the evidence, developing practice guidelines, and delineating best practices for clinical care. There is a significant lag between the discovery of better forms of treatment and their incorporation into actual care. The identification of prior- ity conditions supports a well-thought-out organization of information to im- prove its accessibility and utility for both patients and health professionals (see Chapter 6). Identification of these conditions can guide the prioritization of issues for analysis and synthesis of evidence, delineation of practice guidelines, and development and application of automated decision support tools. It can also provide direction for stronger dissemination efforts aimed at communicating this information to clinicians and consumers. Even in clinical areas characterized by strong evidence and general consensus on practice, variability in practice sug- gests that current dissemination efforts could be improved. The Internet offers the opportunity to achieve such improvement by reaching sizable proportions of both consumers and clinicians in a timely manner.
One of the strongest examples of synthesizing the evidence base and apply- ing it to clinical care is offered by the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). The VHA’s Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) is a quality im- provement program that focuses on eight priority conditions: chronic heart fail- ure, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, ischemic heart disease, mental health (depression and schizophrenia), spinal cord injury, stroke, and substance abuse (Demakis et al., 2000). These conditions were selected on the basis of the number of veterans affected, the burden of illness, and known health risks among the veteran popula- tion. Specific conditions were selected as the focus in the belief that quality improvement is most likely to occur when viewed in the context of the overall care of a patient and population, rather than the individual components of care (Demakis and McQueen, 2000).
The process implemented at the VHA involves defining best practices by reviewing currently available information and literature. For some conditions, such as diabetes, a great deal of information is available; for others, the informa- tion must be developed by a planning team. Once the evidence has been re- viewed and best practice defined, the latter is compared with current practice to identify gaps in performance. Policies, procedures, and programs are then devel- oped to organize care around the best practice, which also guides the evaluation of impact and feedback to enable learning from experience and continuously improving care. Thus, best practice affects how care is delivered, but evaluation
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of its impact also informs the continued development of best practice. The process used by the VHA also emphasizes the broad dissemination of informa- tion about best practice throughout their system, from large academic centers to smaller, community-based centers.
The VHA’s approach is consistent with the concept of focusing on priority conditions in that it provides a framework for organizing and continually updat- ing the evidence base, bringing it to the direct delivery of care, and evaluating its effect on improving care for patients. Synthesis and application of the evidence base, therefore, forces the reexamination of how care is organized to affect qual- ity. By examining where current practice departs from the evidence base and best practice, suggestions for improving care may emerge that can direct changes in provider actions, patient responsibilities, or organizational approaches. It would be difficult to use this multifaceted, comprehensive care approach except at the level of a specific condition.
Organize and Coordinate Care Around Patient Needs
The primary purpose of identifying priority conditions is to facilitate the organization of care around the patient’s perspective and needs rather than, as in the current system, around types of professionals and organizations. For ex- ample, the current system may require patients to travel to multiple locations to receive care (usually Monday through Friday, between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.) instead of using modern technologies to facilitate access even for patients with mobility problems or those living in rural areas. Most hospitals are organized around physician specialties (such as thoracic surgery or internal medicine), not around common clinical needs of patients, which may cross departmental bound- aries. (An example is diabetes care, which may require general medicine, endo- crinology, ophthalmology, and vascular services.) Organizing care around prior- ity conditions emphasizes meeting the needs of patients with those conditions, regardless of who provides their care or where. Attention must be paid to how care is coordinated across settings and provider types. A surgical procedure may be performed perfectly, but if there is inadequate postoperative care, follow-up care, home care, or other supports, the patient may encounter complications that compromise the quality of the episode of care. It is also important to recognize that patients may have to manage multiple conditions simultaneously, because they either have more than one chronic condition or have one chronic condition and an unrelated acute event. Indeed, there is evidence that patients actively receiving care for one chronic condition may not receive treatment for other, unrelated conditions (Redelmeier et al., 1998). Thus, one of the challenges of designing care around specific conditions is to avoid defining patients solely by their disease or condition.
There are several mechanisms for coordinating care across priority condi- tions. First, coordination could be performed by a health professional acting as a
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liaison across patients’ multiple needs, ensuring the exchange of information and any necessary follow-up2 (Bodenheimer et al., 1999). This individual could be a physician, nurse, case manager, or other type of professional working in the care delivery system. Second, some consumers might choose to actively coordinate their own care. This is a growing possibility as consumers and patients have access to more health information and are able to make use of the evidence base and practice guidelines for their specific conditions. Third, as information tech- nology becomes more sophisticated, computer algorithms can be used to coordi- nate many activities, for example, sending reminders of needed follow-up or identifying missing information, such as test results. Finally, coordination could occur through a combination of all these methods, involving a health profes- sional, the patient, and technological support.
Various approaches in practice today offer insight that can be applied in organizing care around specific conditions or types of needs, including disease management programs and centers of excellence. Each is briefly reviewed below.
Disease Management Programs
Multiple definitions of disease management programs have been put forth (Blumenthal and Buntin, 1998; Ellrodt et al., 1997; Homer, 1997). In general, they describe a systematic and comprehensive approach to improving the man- agement of a condition. This approach involves improving coordination of care and controlling costs through the integration of components across the entire delivery system and the application of appropriate tools (e.g., guidelines, proto- cols, information systems) specifically designed for the population in question.
Disease management programs share some of the features envisioned for organization around priority conditions as described above, but also differ in important ways. The two are similar in that disease management represents a systematic approach to designing care, uses multidisciplinary teams to deliver care, and potentially includes services across the entire continuum of care. How- ever, disease management programs differ in that they are frequently perceived primarily as a method for controlling costs (Bodenheimer, 2000; Homer, 1997; Ketner, 1999). They are often applied only to the most severely ill patients (generally categorized by historical costs) instead of to the entire population with a specific condition (Hunter, 2000; Ketner, 1999). This means not all patients with a condition are able to benefit from such programs. Although the programs are developed to improve care for patients, patients may not have much say in whether they receive care through such programs. Finally, there are no clear
2It should be noted that this discussion of coordination of care is not meant to imply support for or opposition to a gate-keeping function used by many groups to ensure appropriate access. Coordina- tion can be provided with or without a gate-keeping role.
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definitions of what is included or excluded from such programs, making it diffi- cult to compare their effectiveness in treating similar populations.
One of the main concerns associated with disease management programs is the potential for fragmenting care, especially if the patient’s primary care physi- cian is not involved in the program. Again, this concern highlights the impor- tance of coordination across conditions and the need to design such coordination systematically into care processes. Primary care models offer one approach to coordination, in which the primary care practitioner is both provider and coordi- nator of care. Alternatively, programs can be designed specifically to include or link an individual’s primary care practitioners in care planning and assessment. The committee does not recommend one approach over another, but emphasizes the importance of designing coordination into care to avoid fragmentation.
Centers of Excellence
There is a growing body of evidence on the relationship between volume of service and outcomes. The IOM conducted a workshop in May 2000 to explore the volume–outcome relationship (Hewitt, 2000). A systematic review of the literature conducted for the workshop encompassed 88 studies concerning eight conditions and procedures.3 This review led to the conclusion that for a wide variety of procedures, higher volume (by either the hospital or physician) is associated with better health outcomes. Statistically significant associations be- tween higher volume and better outcomes were found in 79 percent of studies of hospital volume and 77 percent of studies of physician volume. None of the studies showed a negative effect of volume.
The Health Care Financing Administration has pursued Centers of Excel- lence as a way of operationalizing the volume–outcome relationship. Centers of Excellence are hospitals and physician groups that meet high quality standards, for which they are paid a single bundled fee for all services related to specific, complex procedures (Health Care Financing Administration, 1999). Evaluation of the experience with cardiac surgery has indicated that the approach can offer cost savings without compromising quality, measured as mortality rates (Crom- well et al., 1997). Although developed as a payment policy, the approach bears some similarity to organizing around priority conditions in that it gives health care organizations and professionals the flexibility to organize care appropriately for a specific population group. The approach is dissimilar in that it is focused primarily on selected complex procedures with a strong emphasis on costs, rather than being solely a quality-driven strategy (Cromwell et al., 1997; Health Care Financing Administration, 1999).
3Coronary artery bypass graft surgery, pediatric cardiac surgery, carotid endarterectomy, abdomi- nal aortic aneurysm repair, cancer surgery, percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, acute myocardial infarction, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
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Provide a Common Base for the Development of Information Technology
Priority conditions can provide a framework for the development of an infor- mation infrastructure that is aligned around the clinical conditions frequently faced by patients. The absence of well-designed care processes is currently an impediment to the development and application of effective information technol- ogy systems. To be most useful, information technology must be designed to support the work of the care team. Consciously and skillfully designed care processes for priority conditions are an important step in establishing a founda- tion from which to design supportive information technology applications.
Common information technology systems are needed to effectively measure outcomes and processes of care and to provide benchmarks for continuous im- provement. Currently, each provider group may implement its own information system, but incompatibilities inhibit communication among the many people caring for an individual patient. Priority conditions can provide a focus for the development of standards and terminology for use in managing and using infor- mation technology to improve care for patients. Best practices can help define standard information needs and guide the development of information technolo- gies that can be used to implement best practices (e.g., decision support systems).
A significantly enhanced information infrastructure is critical to achieving the aims set forth in Chapter 2 and the other potential applications of the priority conditions. Synthesizing the evidence base, linking it to clinical practice, and making it accessible to a variety of potential users will require good information systems and, most likely, greater use of the Internet. Greater use of the Internet and telemedicine should in turn facilitate access to clinical expertise and support care for patients in their own communities, especially in rural areas. Better flows of information are also necessary to improve the ways care is organized and coordinated, especially across settings and over time. Using payment methods to reward quality will require stronger information systems to track costs and link them to processes of care. Finally, measurement and evaluation cannot be ad- vanced without better technology for data collection and management (see Chap- ter 7 for further discussion on using information technology).
Reduce Suboptimization in Payment
A major barrier to quality improvement is the lack of reward that character- izes the most common payment methods used today (see Chapter 8). The current payment system often reinforces fragmentation by paying separately according to the setting of care and provider type, and by not giving providers the flexibility needed to customize care for individual patients. Furthermore, common payment methods can inhibit quality improvement to the extent that organizations that improve certain aspects of quality (e.g., by reducing readmission rates or office visits) can experience a reduction in their revenues, which serves as a disincen- tive for continuous improvement.
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Priority conditions offer a framework for linking payment with patient needs and for designing incentives to reward quality. Alternative payment methods (e.g., fee for service or capitation) could be adapted to facilitate the delivery of care around priority conditions, consistent with the evidence base. Priority con- ditions could also provide a framework for purchasers to use in assessing the value of their purchases. See Chapter 8 for a detailed discussion on the relation- ship between payment and quality improvement.
Simplify Quality Measurement, Evaluation of Performance, and Feedback
Priority conditions improve the feasibility of quality measurement by offer- ing a framework for the development of standards to guide the necessary data collection. At present, quality measurement for external accountability tends to focus on institutions or discrete services; there is little comparative information available for patients seeking specific care or physicians referring care. For example, a patient can obtain information on mammogram rates, but will find little information on methods of treatment or outcomes for breast care programs. Priority conditions can offer a framework for the development of core measures that address both processes and outcomes of care.
Part of the difficulty involved in obtaining such information is due to meth- odological barriers in measurement. The services of an individual physician are usually too small a unit for measurement of many aspects of clinical care pro- cesses and outcomes (Hofer et al., 1999). Even the typically sized medical group may be too small to provide reliable information on outcomes. Health plans may aggregate information, but clinicians are often affiliated with multiple plans. The delineation of priority conditions, the organization of services around these con- ditions, and the development of core sets of measures may help overcome some of these barriers to measurement.
Public- and private-sector oversight organizations are already organizing some of their activities around particular conditions. For example, the Founda- tion for Accountability has developed population- or condition-specific quality measurement guides related to adult asthma, alcohol misuse, breast cancer, dia- betes, health status under age 65, and major depressive disorders (Foundation for Accountability, 1999a) and continues to work on quality measurement and con- sumer reporting approaches in the areas of child and adolescent health, coronary artery disease, end of life, and HIV/AIDS (Foundation for Accountability, 1999b). The Foundation’s model organizes comparative information about quality perfor- mance into five categories based on how consumers think about their care: the basics, staying healthy, getting better, living with illness, and changing needs.
The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (2000) has identified five specific areas for the development of indicators to assess hospital care: acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, pneumonia, surgical procedures and complications, and pregnancy and related conditions. Accredita-
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tion by the National Committee for Quality Assurance includes measures related to how well a health plan cares for people when they have a chronic illness in such areas as cardiovascular disease, cancer, asthma, pneumonia and influenza, and diabetes (National Committee for Quality Assurance, 1999). Peer Review Organizations focus their national quality improvement efforts on six clinical priority areas: acute myocardial infarction, breast cancer, diabetes, heart failure, pneumonia, and stroke (Health Care Financing Administration, 2000). Finally, the National Quality Forum is developing a comprehensive quality measurement and reporting strategy that will address priorities for quality measurement that are consistent with the national aims for quality improvement in health care set forth in this report (National Quality Forum for Health Care Quality Measurement and Reporting, 2000).
CRITERIA FOR IDENTIFYING PRIORITY CONDITIONS
Various criteria can be used to identify the priority conditions. Two IOM committees have suggested criteria for setting priorities among conditions: one committee focused on how to set priorities for guideline development, the other on how to set priorities for technology assessment. The common criteria from both processes included prevalence, burden of illness, cost, variability in prac- tice, and the potential to improve outcomes or reduce costs (Institute of Medicine, 1992, 1995).
As noted earlier, this committee suggests starting with the priority conditions identified in the MEPS. Some are long-term life-threatening conditions, such as cancer, diabetes, emphysema, high cholesterol, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, is- chemic heart disease, and stroke. Others, such as arthritis, asthma, gall bladder disease, stomach ulcers, and back problems of any kind, are categorized as chronic manageable conditions. The list also includes Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and anxiety disorders. MEPS obtains a larger sample size for seven of the conditions—hypertension, ischemic heart disease, asthma, diabetes, stroke, em- physema, and arthritis—to make population estimates. Although other sources are also available, the advantage of starting with the MEPS listing is its represen- tative population sample, as opposed to claims data that rely on services having been used.
PROVIDING THE RESOURCES NEEDED TO INITIATE CHANGE
The health care system in the United States needs significant redesign. Given the magnitude of the change required, the innovation fund recommended earlier is needed to seed projects that can help apply the concepts described in this report. A Health Care Quality Innovation Fund should finance the demonstration
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and evaluation of programs designed to implement the types of changes recom- mended in this report. Although a specific agenda should be established, the areas of interest for funding should address one or more of the issues covered in this report: techniques for implementing the rules for redesigning care set forth in Chapter 3, applying evidence to health care delivery, using information tech- nology, aligning payment policies for quality, and preparing the workforce.
Emphasis should be placed on funding projects that will integrate the result- ing innovations into processes of care. The goal is not simply to fund “good ideas,” but rather to fund the implementation of good ideas in real-life settings, focusing on innovations that have a good likelihood of broad applicability to other sites. Evaluations will need to be carefully structured to be able to assess the programmatic features that contributed to a project’s successful implementa- tion, including how technical, cultural, and economic factors were addressed. Barriers encountered should also be identified, as well as how they were over- come or whether they presented too great an obstacle.
Funding may be provided to individual local health care organizations, pri- vate partnerships (e.g., those between purchasers and delivery systems), or pub- lic–private partnerships (e.g., those among delivery systems, local public health agencies, and consumer groups). Possible projects may relate to the direct deliv- ery of health care for a specific population or to the development of an infrastruc- ture that facilitates needed change (e.g., approaches for sharing data).
A portion of the Health Care Quality Innovation Fund should be set aside to provide resources to answer critical research questions. Implementation and evaluation of innovative projects are important, but some areas may require additional understanding to guide demonstrations and their implementation. For example, the change to using relative value units as a payment approach for physicians was legislated in 1989 for implementation in 1992, following about 10 years of research, testing, and evaluation (Hsaio and Stason, 1979). Possible areas requiring additional organizational research include understanding how financial and other types of incentives relate to organizational setting, how phy- sician and nonphysician members of the care team can optimally interact and complement each other, what components and interactions of systems of care are most important for improving quality, and how to organize care for people with chronic conditions.
The committee views public support as important for catalyzing the needed changes for several reasons. First, a commitment of funds over several years can ensure a sustained and stable funding source. Projects funded by health care organizations through operating revenues represent a valuable contribution, but the stability and level of funding can be unpredictable, and perhaps unsustain- able, in a rapidly changing marketplace.
Second, public support can provide partial funding for the up-front costs that health care organizations face in undertaking the changes recommended in this report. Organizations should be prepared to support the continuing costs of any
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initiatives, but public funding for some portion of up-front costs can be a valuable resource for an organization that is interested, willing, and ready to redesign the delivery of health care to improve quality. Thus, the Health Care Quality Innova- tion Fund represents a public–private approach to change, with the public sector providing seed money and the private sector using operating revenue to fund some of the up-front costs and any ongoing costs.
Third, rather than trying to identify large programs aimed at reforming the entire system, smaller applied projects of varying size and focus should be per- mitted to flourish. Public funding for a mix of projects would permit midcourse corrections to be made as greater understanding is gained on what types of projects work or fail. Use of public seed money can also require an objective evaluation of demonstration projects and public access to the tools and tech- niques used. Rather than remaining in the private domain, the information be- comes a public good for use by all to learn how to improve health care quality.
Research and demonstrations for organizational redesign in health care occur today in both the private and public sectors, although the level of effort appears to be modest given the size of the task ahead. In the private sector, one of the main sources of funds for organizational design research is foundations. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has sponsored the Changes in Health Care Financing and Organization Program since 1988. It has provided over $50 million to stimulate research into new strategies in the financing and organization of health care and the impact of changes in the delivery system on quality, access, and costs. The program funds research, policy analysis, demonstrations, and evalua- tions to provide timely information to policy makers, purchasers, providers, and researchers.
Some health care organizations also devote a portion of their revenues to research and development projects. For example, Kaiser-Permanente has con- ducted work on risk adjustment methods for payment policy; Group Health Co- operative of Puget Sound has conducted extensive work on improving care for populations with chronic illness; and Intermountain Health Care in Salt Lake City has developed data systems for evaluating and improving process of care. Organizational design research is also being conducted at universities across the country.
On the public side, the primary source of funds for organizational design research is AHRQ. The Center for Organization and Delivery Studies was cre- ated in 1996 to provide leadership for research on health care markets, delivery systems and organizations (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000a). The Integrated Delivery System Research Network is a new model of field-based research that partners health services researchers with large health care systems to develop and disseminate evidence on data and measurement systems and orga- nizational best practices (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000b). Approximately $4 million has been allocated over a 3-year period. Other AHRQ projects also contribute to innovation in health care delivery, such as work in
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medical informatics and patient safety. Other investments in organizational rede- sign in the public sector include those of the VHA, whose Quality Enhancement Research Initiative effort was described earlier in this chapter, and the Health Care Financing Administration’s Office of Research and Development, funded at approximately $55 million in fiscal year 2001 (a decline of 11 percent from the prior year) (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2000a). A portion of those funds supports projects that are consistent with redesigning health care delivery, including work related to competitive pricing, coordinated care for the chronically ill, and Centers of Excellence.
A great many resources are devoted to technological innovation in health care in the areas of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, and biotechnology. Invest- ment in research and development was estimated at almost $36 billion in 1995, or about 3.5 percent of total health care spending (Neumann and Sandberg, 1998). Over $30 billion has been invested each year since 1993. Just over half of the investments were made in the private sector; the remainder of the spending was in the public sector, primarily the National Institutes of Health.
Although such investments have produced great advances in technological innovation, however, they have produced little innovation in the organization and delivery of care. The irony is that the current health care system cannot ensure that the new technologies are delivered effectively, efficiently, and safely to the people that can most appropriately benefit from them. This dilemma will likely worsen in the future with expected advances in genome research, tissue reengineering, pharmacogenetics, and other areas.
As noted earlier, the committee has not recommended a specific amount for a Health Care Quality Innovation Fund, but believes that an amount on the order of $1 billion over 3 to 5 years is needed. This amount represents one-quarter of 1 percent of the almost $400 billion the federal government currently spends on health care. By comparison, the top ten funded diseases at the National Institutes of Health were funded at $3.6 billion just for the year 1996 (Gross et al., 1999), while approximately $1 billion was devoted to the human genome project over the last 4 years (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2000b). There is no central source for determining the extent of public and private investments in innovation in health care organization and delivery; however, the public- and private-sector initiatives identified above may total $100 million annually. This is far short of the amount needed for the magnitude of changes required and far less than the $36 billion expended annually for technology research.
The following are examples of the types of projects that might be supported through the recommended fund.4
4These examples draw on some of the approaches to redesign being pursued by clinical leaders who were interviewed as part of an Institute of Medicine study aimed at identifying exemplary practices (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000).
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Example 1—Using Information Technology to Improve the Timeliness of Ser- vices in a Hospital Emergency Department
An emergency department sought to redesign the process of care by reduc- ing the time required to provide complete care to a patient—the cycle time. Reducing cycle times improves both patient satisfaction and productivity. The staff identified key processes of care, such as x-ray cycle time, time between arrival at the emergency department and seeing a physician, and time needed to get a patient admitted to a bed. They introduced the concept of parallel process- ing and designed algorithms to permit the simultaneous performance of multi- ple tasks. Additionally, they developed their own tracking system (since noth- ing acceptable for the purpose was available from vendors) to track where patients are in the process of care, as well as the status of the system, in 15- minute increments (almost real time). A touch screen informs staff instantly of any problems in specific care processes so they can intervene quickly. These efforts have reduced total cycle time for less urgent patients from 92 to 47 minutes, time between arrival and seeing a physician from 32 to 18 minutes, time between decision to admit and getting the patient to the floor from 210 to 60 minutes, and x-ray cycle time from 92 to 32 minutes. If supported by an innovation fund, this project would share its algorithms and tracking system, along with pitfalls encountered during the redesign, so that the improved pro- cess would be disseminated to other emergency departments.
Example 2—A Partnership to Improve Chronic Care A hospital, two small primary care practices, and an endocrinologist decid-
ed to collaborate on the development of a state-of-the-art diabetic care program. They began by reviewing the practice guidelines and agreeing on the key ele- ments of preventive, acute, and chronic care. In an attempt to identify best practices, they visited two of the leading diabetic care programs. They then reached agreement on the key elements of a care process, and on the quality measures to be collected and used in assessing the care process and patient outcomes. They also worked to establish an interactive patient education pro- gram, which could be used online or viewed on video in the office. A diabetic care team was formed, consisting of two primary care physicians, a nurse prac- titioner, and an endocrinologist. Relying heavily on e-mail, they were able to establish procedures for ongoing communication and management of diabetic patients.
Example 3—Reorganizing Staff for Patient-Centered Primary Care A primary care center with multiple offices served 270,000 patients with
110 full-time equivalents (FTEs). The center had a 55-day waiting period for appointments, resulting in packed schedules for staff, a chaotic office environ- ment, an overused urgent care clinic, and unhappy patients. The center decided to develop an open-access system so that patients could get an appointment either the same day they called or the next day, with their own physician when- ever possible. Under the old system, patients calling for appointments would be sorted according to need: wellness care, acute illness, or chronic care. This approach was ineffective because patients might have two or three needs simul-
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taneously; thus, they would make multiple appointments to meet different needs or go to the urgent care clinic, which further stressed the system.
In the redesigned system, the staff was organized into 15 teams, each with 7 to 9 physicians and nurse practitioners; the urgent care clinic was closed, and that staff was reassigned to the regular offices. Patients were no longer catego- rized according to the nurse’s or receptionist’s assessment of their need, but were seen based on their own perception of need. Whereas the number of visits was expected to increase because of “patients’ insatiable demands,” the total number of patient visits declined by 7 percent, and the no-show rate went from 20 percent to being “too small to show up in the statistics.” Patients could meet all their needs in one visit with their regular doctor (rather than in one visit to the urgent care clinic and another visit to their regular doctor). The rate of patients able to see their own physician increased from 47 to 75 percent. The provision of preventive services also increased. Additionally, fewer patient charts were lost because they were pulled the day the patients came in, and with fewer lost charts, clinicians were more likely to have the information they need- ed when seeing a patient. Overall costs decreased because of fewer visits and the closure of the urgent care clinic. Additionally, the center thought it would be necessary to hire additional staff, but when the operational system was im- proved, this was not the case, so cost increases were avoided. If such a project were funded by an innovation fund, the primary care center would share its tools for appointment scheduling and staffing design.
The above examples illustrate the range and depth of redesign efforts that should occur. Because such efforts can be disruptive to current operations and take extended periods of time to accomplish, health care professionals and orga- nizations need extra support and incentive to undertake them. An innovation fund should support the implementation of projects that could not otherwise be conducted during the routine course of business because they would be too dis- ruptive for the patients and staff. As suggested in Example 1 above, use of a new information technology can be quite disruptive to the provision of services and staff functioning. In some cases, redesign may be so fundamental that temporary closure of a service may be required. For example, in another case that was part of an IOM study of exemplary practices (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000), one medi- cal group had to close its offices for a short period of time to make the changes they deemed necessary. Few health care professionals and organizations can undertake such drastic steps to substantially reorganize their care processes with- out special (and temporary) assistance. Additional examples of reengineering and redesign projects are provided in Chapter 5.
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5
Building Organizational Supports for Change
Between front-line clinical care teams and the health care environment lies an array of health care organizations, including hospitals, managed care organi- zations, medical groups, multispeciality clinics, integrated delivery systems, and others. Leaders of today’s health care organizations face a daunting challenge in redesigning the organization and delivery of care to meet the aims set forth in this report. They face pressures from employees and medical staff, as well as from the local community, including residents, business and service organizations, regulators, and other agencies. It is difficult enough to balance the needs of those many constituencies under ordinary circumstances. It is especially difficult when one is trying to change routine processes and procedures to alter how people conduct their everyday work, individually and collectively.
This chapter describes a general process of organizational development and then offers a set of tools and techniques, drawing heavily from engineering con- cepts, as a starting point for identifying how organizations might redesign care. Chapter 3 offered a set of rules that would redesign the nature of interactions between a clinician and a patient to improve the quality of care. This chapter describes how organizations can redesign care to systematically improve the quality of care for patients. This is not an exhaustive list of possible approaches, but a sampling of techniques used in other fields that might have applicability in health care. The broad areas discussed in this chapter apply to all health care organizations; the specific tools and techniques used would need to be adapted to an organization’s local environment and patients.
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112 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
Recommendation 7: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Qual- ity and private foundations should convene a series of workshops involving representatives from health care and other industries and the research community to identify, adapt, and implement state-of- the-art approaches to addressing the following challenges:
• Redesign of care processes based on best practices • Use of information technologies to improve access to clinical
information and support clinical decision making • Knowledge and skills management • Development of effective teams • Coordination of care across patient conditions, services, and
settings over time • Incorporation of performance and outcome measurements for
improvement and accountability
To achieve the six aims identified in Chapter 2, board members, chief execu- tive officers, chief information officers, chief financial officers, and clinical man- agers of all types of health care organizations will need to take steps to redesign care processes. The recommended series of workshops is intended to serve multiple purposes: (1) to help communicate the recommendations and findings of this report and engage leaders and managers of health care organizations in the pursuit of the aims, (2) to provide knowledge and tools that will be helpful to these individuals, and (3) to encourage the development of formal and informal networks of individuals involved in innovation and improvement.
STAGES OF ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
The design of health care organizations can be conceptualized as progressing through three stages of development to a final stage that embodies the committee’s vision for the 21st-century health care system, as represented by the six aims set forth in Chapter 2 (see Table 5-1). Although settings and practices vary, the committee believes much of the health sector has been working at Stages 2 and 3 over the last decade or more. As knowledge and technologies continue to ad- vance and the complexity of care delivery grows, the evolution to Stage 4 will require that Stage 3 organizations accelerate efforts to redesign their approaches to interacting with patients, organizing services, providing training, and utilizing the health care workforce.
Stage 1
Stage 1 is characterized by a highly fragmented delivery system, with physi- cians, hospitals, and other health care organizations functioning autonomously.
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BUILDING ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORTS FOR CHANGE 113
The scope of practice for many physicians is very broad. Patients rely on physi- cian training, experience, and good intentions for guidance. Individual clinicians do their best to stay abreast of the literature and rely on their own practice experience to make the best decisions for their patients. Journals, conferences, and informal consultation with peers are the usual means of staying current. Information technology tools are almost entirely absent. Norman (1988) has characterized this approach to work as based on “knowledge in the head,” with heavy dependence on learning and memory. The patient’s role tends to be pas- sive, with care being organized for the benefit of the professional and/or institu- tion.
Stage 2
Stage 2 is characterized by the formation of well-defined referral networks, greater use of informal mechanisms to increase patient involvement in clinical decision making, and the formation of loosely structured multidisciplinary teams. For the most part, health care is organized around areas of physician specializa- tion and institutional settings. Patients have more access to health information through print, video, and Internet-based materials than in Stage 1, and more formal mechanisms exist for patient input. However, these tend to be generic mechanisms, such as consent forms and satisfaction surveys. Patients have infor- mal mechanisms for input on their care.
Most health data are paper based. Little patient information is shared among settings or practices; the result is often gaps, redundancy of data gathering, and a lack of relevant information. In this stage, institutions and specialty groups, for example, try to help practitioners apply science to practice by developing tools for knowledge management, such as practice guidelines.
Stage 3
In Stage 3, care is still organized in a way that is oriented to the interests of professionals and institutions, but there is some movement toward a patient- centered system and recognition that individual patients differ in their prefer- ences and needs. Team practice is common, but changes in roles are often slowed or stymied by institutional, labor, and financial structures, as well as by law and custom. Some training for team practice occurs, but that training is typically fragmented and isolated by health discipline, such as medicine, nursing, or physi- cal therapy.
Clinicians and managers recognize the increasing complexity of health care and the opportunities presented by information technology. Some real-time deci- sion support tools are available, but information technology capability is modest, and stand-alone applications are the rule. Computer-based applications for labo- ratory data, ordering of medications, and records of patient encounters typically
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114
T A
B L
E 5
-1 S
ta ge
s of
E vo
lu ti
on o
f th
e D
es ig
n of
H ea
lt h
O rg
an iz
at io
ns
S ta
ge T
he P
at ie
nt E
xp er
ie nc
e K
no w
le dg
e an
d S
ki ll
s M
an ag
em en
t C
ar e
D el
iv er
y
1 •
T he
p hy
si ci
an d
et er
m in
es w
ha t
is i
n th
e •
T he
re i
s he
av y
re li
an ce
o n
hu m
an m
em or
y •
In di
vi du
al p
hy si
ci an
s cr
af t
so lu
ti on
s fo
r be
st i
nt er
es t
of t
he p
at ie
nt a
nd c
on tr
ol s
an d
kn ow
le dg
e w
it ho
ut s
ig ni
fi ca
nt r
ea l-
in di
vi du
al p
at ie
nt s.
ca re
. T
he p
at ie
nt ’s
r ol
e te
nd s
to b
e ti
m e
ai ds
a nd
t oo
ls .
I nf
or m
at io
n pa
ss iv
e, w
it h
ca re
b ei
ng o
rg an
iz ed
f or
t he
te ch
no lo
gy i
s al
m os
t en
ti re
ly a
bs en
t. be
ne fi
t of
t he
p ro
fe ss
io na
l an
d/ or
in st
it ut
io n.
2 •
M em
be rs
o f
th e
pr of
e s si
on a l
t e a
m •
C li
ni c i
a n s
ha ve
s om
e pr
ot oc
ol s
a n d
• R
e c og
ni ti
on o
f th
e va
ri a b
il it
y in
t re
a t m
en t
in fo
rm a l
ly s
ha re
c on
tr ol
a m
on g
kn ow
le dg
e a s
si st
a n c e
a va
il a b
le ,
bu t
st il
l m
ay l
e a d
to i
nt e r
e s t
in p
ro to
c o ls
a nd
th em
se lv
e s ,
bu t
ph ys
ic ia
n a u
to no
m y
re ly
o n
m em
or y
a n d
ba si
c kn
ow le
dg e
gu id
e l in
e s .
pr e d
om in
a t e s
. C
a r e
is o
rg a n
iz e d
f or
t he
m an
ag em
en t
to ol
s (j
ou rn
a l s,
c on
fe re
nc e s
, •
T ra
di ti
on a l
p ro
fe ss
io na
l ro
le s
de fi
ne be
ne fi
t of
t he
p ro
fe ss
io na
l a n
d/ or
c o ns
ul ta
ti on
w it
h pe
e r s,
g e n
e r a l
I nt
e r ne
t w
or ki
ng r
e l a t
io ns
hi ps
. in
st it
ut io
n. in
fo rm
a t io
n si
te s)
. V
e r y
li tt
le i
nf or
m a t
io n
• P
a t ie
nt s
ha ve
i nf
or m
a l m
e c ha
ni sm
s fo
r te
c h no
lo gy
i s
in u
se .
in pu
t on
t he
ir c
a r e .
te c h
no lo
gy i
s in
u se
. •
P a t
ie nt
s re
c e iv
e so
m e
in fo
rm a t
io n
fr om
c l in
ic ia
ns (
ge ne
ra ll
y st
oc k
pr in
t m
a t e r
ia l
a n d
ve rb
a l i
nf or
m a t
io n)
.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
115 3
• F
or m
al m
ec ha
ni sm
s fo
r pa
ti en
t in
pu t
• C
li ni
ci an
s an
d pa
ti en
ts h
av e
re ad
y ac
ce ss
• T
he p
ro fe
ss io
na l
te am
f or
m al
ly s
ha re
s ex
is t.
to c
li ni
ca l
kn ow
le dg
e.
T he
re i
s ro
le s
an d
re sp
on si
bi li
ti es
a m
on g
it s
• C
ar e
is o
rg an
iz ed
f or
t he
b en
ef it
o f
th e
si gn
if ic
an t
re li
an ce
o n
be st
p ra
ct ic
es ,
m em
be rs
. T
he p
hy si
ci an
a s
re sp
on si
bl e
pr of
es si
on al
a nd
/o r
in st
it ut
io n,
b ut
t he
re gu
id el
in es
, an
d di
se as
e m
an ag
em en
t le
ad er
e m
er ge
s.
P ra
ct ic
es r
ec og
ni ze
t he
is s
om e
m ov
em en
t to
w ar
d a
pa ti
en t-
pa th
w ay
s fo
r cl
in ic
ia ns
a nd
p at
ie nt
s. ne
ed f
or c
ha ng
in g
pr of
es si
on al
r ol
es ,
bu t
ce nt
er ed
s ys
te m
. S
om e
re al
-t im
e de
ci si
on su
pp or
t to
ol s
ar e
ch an
ge i
s sl
ow ed
o r
st ym
ie d
by av
ai la
bl e,
b ut
i nf
or m
at io
n te
ch no
lo gy
in st
it ut
io na
l an
d fi
na nc
ia l
st ru
ct ur
es ,
la w
, ca
pa bi
li ty
i s
m od
es t.
an d
cu st
om .
• S
om e
tr ai
ni ng
f or
t ea
m p
ra ct
ic e
oc cu
rs .
• A
s m
al l
nu m
be r
of p
ra ct
ic es
a pp
ly s
ys te
m de
si gn
p ri
nc ip
le s
an d
in co
rp or
at e
in fo
rm at
io n
sy st
em s
in t
he ir
d ai
ly w
or k.
• M
an y
co nd
it io
ns a
re m
an ag
ed t
hr ou
gh sp
ec ia
l ca
re m
an ag
em en
t pr
og ra
m s.
4 •
C ar
e pr
oc es
se s
an d
tr an
sa ct
io ns
a re
b as
ed •
T he
e nv
ir on
m en
t is
r ic
h in
c li
ni ca
l •
T he
d el
iv er
y of
s er
vi ce
s is
c oo
rd in
at ed
on t
he n
ew r
ul es
s et
f or
th i
n C
ha pt
er 3
. in
fo rm
at io
n fo
r pa
ti en
ts a
nd ac
ro ss
p ra
ct ic
es ,
se tt
in gs
, an
d pa
ti en
t C
ar e
is p
at ie
nt -c
en te
re d,
w it
h pa
ti en
t an
d cl
in ic
ia ns
. co
nd it
io ns
o ve
r ti
m e.
I nf
or m
at io
n fa
m il
y be
in g
pa rt
o f
th e
he al
th c
ar e
te am
. •
A ut
om at
ed d
ec is
io n
su pp
or t
sy st
em s
te ch
no lo
gy i
s us
ed a
s th
e ba
si c
bu il
di ng
P at
ie nt
s ha
ve a
cc es
s to
a s
m uc
h in
co rp
or at
in g
pa ti
en t-
sp ec
if ic
d at
a ar
e bl
oc k
fo r
m ak
in g
sy st
em s
w or
k, t
ra ck
in g
in fo
rm at
io n
as t
he y
w is
h to
h av
e an
d us
ed a
t th
e po
in t
of p
at ie
nt c
ar e.
pe rf
or m
an ce
, an
d in
cr ea
si ng
l ea
rn in
g. op
po rt
un it
ie s
to e
xe rc
is e
a s m
uc h
c o nt
ro l
• S
ki ll
d e v
e l op
m en
t, t
ra in
in g,
a nd
P ra
c t ic
e s u
se m
e a su
re s
a n d
in fo
rm a t
io n
ov e r
t he
ir c
a r e
a s t
he y
de si
re .
le a d
e r sh
ip s
up po
rt t
he m
ul ti
di sc
ip li
na ry
a b ou
t ou
tc om
e s a
nd i
nf or
m a t
io n
ch a r
a c te
r of
c li
ni c a
l pr
a c ti
c e .
te c h
no lo
gy t
o c o
nt in
ua ll
y re
fi ne
a dv
an c e
d e n
gi ne
e r in
g pr
in c i
pl e s
a nd
t o
im pr
ov e
th e i
r c a
re p
ro c e
ss e s
. T
he h
e a lt
h w
or kf
or c e
i s
us e d
e ff
ic ie
nt ly
a nd
f le
xi bl
y to
i m
pl em
en t
c h a n
ge .
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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116 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
cannot exchange data at all or are not based on common definitions. Practice groups—particularly those that are community based—typically lack informa- tion systems to make such decision support tools available at the point of patient care, or to integrate guidelines with information about specific patients. Clinical leaders recognize the need for what has been called “knowledge in the world” (Norman, 1988)—information that is retrievable when needed, replaces the need for detailed memory recall, and is continuously updated on the basis of new information. More organized groups rely on best practices, guidelines, and dis- ease management pathways for clinicians and patients, but these are not inte- grated with workflow.
Stage 4
Stage 4 is the health care system of the 21st century envisioned by the committee. This system supports continued improvement in the six aims of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity. Health care organizations in this stage have the characteristics of other high- performing organizations. They draw on the experiences of other sectors and adapt tools to the unique characteristics of the health care field.
Patients have the opportunity to exercise as much or as little control over treatment decisions as they choose (as long as their preferences fall within the boundaries of evidence-based practice). Services are coordinated across prac- tices, settings, and patient conditions over time using increasingly sophisticated information systems.
Whatever their form, health care organizations can be characterized as “learn- ing organizations” (Senge, 1990) that explicitly measure their performance along a variety of dimensions, including outcomes of care, and use that information to change or redesign and continually improve their work using advanced engineer- ing principles. They make efficient and flexible use of the health workforce to implement change, matching and enhancing skill levels to enable less expensive professionals and patients to do progressively more sophisticated tasks (Christen- sen et al., 2000).
The committee does not advocate any particular organizational forms for the 21st-century health care system. The forms that emerge might comprise corpo- rate management and ownership structures, strategic alliances, and other contrac- tual arrangements (“virtual” organizations) (COR Healthcare Resources, 2000; Robinson and Casalino, 1996; Shortell et al., 2000a). New information and delivery structures might be located in a particular city or region or might be the basis for collaborative networks or consortia (COR Health LLC, 2000). What- ever the organizational arrangement, it should promote innovation and quality improvement. Every organization should be held accountable to its patients, the populations it serves, and the public for its clinical and financial performance.
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In some respects, such as economies of scale, workforce training and deploy- ment, and access to capital, larger organizations will have a comparative advan- tage. In other cases, small systems will evolve to take on functions now per- formed by larger organizations. The use of intranet- or Internet-based applications and information systems may enable the development of an infrastructure to accomplish certain functions. New forms might include, for example, Web- based knowledge servers or broker-mediated, consumer-directed health care pur- chasing programs.
KEY CHALLENGES FOR THE REDESIGN OF HEALTH CARE ORGANIZATIONS
Health care services need to be organized and financed in ways that make sense to patients and clinicians and that foster coordination of care and collabora- tive work. They should be based on sound design principles and make use of information technologies that can integrate data for multiple uses (Kibbe and Bard, 1997a; Rosenstein, 1997). Whatever their form, organizations will need to meet six challenges, see Figure 5-1, that cut across different health conditions, types of care (such as preventive, acute, or chronic), and care settings:
• redesigning care processes; • making effective use of information technologies; • managing clinical knowledge and skills; • developing effective teams; • coordinating care across patient conditions, services, and settings over
time; and • incorporating performance and outcome measurements for improvement
and accountability.
The following discussion of these six challenges includes excerpts from interviews with clinical leaders conducted as a part of an IOM study aimed at identifying exemplary practices (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000).
Redesigning Care Processes
I try to help people understand that we can “work smarter.” You can feel rotten about how you are practicing. I tell them, “You are right—and it’s going to get worse.” But change is possible. We don’t need a billion-dollar solution.
We need a billion $1 solutions. You have to create the will to change. There’s the will to change, then execution.—Hospital-based endoscopy unit
Like any complex system, health care organizations require sophisticated tools and building blocks that allow them to function with purpose, direction, and high
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reliability. Effective and reliable care processes—whether registering patients who come to the emergency room, ensuring complete immunizations for chil- dren, managing medication administration, ensuring that accurate laboratory tests are completed and returned to the requesting clinician, or ensuring that discharge from hospital to home after a disabling injury is safe and well coordinated—can be created only by using well-understood engineering principles. Not only must care processes be reliable, but they must also be focused on creating a relation- ship with a caregiver that meets the expectations of both the patient and the family. Redesign can transform the use of capital and human resources to achieve these ends.
Redesign may well challenge existing practices, data structures, roles, and management practices, and it results in continuing change. It involves conceptu-
FIGURE 5-1 Making change possible.
CARE SYSTEM
Supportive payment and regulatory environment
Organizations that facilitate the work of patient- centered teams
High performing patient-centered teams
Outcomes • Safe • Effective • Efficient • Personalized • Timely • Equitable
REDESIGN IMPERATIVES: SIX CHALLENGES
• Redesigned care processes • Effective use of information technologies • Knowledge and skills management • Development of effective teams • Coordination of care across patient conditions, services,
and settings over time • Use of performance and outcome measurement for
continuous quality improvement and accountability
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alizing, mapping, testing, refining, and continuing to improve the many processes of health care. Redesign aimed at increasing an organization’s agility in respond- ing to changing demand may be accomplished through a variety of approaches, such as simplifying, standardizing, reducing waste, and implementing methods of continuous flow (Bennis and Mische, 1995; Goldsmith, 1998).
Students of organizational theory have learned a great deal through careful examination of the work of organizations that use very complex and often haz- ardous technologies. The committee’s earlier report, To Err Is Human, outlines the achievements of several manufacturing companies and the U.S. Navy’s air- craft carriers in using replicable strategies to achieve great consistency and reli- ability (Institute of Medicine, 2000). Other world-class businesses, notably those that have received the prestigious Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award, have embraced many of the tenets of quality improvement described by Deming, Juran, and others (Anderson et al., 1994), which include the need to improve constantly the system of production and services. Yet few health care organiza- tions have developed successful models of production that reliably deliver basic effective services, much less today’s increasingly advanced and complex tech- nologies. Nor have most been able to continually assess and meet changing patient requirements and expectations.
Some health care organizations have dedicated considerable energy and re- sources to changing the way they deliver care. Although these organizations have recognized the need for leadership to provide the necessary commitment to and investment in change, they have also recognized that change needs to come from the bottom up as front-line health care teams recognize opportunities for redesigning care processes and acquire the skill to implement those new ap- proaches successfully (National Committee for Quality Health Care, 1999; Wash- ington Business Group on Health, 1998). Many other organizations have taken steps toward redesigning processes, but have found replication and deployment difficult or short-lived (Blumenthal and Kilo, 1998; Shortell et al., 1998). The committee recognizes these efforts and the difficulties that stem from, among other things, restructuring and economic pressure, misaligned incentives, profes- sional entrenchment, competing priorities, organizational inertia, and lack of adequate information systems (Shortell et al., 1998).
A growing body of literature in health care indicates that well-designed care processes result in better quality (Desai et al., 1997; Griffin and Kinmouth, 1998). Some have argued that health care is not amenable to quality improvement ap- proaches derived from other industries because inputs (patients) are so variable; outputs, such as health-related outcomes, so ill-defined; and the need for expert judgment and improvisation so demanding. Similar arguments have been made, but not substantiated, in other service industries and by those in the specialized departments (e.g., legal) of manufacturing industries that have subsequently ex- perienced success in embracing principles of quality improvement (Galvin, 1998).
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Fortunately, useful redesign principles that are now used widely in other indus- tries can be (and in some cases have been) adapted to health care.
Engineering principles have been widely applied by other industries and in some health care organizations to design processes that improve quality and safety (Collins and Porras, 1997; Donaldson and Mohr, 2000; Hodgetts, 1998; Kegan, 1994; Peters and Waterman, 1982). The following subsections describe five such principles and their use by health care professionals to improve pa- tients’ experiences and safety, the flow of care processes, and coordination and communication among health professionals and with patients (Langley et al., 1996).
System Design Using the 80/20 Principle
The nurse assesses the patient demographics, risk factors, support available, medication, lifestyle, and barriers to making changes. The first visit is usually 45 minutes to an hour long. Preventive screening visits are done yearly—assess vital signs, behavior, willingness to make changes. We take retinal photos, which are sent directly to the ophthalmologist, instead of sending the patient there. We learned that we need to risk stratify and fit the level of services to the level of risk. Services are less or more intense based on risk. We use protocols to identify risk level: primary—those with diabetes, secondary—those with diabetes and any other risk factors, tertiary—those who have already had a stroke, myocardial infarction, or renal failure.—Diabetic management group
This engineering principle can be restated: Design for the usual, but recog- nize and plan for the unusual. Process design should be explicit for the usual case—for 80 percent of the work. For the remaining 20 percent, contingency plans should be assembled as needed. This concept is useful both for designing systems of care and as an approach to acculturating new trainees. Also referred to as the Pareto Principle, the 80/20 principle is based on the recognition that a small number of causes (20 percent) is responsible for a large percentage (80 percent) of an effect (Juran, 1989; Transit Cooperative Research Program, 1995). In health care, for example, 20 percent of patients in a defined population may account for 80 percent of the work and incur 80 percent of costs. Similarly, 20 percent (or fewer) of common diagnoses may account for 80 percent of patients’ health problems.
A fundamental approach in health care has been to build care systems to accommodate all possible occurrences. This approach is cumbersome and often the source of delays when, for example, laboratory tests are done in case a rare disease is present, or certain procedures must be followed in case an unusual event should happen. System design based on the 80/20 approach exploits the existence of routine work, often a large proportion of the total work load, that is involved in an assortment of patient problems. One determines what work is
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routine and designs a simple, standard, and low-cost process for performing this work efficiently and reliably. This leaves the more complex work to be per- formed employing processes that appropriately use higher-skilled personnel or more advanced technologies.
In accordance with this principle, approaches to planning care are designed to reflect the different sorts of clinical problems encountered in practice. Level 1 represents the most predictable needs. In a pediatric practice, well-child health supervision, immunization, and middle-ear infections represent a large portion of the work and very predictable needs. In an obstetrics–gynecology practice, pre- natal care and contraceptive counseling are examples of Level 1. In adult pri- mary care, examples include management of hypertension, acute sprains, low back pain, and sinusitis. For newly diagnosed patients with asthma, instruction in the use of an inhaler is an example of predictable work. The more predictable the work, the more it makes sense to standardize care so that it can be performed by a variety of workers in a consistent fashion.
When needs are predictable, standardization encompasses the key dimen- sions of work that should be performed the same way each time using a defined process and is a key element of the principle of mass customization discussed later in this section. For example, variation in the care of patients with commu- nity-acquired pneumonia can be reduced by identifying and standardizing the key dimensions of care. Standardization may involve very complex or very simple technologies and processes. An example of the latter is a nursing assistant stamp- ing on a patient’s chart, “Immunization up to date?” and circling “Yes” or “No” for a clinician to see as he or she enters the exam room. Focused standardization often entails simplifying processes. For example, instead of each clinician on staff having a different protocol, clinicians might agree to use a single chemo- therapy protocol for most patients, or a single dose, route, or frequency for a commonly administered medication. Although it might be permissible to use other protocols, clinicians would have to agree to evaluate the outcomes for patients under both the standard and nonstandard protocols to determine which was best (Institute of Medicine, 2000). In another example, Duke University’s pediatric emergency department uses a color-coded tape to measure a child’s length and an approximate weight range. Color-coded supplies (e.g., IV tubing, airway masks, syringes) correspond to the four weight ranges. Standardizing equipment for each color zone ensures that dosages and equipment are appropri- ate and safe for children in that range (Glymph, 2000).
Level 2 represents health care needs of medium predictability. At this level, it is important for practice settings to triage patients accurately to determine their needs. Examples are patients with chronic illnesses, such as asthma or diabetes, whose condition is not under control and who need special services to help them. Some patients might best be served by group visits with a diabetic counselor, others might need individual support, and others might need hospitalization. Appropriate triage based on needs could include working out a care plan with
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patients in terms of exercise, weight loss, and insulin control and providing them with materials and resources to help them meet their objectives.
Level 3 represents patients with rare or complex health care health condi- tions for which special resources must be assembled. In such cases, applying excellent listening skills, assembling resources, and managing the clinician– patient relationship are especially important. Examples are a patient with an infectious disease that is rare and difficult to identify, or the need to assemble a multidisciplinary team for health supervision of children with special needs, such as those with cystic fibrosis, meningomyelocele, or craniofacial syndromes (Carey, 1992).
The assembling of these resources can sometimes be accomplished within a single office practice. In other cases, a relationship with another system—an- other critical care unit or an individual such as a subspecialist, for example—may be required. Recent evidence indicates that for ambulatory care, nurses and nurse practitioners can manage a substantial proportion of the work (Mundinger et al., 2000; Shum et al., 2000). The remaining 20 percent of the work would corre- spond to the third level, which requires the most highly trained practitioners.
Design for Safety
When lab results are returned by e-mail, they come back by provider, and I can attach them to the patient’s chart. When I open the patient record, the “desk- top” flags alert me to abnormal results.—Primary care practice
The doctor–patient relationship is important, but perhaps more important is how much [doctors] can rely on the system not to let [the patient] slip through the cracks. —Primary care practice
The prevention, detection, and mitigation of harm occur in learning environ- ments, not in environments of blame and reprisal. Designing systems for safety requires specific, clear, and consistent efforts to develop a work culture that encourages reporting of errors and hazardous conditions, as well as communica- tion among staff about safety concerns. Such learning also requires attention to effective knowledge transfer, including the systematic acquisition, dissemina- tion, and incorporation of ideas, methods, and evidence that may have been developed elsewhere (Institute of Medicine, 2000). As described in detail in the committee’s earlier report, To Err Is Human (Institute of Medicine, 2000), de- signing health care processes for safety involves a three-part strategy: (1) design- ing systems to prevent errors, (2) designing procedures to make errors visible when they do occur, and (3) designing procedures that can mitigate the harm to patients from errors that are not detected or intercepted (Nolan, 2000).
Designing systems to prevent errors includes designing jobs for safety, avoid- ing reliance on memory and vigilance, and simplifying and standardizing key processes (such as using checklists and protocols). Designing jobs for safety
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means attending to the effects of work hours, workloads, staffing ratios, appropri- ate training, sources of distraction and their relationship to fatigue and reduced alertness, and sleep deprivation, as well as providing appropriate training. Avoid- ing reliance on memory and vigilance can be accomplished in simple ways, such as instituting reminder systems and color coding, eliminating look-alike and sound-alike products, wisely using checklists and protocols, and employing more complex automated systems that may prevent many errors (though they may also introduce new sources of error). Simplification and standardization are key principles not only in delivering effective services, but also in making them safer. For example, standardization of data displays so that all are expressed in the same units, of equipment so that on–off switches are in consistent locations, of the location of supplies and equipment, of order forms, and of prescribing conven- tions can prevent many errors (Institute of Medicine, 2000).
Designing procedures to make errors visible can also improve safety. Al- though human beings will always make errors, procedures can be designed so that many errors are identified before they result in harm to patients. For ex- ample, pharmaceutical software can alert the prescriber to an incorrect dose or potential interaction with another medication (Institute of Medicine, 2000).
Designing procedures that can mitigate harm from errors is a third means of improving patient safety. Examples of this strategy are having antidotes and up- to-date information available to clinicians; having equipment that is designed to default to the least harmful mode; and ensuring that teams are trained in effective recovery from crises, such as unexpected complications during operative proce- dures (Institute of Medicine, 2000).
Mass Customization
Mass customization involves combining the uniqueness of customized prod- ucts and services with the efficiencies of mass production. In manufacturing, this strategy has been developed as a way to give customers exactly what they want in a way that is feasible from a business standpoint—that is, quickly, at an accept- able cost, and without added complexity (Pine et al., 1995).
With reference to the three levels of predictability discussed earlier, mass customization is the design approach to Level 2 (patients with moderate levels of predictability of needs). Patients can often be grouped according to their need for a common set of services. For example, many medical conditions are defined in terms of their grade or degree of severity (e.g., cancer staging), degree of control achieved (e.g., controlled or uncontrolled hypertension), or level of risk (e.g., high- or low-risk pregnancy and the Glasgow trauma scale). With good informa- tion about the past needs and preferences of patients, it is often possible to standardize processes of care within a given stratum. It is possible to predict fairly accurately, for example, what proportion of patients will choose a variety of options, such as a group versus individual visit for management of a condition.
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In a non-health care example, hotels such as the Ritz Carlton keep track of their customers’ preferences so they can be offered appropriate services (Gilmore and Pine, 1997).
Yet patients thus grouped are not identical, and the health system should be responsive to differences in their preferences and special needs. Mass customi- zation involves attempting to standardize the common set of services needed by many patients while customizing or tailoring other aspects of those services to respond to individual preferences and needs. In the computer world, Internet sites can cater to “segments of one” by efficiently providing each customer with products that match his or her preferences (Leibovich, 2000). Likewise, the use of independent modules means that computer products can be assembled into different forms quickly and inexpensively (Feitzinger and Lee, 1997). Gateway is an example of a retail computer company that uses modules (such as varying amounts of memory or hard drive capacity) in mass customizing its products for the consumer. This use of modules for mass customization can be applied to the health care arena, for example to patients with congestive heart failure who need acute care. Modules for admission to a hospital or nursing home, for family education, and for rehabilitation can be drawn on and combined for individual patients. Another example is the steps in patient care, which can be thought of as a series of modules, such as (1) prescribing a medication, (2) assessing and encouraging adherence to therapy, and (3) monitoring patient outcomes. In these examples, the 80/20 approach also applies; that is, for each module, the set of options should be appropriate for 80 percent of patients.
In applying the principle of mass customization, differentiation is the last step—in industry, an example is manufacturing all products in the same way up to the addition of the product color. A health care example is having standardized instructions for patients with a given health problem, but writing in further infor- mation for those with additional health conditions.
Continuous Flow
When a patient calls to make an appointment, our philosophy is: If your doctor is here today, you will see your doctor.—Primary care practice
We have bedside registration in the emergency department. Each room re- ceives a portable computer rolled in on a cart. Computer orders for lab and pharmacy are entered from the bedside.—Emergency department
Each morning we make rounds on all 34 intensive care patients. The discussion includes pointed, patient-oriented reports, social as well as medical needs. All such issues can be dealt with and work begun at once.—Intensive care unit
If a patient calls in with a breast lump, she is usually seen within a day or so. First she sees her primary care provider, then she is sent to us for a mammo- gram—usually an ultrasound as well. We can do what we think should be done
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right then—a biopsy and surgery if needed. Usually everything is done within 1 or 2 days.—Breast care center
Volume has dramatically increased here. We have had to change the way we work. Although most ERs have 12-hour shifts, we shortened the shifts to 9 hours. We have a system where there is “virtual on-call.” Physicians have agreed in advance that if our tracking system shows that the cycle time from the arrival of a patient to being seen by a doctor is past a specific threshold, they will stay longer, even if more help is there or on its way.—Emergency depart- ment
Continuous flow, sometimes referred to as “a batch size of one,” is an impor- tant design concept in which the system is designed to match demand so there is no aggregation of persons or units during processing. It represents the theoretical optimum for any production or service delivery system. In health care, application of this principle involves examining current assumptions about patient demand and redesigning the care process to better correspond to the characteristics of the demand curve (Murray and Tantau, 1998; Nolan et al., 1996).
If clinicians and managers assume that patient demand is insatiable, health care systems and individual practitioners must find ways to manage this demand. Management of demand generally entails using barriers, such as waiting, to dis- suade some people from seeking services or reducing the need to use resources that could be used elsewhere, or both. Alternatively, if the assumption is that patient demand is steady, predictable, and reasonable, then continuous flow is a more appropriate and effective solution. Some of the most advanced examples of continuous flow have been pioneered by office practices that use “open-access” scheduling (Grandinetti, 2000; Murray, 2000; Terry, 2000). Most scheduling systems rely on distinguishing between urgent and nonurgent requests for ap- pointments; the result is often waits of 2 weeks for a nonurgent appointment and several months for a physical examination. As a result, many patients do not keep their appointments (Bowman et al., 1996; Festinger et al., 1995). In an open-access system, office staff do not triage patients who call for an appoint- ment on the basis of whether they believe those patients need to be seen that day. Patients can schedule an appointment and be seen the same day, if they wish, by their doctor (or nurse practitioner) if that individual is in. Continuous flow does not, however, mean that patients must be fit into a lock-step process. If they prefer to wait or schedule an appointment for the future, they are always free to do so.
To implement such a program and match demand with resources requires that a practice first deal with its backlog of future appointments. Once it has implemented an open-access process, the practice will have only one scheduling system for all patients. Practices that have implemented open access report that they are able to see as many or more patients as before; that they finish the day on time and with personnel less exhausted; and that they are providing more appro-
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priate—effective, patient-centered, timely, and probably safer—care (Institute for Healthcare Improvement, 2000).
Under a system of continuous flow, as opposed to batch flow, practitioners dictate notes, take care of other tasks after a patient’s visit, and respond to tele- phone messages as they occur or as patients are seen, rather than “batching” such tasks to be addressed at the end of the day. In the case of telephone messages, for example, batching often results in repeated calls by patients who are not certain their message has been received, repeated calls to patients who may be on their way home from work by the time the message is returned, delays in managing medications or in providing information about laboratory tests and instructions for self-care, and sometimes greater anxiety and suffering.
Production Planning
We reorganized into teams 2 years ago. An MD, RN, and Medical Assistant form a team. We have six or seven teams; each team sees a panel of 1200 patients. Each team sees patients for a 4 1/2-hour block of time per day. The morning starts with a 30-minute meeting to review appointments that are sched- uled for the day. Then the compressed clinic day. Then time for charting each afternoon. We have practice management time that is scheduled every week. Patients are not scheduled for that time. That time is for reviewing data, col- lecting data. It’s funny, but you can see almost the same number of patients during a compressed clinical day as during a full day. The teams are staggered throughout the day so that we can be open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. The number of teams is scheduled to match times when patient demand is the greatest.—Pri- mary care practice
Production planning has been used in other industries to find the best way to allocate staff, equipment, and other resources to meet the needs of customers, as well as to reduce costs. Application of the principle depends on a detailed understanding of work processes, specifically, the identification of repetitive patterns of work.
Although the needs of patients and the work required to meet those needs will vary from day to day, all clinical practices have a natural rhythm defined by a period—for example, a week—after which the nature of the work repeats. One method of production planning involves the use of a repetitive master schedule to make the best use of resources in meeting patient needs. Creating such a sched- ule necessitates defining the work to be done, assembling a team suited to per- form the work, understanding the time period within which the work repeats, and making work assignments based on the standard time period. If a master sched- ule can be built for a typical week, it can be used with minor adjustments for any week. The repetitive master schedule serves a variety of purposes. Its primary purpose is to match resources to the needs of patients, but it also provides a
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method for understanding complex systems and designing better production pro- cesses.
Summary
The reengineering principles described in this section—system design using the 80/20 approach, design for safety, mass customization, continuous flow, and production planning—are used by other industries, and, as indicated in the ac- companying quotations, by teams across a range of health care settings that include ambulatory office practices, hospital units, emergency departments, and hospices. Such engineering principles illustrate what is meant by focusing at a system level. They enable health care teams to organize their resources effec- tively to better meet patient needs, and make medical practice more satisfying without driving up costs. Such deliberate crafting of systems of care results not in impersonal, one-size-fits-all care processes. Rather, it makes care safer, en- ables standardization where appropriate, and at the same time results in situations that meet the unique needs of each patient.
Making Effective Use of Information Technologies
Spending 1 hour each day online, I send 800–900 e-mails each month. In my former visit-based model, I would see 400–500 patients each month. Now I see 200 patients each month, in unhurried and more time intensive visits, but I communicate with over 1,000 patients each month. I feel less stressed and my patients receive better care.—Primary care practice
Chapter 7 examines in detail the potential role of information technology in improving quality. Information technology can reduce errors and harm from errors (Bates et al., 1998; Raschke et al., 1998), make up-to-date evidence and decision support systems available at the point of patient care (Berner et al., 1999; Classen, 1998; Evans et al., 1998; Hunt et al., 1998), support research (Blumenthal, 1997), help make quality measurement timely and accurate (Schneider et al., 1999), improve coordination among clinicians, and increase accountability for performance (Blumenthal, 1997; National Committee for Qual- ity Assurance, 2000).
Increasingly, secure Internet and intranet applications are making it possible for clinicians and patients to communicate with one another more easily, for up- to-date evidence about what works to become increasingly accessible, and for clinical data to be shared in a timely fashion (Cushman and Detmer, 1998; Sci- ence Panel on Interactive Communication and Health, 1999). Some organiza- tions have begun to implement Internet applications for their patients for such purposes as obtaining health information, communicating with one another, read- ing information about physicians and staff, and viewing schedules for health education classes (Kaiser Permanente Online, 2000).
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Information technology can provide laboratory results and other findings, as well as tools that help clinicians apply the health literature when making diag- noses and deciding among therapeutic approaches. The validity of the informa- tion used for such decision making is obviously critical. Also important is a user interface that matches clinical workflow, cognitive style, and the time constraints of clinical practice (Kibbe and Bard, 1997b), a need that can be addressed by vendors, experts in medical informatics, and usability experts. The widespread adoption of Web-based browsers to interface with data systems has influenced medical informatics, increasing the likelihood of its acceptance and use in health care settings.
Systems that can access and combine data from many sources should be able to evolve with the uses to which they are put, the changing demands of the health care environment, and advances in technology. Such systems should be able to access all patient data wherever clinical decisions are made. They should be able to access the evidence base and decision supports, such as clinical practice guide- lines. They should provide efficient means of entering orders and retrieving results. They should help practitioners coordinate activities whether they occur in the inpatient, outpatient, home, or other settings.
A handful of health care organizations have made impressive gains in auto- mating clinical information—for example, the health systems of the Department of Veterans Affairs and Intermountain Health Care (in Salt Lake City, Utah)— but overall progress has been slow. Barriers to moving forward include the many policy (e.g., privacy concerns), technical (e.g., data standards), financial (e.g., capital requirements), and human factors (e.g., clinician acceptance) consider- ations discussed in Chapter 7.
Managing Clinical Knowledge and Skills
We have an intranet throughout the system that enables physicians to see the latest guidelines and recommendations about screening and to find out where each of their patients is in this care process.—Health plan–based breast care center
Our protocols for brain edema were going well. However, new literature emerged. One of the neurosurgeons recommended that we revamp the proto- cols to incorporate the new findings. He gathered the evidence, and the first protocol was designed by a team headed by a unit nurse. The protocol was soon standardized, and ownership was created at the physician and nurse level.— Intensive care unit
All surgeons who join the staff, regardless of seniority, start by assisting, then being assisted in 150 cases before being left on their own. If we are not com- pletely confident they have mastered the technique, supervision is extended to another 100 cases. The secret of success is in everyone using the same tech- nique. It decreases complications and is more cost-effective.—Small hospital specializing in two procedures
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If the Respiratory Therapist notes an abnormal lab value, he or she is comfort- able not just taking a blood sample and reporting it, but managing it. The technicians are caregivers. Expectations have changed. They [adjust] therapy to within physiological parameters. They are cross-trained so that they can take on nursing tasks, for example, starting IVs when needed. When fully trained and confident, they may tell an admitting doc that a patient is not ready to have a ventilator tube removed.—Intensive care unit
A key challenge for organizations, requiring a range of competencies, is translating the evidence base into practice. The competencies involved include tracking and disseminating new information, managing the clinical change that helps incorporate new information into practice, and ensuring that health care professionals have the skills they need to make use of new knowledge. All such competencies are interrelated. New information and technologies may require new skills. And new technologies, such as simulation, may enhance skills, such as those involved in performing surgical procedures or managing crises.
As described in greater detail in Chapter 6, the flood of new information that is relevant to practice can no longer be managed adequately by individual clini- cians trying to keep up with the literature and attending conferences or lectures (Davis et al., 1999; Weed, 1999). One new approach to timely management of information involves including clinical librarians as a part of clinical care teams, for example, on morning rounds or on call, to note questions and search the literature for the best and most relevant information (Davidoff and Florance, 2000). Another response is to create easily accessible systematic reviews of the literature, using well-understood criteria for determining the strength of evidence and the generalizability of findings. Such systematic reviews, though important, are only the first stage, however, in disseminating the flow of new knowledge and translating it for use with individual patients. First, clinicians need evidence- based guidelines that make clear which steps are well founded and which are based on expert consensus (Institute of Medicine, 1992). These efforts may occur within practices or larger institutions, or may be developed by external entities such as specialty groups, independent organizations established for the purpose, or governmental groups. Whatever the source of such guidelines, any group that uses them needs to understand their validity and ensure that they are kept up to date.
Ensuring that new knowledge is incorporated into practice also requires a thorough understanding of how change is managed most effectively in health care, including the barriers to and facilitators of change. Knowledge about why guidelines are or are not used is accumulating, and experts now better understand the circumstances in which such strategies as education, administrative changes, incentives, penalties, feedback, and social marketing are likely to be effective (Greco and Eisenberg, 1993; Grol, 1997; Oxman et al., 1995; Solberg et al., 2000; Wensing et al., 1998) and why the translation of research findings to date has been characterized as “slow and haphazard” (Grol and Grimshaw, 1999).
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One strategy for successfully managing change is to design guidelines and implementation processes so that it is easier to apply the best evidence than not to do so. This strategy begins with a systematic review of the evidence, but attends to the creation of clinical guidelines or protocols that match the logic and flow of care. Implementing this strategy also requires agreement on the part of clinicians that they will use the new guidelines and protocols, as well as the resources needed to redesign care processes (despite such resources often being scarce) so that the guidelines and protocols will become an integral and efficiently designed element of the care process.
Health care requires complex, sophisticated judgments and psychomotor skills, perhaps at a level unmatched in any other field. Other industries test judgment and psychomotor skills. In aviation, for example, simulations are used to assess competence and to help pilots improve their judgment and skills. Medi- cine has traditionally relied on cognitive testing of knowledge, not of judgment or skills. The field also relies on privileges granted by hospitals using various levels of rigor to assess professionals’ skills, but such mechanisms do not include test- ing to ensure that those skills are current and have not deteriorated.
Making use of new knowledge may require that health professionals develop new skills or that their roles change. New skills might include basic technical proficiency, for example, in executing a procedure, using equipment, and inter- preting data from new tests and devices. Managing new knowledge may also require the use of new psychosocial skills to elicit behavior change in patients and colleagues. Other new skills might include designing data collection efforts and managing and interpreting quality-of-care information. Finally, incorporat- ing new knowledge requires skilled leadership to engage the participation of health professionals in collaborative teams. Leaders need to devote explicit attention to ensuring that the most appropriate individuals are trained in, maintain competence in, and are supported in their new tasks.
Developing Effective Teams
There has been a radical change since we introduced teams. You can see it even where they hang out. Before the docs were together, the nurses together, etc. But now the team hangs out with the team. At the morning meetings, you may see the medical assistants providing the leadership. The medical director calls it the “fast break”—three people on the floor and anybody can finish the play.—Primary care practice
[The doctors] are worried about managing clinical conditions. They work un- der pressure and stress and try to find a way to control it. They all claim that “my patients are sicker.” I reply, “Give me your sickest patients—those with congestive heart failure, the ones on coumadin, patients with diabetes, hyper- tension, the old, sick people, anyone who seems to require more than the aver- age resources and time.” When they ask why I would say this, I reply, “Be-
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cause I will enlist help, resources—clinical pathways, care managers.” We provide these resources to the practice and should never charge [or penalize] the doctors for this help. Doctors have not learned yet how to enhance the team with other kinds of providers—health education, behavioral medicine, physical therapy, pharmacy.—Primary care practice
Organized work groups, or multidisciplinary teams, have become a common way to organize health care, and considerable attention has been focused on their value and functioning. Such teams are found in primary care practice, in the focused care of patients with chronic conditions, in critical acute care (the inten- sive care unit, trauma units, operating rooms), and in geriatrics and care at the end of life. In such settings, smooth team functioning is needed because of the increasing complexity of care, the demands of new technology, and the need to coordinate multiple patient needs (Fried et al., 2000). Nonphysician team mem- bers may increase efficiency (e.g., drawing blood, giving immunizations); substi- tute for physicians (e.g., care for patients with simple, well-defined problems); and complement physicians (Starfield, 1992) by filling roles that physicians may not perform well or may be reluctant to undertake, such as counseling about behavior change or performing highly technical diagnostic tests. Such distribu- tions of roles and tasks change dramatically over time. Many tasks, such as monitoring and adjusting equipment for an ill newborn after hospital discharge, have been taken over by family members and patients themselves (Hart, 1995; Lorig et al., 1993, 1999; Von Korff et al., 1997).
An IOM study of small work teams at the front lines of patient care (Donald- son and Mohr, 2000) included asking practitioners and staff who worked together on a daily basis about that experience. Respondents cited the importance of collaborative work both for clinical care and for improvement efforts. They emphasized the need to base quality improvement work within the team and to recognize the contributions that all members of the group could make, with various individuals taking leadership roles for specific improvement activities. They also described new or expanded roles and the need for coaching and train- ing new members of the team in their work relationships.
Effective working teams must be created and maintained. Yet members of teams are typically trained in separate disciplines and educational programs, leaving them unprepared to enter practice in complex collaborative settings. They may not appreciate each other’s strengths or recognize weaknesses except in crises, and they may not have been trained together to use established or new technologies (Institute of Medicine, 2000). An enormous amount of knowledge has been accumulated about team creation and management, including effective communication among team members (Fried et al., 2000). In commercial avia- tion, for example, emphasis is placed on crew resource management because of its importance to airline safety, and communication among flight personnel has become a special focus of proficiency checks by certified examiners (e.g., during simulated emergencies).
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Considerable research has gone into identifying the characteristics of effec- tive teams (Fried et al., 2000). These characteristics include (1) team makeup, such as having the appropriate size and composition and the ability to reduce negative effects of status differences between, for example, physicians and nurses; (2) team processes, such as communication structures, conflict management, and leadership that emphasizes excellence and conveys clear goals and expectations; (3) the nature of the team’s tasks, such as matching roles and training to the level of complexity and promoting cohesiveness when work is highly interdependent; and (4) the environmental context, such as obtaining needed resources and estab- lishing appropriate rewards. Effective teams have a culture that fosters openness, collaboration, teamwork, and learning from mistakes. Shortell et al. (1994) have demonstrated a significant relationship between better interaction among team members in intensive care units and decreased risk-adjusted length of stay. Such interaction includes the dimensions of culture, leadership, communication, coor- dination, problem solving, and conflict management.
Research on team interactions has also demonstrated that teams often fall short of the expectations of their clinical leaders, members, and administrative managers (Pearson and Jones, 1994). One reason is that medical education emphasizes hierarchy and the importance of assuming individual responsibility for decision making. An emphasis on personal accountability comes at the price of losing the contribution of others who may bring added insight and relevant information, whatever their formal credentials. Acculturation to medical roles makes it difficult for members of a team to point out or admit to safety problems and thereby prevent harm. Indeed, challenges to those in positions of power and authority by nurses, physicians in training, and others is notoriously difficult and discouraged (Helmreich, 2000; Institute of Medicine, 2000). Avoiding overt hostility over a slip or lapse and acknowledging shared knowledge and profi- ciency when recovering from unexpected patient events (Helmreich, 2000) are examples of how strong collaborative working relationships can improve patient safety.
In health care environments characterized by uncertainty, instability, and variability (such as operating rooms and intensive care units), high levels of stress are common (Mark and Hagenmueller, 1994; Perrow, 1967). Other envi- ronments do not have the level of instability and uncertainty associated with critical care units and operating suites, yet the complexity of patients’ needs still necessitates highly effective coordination of resources across a spectrum of set- tings, disciplines, and the community. An example is the care of frail elderly patients, in which the ability to coordinate care and assemble effectively func- tioning health care teams is paramount, and flexibility in role functioning may be key.
In Chapter 3, new rule 10 emphasizes the importance of collaboration for effective team functioning. What is sometimes thought to be collaboration, how- ever, may in fact be uncoordinated or sequential action rather than collaborative
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work. That is, the work of each individual may be efficient from the perspective of his or her own tasks, but overall the efforts are suboptimal and do not serve the needs of patients. An example of suboptimization may occur when an elderly woman breaks her hip and comes to the emergency department. She may spend several hours receiving x-rays and being stabilized and will certainly need to be admitted. At the end of this time, someone may call to notify the nursing staff that the patient is being admitted, and several hours more may elapse while admission orders are written and the patient’s room is made available. When emergency department and floor staff collaborate, notification is given immedi- ately after the patient arrives in the emergency department so that the admission process can begin, and the patient can go from the emergency department directly to her hospital room, where she will be much more comfortable. In such cases and in many others, running parallel processes reduces delays and improves outcomes (Nugent et al., 1999).
Coordinating Care Across Patient Conditions, Services, and Settings Over Time
That is fundamental to what is important to me—that the focus be on the indi- vidual—a complex person—and you try to do the best you can for them. It seems odd to say, but that is what is fun. We did focus groups with families and learned key things that are important: (1) the organization and delivery of care, (2) shared medical decision making, (3) treating each person as an individual, and (4) attending to those who care for and love the dying person. The building blocks to accomplish this are information and education of the patient and family, coordination, and continuity.—Hospice
Another key challenge for organizations is coordination (or clinical integra- tion) of work across services that are complementary, such as emergency re- sponse units, emergency departments, and operating suites, or across primary care practices, specialty practices, and laboratories to which patients are referred. Clinical integration can be defined as “the extent to which patient care services are coordinated across people, functions, activities, and sites over time so as to maximize the value of services delivered to patients” (Shortell et al., 2000a). In particular, coordination encompasses a set of practitioner behaviors and informa- tion systems intended to bring together health services, patient needs, and streams of information to facilitate the aims of care set forth in Chapter 2. For example, coordination may involve ensuring that treating physicians are informed about diagnostic results, therapies attempted during an earlier hospital admission, and the effectiveness of those efforts. Coordination may involve nurse case managers transmitting information to both primary and specialty care practitioners about a patient’s unmet needs. Such coordination may be facilitated as well by proce- dures for engaging community resources (such as social and public health ser-
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vices) and other sites of care (such as hospice or home care) when and as appropriate.
Coordination of care across clinicians and settings has been shown to result in greater efficiency and better clinical outcomes (Aiken et al., 1997; Gittell et al., 2000; Knaus et al., 1986; Shortell et al., 1994, 2000a, 2000b). Optimizing care for a patient with a complex chronic condition is challenging enough, but opti- mizing care for patients with several chronic conditions and acute episodes, as well as meeting health maintenance needs, represents an extraordinary challenge for today’s health care systems (MacLean et al., 2000; Shortell et al., 2000a). The challenges arise at many organizational levels and across the full range of tasks, including the design, dissemination, implementation, and modification of care processes and the payment for these tasks. What is important to patients and their families is that effective systems for transferring patient-related information be in place so that the information is accurate and available when needed. Patients and their families need to know who is responsible for decisions and can answer questions, and to be assured that gaps in responsibility will not occur.
Some problems—such as substance abuse, AIDS, and domestic violence— are so interrelated that they appear to require a comprehensive rather than prob- lem-by-problem approach (Shortell et al., 2000a). Other problems require as- sembling and making the best use of an array of resources, such as the numerous federal programs that might be involved in obtaining and paying for a wheelchair for a child with special needs. In any case, if care is to move beyond single solutions crafted by individual clinicians (as in the Stage 1 delivery of care described earlier in this chapter), it will require an accurate understanding of patient needs so that standard processes can be provided and individual solutions crafted as appropriate. Newly developed infrastructures, information technolo- gies, and well-thought-out and -implemented modes of communication can re- duce the need to craft laborious, case-by-case strategies for coordinating patient care. A variety of other mechanisms can improve coordination, such as involving a combination of individuals (e.g., clinicians, members of multidisciplinary teams, care managers), along with patients and their families.
Some patients and their families become so expert in their condition that they choose to coordinate care for themselves or a family member. Those who do so are likely to need new skills in accessing information and new technologies for structuring and conveying information to others who are involved in their care. For example, patients can contribute to flow sheets, respond to questions about changes in health status, or upload data from micromonitoring devices worn on the body or from home monitoring devices. Not all patients or their families (or perhaps even most) will choose or be able to become central actors in coordinat- ing their own care, however. In such cases, appropriate mechanisms within the delivery system must be available to meet this responsibility.
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One means of improving coordination is based on what are sometimes called clinical pathways. These blueprints for care set forth a set of services needed for patients with a given health problem and the sequence in which they should take place. For some conditions, a set of clearly identified processes should occur. In complex adaptive systems such as health care, however, few patient care pro- cesses are linear (such as the transition from hospital to nursing home). Rather, most organizational processes are reciprocal and interdependent (Thompson, 1967), and coordination requires the design of procedures that are responsive both to variations among individual patients and to unexpected occurrences.
Incorporating Performance and Outcome Measurements for Improvement and Accountability
We have a Clinical Roadmap team for breast cancer screening. The team has formulated four criteria for success that include process and outcome measures. They are (1) the proportion of women in our population who have received care in the last 2 years; (2) the number of women who came to the screening pro- gram when invited; (3) the number of women in the program who develop a late stage disease; and (4) survey responses during the time of enrollment in the program. These criteria give us specific as well as broad measures of suc- cess.—Breast care center
We have a clinical “instrument panel.” We measure cycle time, patient satis- faction, phone calls (incoming and outgoing), proportion reaching treatment goals for hypertension, operating costs per visit, proportion of patients seeing their provider of choice, available appointments, team morale, practice size, and proportion of pap smears in eligible women.—Primary care practice
The main outcome measure is risk adjusted mortality. We compare ourselves quarterly to similar institutions for observed versus predicted mortality on one axis and resource consumption on the other. Using 50 percent random sam- pling, we track mortality, admission and discharge rates, length of stay, number of patients readmitted to the ICU, and reintubation rates. This helps us know if changes that affect efficiency are affecting quality of care. Although our ad- missions are up, length of stay is down significantly, and our reintubation rate is very low.—Critical care unit
Although we generally think of individuals as learning and enhancing their capabilities, it is also possible to think of an organization as learning—increasing its competence and responsiveness and improving its work (Davies and Nutley, 2000). The committee believes moving toward the health system of the 21st century will require that health care organizations successfully address the chal- lenge of becoming learning organizations. A decade ago, Senge and others (Argyris and Schön, 1978; Senge, 1990) described such organizations as those that can learn quickly and accurately about their environment and translate this learning to the work they do. This idea has been incorporated in the work of
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many companies, most outside of health care—such as 3M, Boeing, the Cadillac Division of General Motors, Fedex, Motorola, and Xerox—whose drive to re- duce defects and improve quality and customer service has been recognized by the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award (National Institute of Standards and Technology, 2000b).
In Senge’s terminology, “single-loop” learning results in incremental im- provements in existing practice. In health care it might involve efforts to de- crease waiting time for follow-up appointments for patients who have an abnor- mal laboratory test result. Another feature of learning organizations is their reexamination of mental models or assumptions on which they base their work, giving rise to “double-loop” learning. An example of double-loop learning is rethinking and reorganizing all ancillary and specialty medical services for women in a breast care center to eliminate any waiting between reporting of abnormal mammographic findings, definitive diagnosis, and therapy.
A critical feature of learning organizations is the ability to be aware of their own “behavior.” In organizational terms, this means having data that allow the organization to track what has happened and what needs to happen—in other words, to assess its performance and use that information to improve. The committee is convinced that a major tool for accomplishing this critical function is the investment in and use of an effective information infrastructure to develop a balanced set of measures on, for example, clinical and financial performance, patient health outcomes, and satisfaction with care (Nelson et al., 1996). It is important that such measures be balanced—that they include a variety of mea- sures so that when changes are made in processes, such as to increase efficiency, other outcomes, such as patient health, are not adversely affected.
Clinical practices that participated in the IOM study of exemplary practices (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000) described how routine measurement has become part of their production process. Ideally, such measures can be aggregated for external reporting, whether to support contract discussions or to help patients make choices about where and from whom to seek care. Building measurement into the production process can counter the perception on the part of many health care leaders that reporting is a burden. Such a perception results when organiza- tions must respond to numerous demands from external groups for quality mea- sures, especially if those measures lack specificity or relevance to the clinical teams that must generate them.
Measures need not involve expensive, large-scale, long-term evaluation projects to be useful. New methods that use sampling and small-scale rapid-cycle testing, modification, and retesting are proving useful in dynamic settings such as patient care units (Berwick, 1996; Langley et al., 1996). As other world-class businesses have learned, including American industry giants (Walton and Dem- ing, 1986), attention to improving quality includes continuous monitoring, often based on small samples of events, that can provide organizations with timely data at the front lines to manage the processes of concern (James, 1989; Rainey et al.,
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1998; Scholtes, 1988). In the IOM study of exemplary practices, several health care teams described their use of such methods to manage their care processes (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000).
It’s an incredible relief to try small changes on a small scale. It’s so simple it’s brilliant. We had been managing indigent diabetic patients for years and didn’t think we could do any better. The providers believed that these people are so hard. But the patients responded to the changes we made. You have to craft something that is doable. You have to look for the simplicity in complex things.—Diabetic management group for underserved minorities
We have embraced the concept of “real-time tracking.” We have developed a “radar screen” that has 8 simultaneous processes continuously monitored. We get information on the census in the ER, the status of the patients, the x-ray cycle, etc. We know where in the process not only the patient is, but where the system is. Each process measured is summarized on the screen by graphs. All we have to do to obtain data is touch the screen. The graphs are equipped with goal lines that are based on customer satisfaction, for example waiting time.— Community based emergency department
The key word to describe a micro-system is homeostasis. A micro-system is always changing and adapting, just like the human body. We have identified the “pathophysiology” of a micro-system. It is powerful, yet very predictable. Think about two downstream processes, x-ray cycle time and getting patients to the floor. If the downstream [processes] get out of control, there are predictable changes in the system. Occupancy in the ER goes up, the number of new patients seen in the ER goes down, the number of free beds in the ER goes down, and the cycle time between a patient’s arrival to a bed goes up. Eventu- ally, every measurement goes up. When we obtain three consecutive 15-minute intervals going the wrong way, we realize that something needs to be done.— Community based Emergency Department.
LEADERSHIP FOR MANAGING CHANGE
The role of leaders is to define and communicate the purpose of the organi- zation clearly and establish the work of practice teams as being of highest strate- gic importance. Leaders must be responsible for creating and articulating the organization’s vision and goals, listening to the needs and aspirations of those working on the front lines, providing direction, creating incentives for change, aligning and integrating improvement efforts, and creating a supportive environ- ment and a culture of continuous improvement that encourage and enable suc- cess.
Learning organizations need leadership at many levels that can provide clear strategic and sustained direction and a coherent set of values and incentives to guide group and individual actions. The first criterion of performance excellence for health care organizations listed by the Baldrige National Quality Program is
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the provision of “a patient focus, clear and visible values, and high expectations” by the organization’s senior leaders (National Institute of Standards and Technol- ogy, 2000a). Indeed, strong management leadership in hospitals is positively associated with greater clinical involvement in quality improvement (Weiner et al., 1996, 1997).
Leaders of health care organizations may need to provide an environment for innovation that allows for new and more flexible roles and responsibilities for health care workers; and supports the accomplishments of innovators despite regulatory, legal, financial, and sometimes interprofessional conflict (Donaldson and Mohr, 2000). Leaders need to provide such an environment because the learning, adaptation, and incorporation of best practices needed to effect engi- neering changes requires energy that is scarce in a demanding and rapidly chang- ing environment.
At the level of front-line teams, leaders should encourage the members of the team to engage in deliberate inquiry—using their own observations and ideas to improve safety and quality. The individual who serves as leader may not be constant over time or across innovative efforts, or be associated with a particular discipline, such as medicine. What is important is for the leader to understand how units relate to each other—a form of systems thinking—and to facilitate the transfer of learning across units and practices.
Leaders of health care organizations must fill a number of specific roles. First, they must identify and prioritize community health needs and support the organization’s ability to meet these needs. Addressing community needs might involve collaboration with other community or health care organizations and the creation of new services. Examples include providing CPR training for a major employer and identifying and alerting the community to patterns of injury, such as the number of children with head injuries from bicycle accidents, or a newly appearing occupational illness. Other examples include addressing the more complex needs for coordinated local social and health services presented by low- income ill elderly individuals or the need for more accessible substance abuse treatment facilities. Leaders of organizations can support accountability to indi- vidual patients while also assuming responsibility for accountability to public bodies and the community at large for the populations they serve.
Second, leaders can help obtain resources and respond to changes in the health care environment, which have been rapid and unrelenting. Leaders must ensure that their organization has the ability to change. Yet many leaders now view their role as shielding and protecting the organization from environmental pressures that may require them to change. Leadership should support innova- tion and provide a forum so that individuals can continuously learn from each other. Organizations must invest in innovation and redesign.
Third, and perhaps the most difficult leadership role, is to optimize the performance of teams that provide various services in pursuit of a shared set of
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aims. In any complex organization, there is danger in supporting some clinical services (perhaps those that are most profitable) to the detriment of the whole system. Leaders must strive to align the strategic priorities of their organization, its resources (financial and human), and support mechanisms (e.g., information systems). Balancing these elements can be extremely difficult and requires lead- ers to have a performance measurement capability that includes measures of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.
Fourth, leaders can support reward and recognition systems that are consis- tent with and supportive of the new rules set forth in Chapter 3 and that facilitate coordination of work across sets of services as necessary. Organizations should support an environment in which incentives to provide effective care are not distorted before they reach caregivers. An example of distortion is a payment system based solely on the numbers of home care visits made by a visiting nurse per day. This sort of productivity measure prevents nurses from focusing on patient needs. A system based on effectively caring for a given number of patients recognizes that a predictable mix of needs will occur over a period of time, and can encourage small teams to organize themselves to meet those needs. Such decision making can be very difficult, especially in the current economic environment and payment system (see Chapter 8).
Fifth, leaders need to invest in their workforce to help them achieve their full potential, both individually and as a team, in serving their patients. The resulting interpersonal and technical competence can produce the synergies and improved outcomes that emerge from collaborative work.
Although the leadership roles described are not novel, the orientation toward facilitating the work of health care teams represents a fundamental shift in per- spective. The new rules set forth in Chapter 3 and the engineering principles described in this chapter will require strong and visible leadership with corre- sponding reward structures. All organizations must overcome their inherent resistance to change. It is role of leaders to surmount these barriers by visibly promoting the need for improvement, becoming role models for the required new behaviors, providing the necessary resources, and aligning recognition and re- ward systems in support of improvement goals. Leadership’s role in promoting innovation, gathering feedback, and recognizing progress is essential to success- ful and sustained improvement.
Finally, leaders must recognize the interdependence of changes at all levels of the organization—individual, group or team, organizational, and interorganiza- tional—in addressing the six challenges discussed in this chapter. For example, providing additional training in error correction or technical skill development to individuals without recognizing that they work as part of a team will have little impact. Similarly, working to develop more effective teams without recognizing that they are part of a complex organization with frequently misaligned incen- tives will have little effect on improving quality. Likewise, trying to redesign organizational structures and incentives and revise organizational cultures with-
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out taking into account the specific needs of teams and individuals is likely to be an exercise in frustration. And attempting to make changes at any of these levels without recognizing the larger interorganizational networks that include other providers, payers, and legal and regulatory bodies (as discussed in subsequent chapters) is likely to result in the waste of well-intended plans and energy.
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6
Applying Evidence to Health Care Delivery
Substantial investments have been made in clinical research and develop- ment over the last 30 years, resulting in an enormous increase in the medical knowledge base and the availability of many more drugs and devices. Unfortu- nately, Americans are not reaping the full benefit of these investments. The lag between the discovery of more efficacious forms of treatment and their incorpo- ration into routine patient care is unnecessarily long, in the range of about 15 to 20 years (Balas and Boren, 2000). Even then, adherence of clinical practice to the evidence is highly uneven.
A far more effective infrastructure is needed to apply evidence to health care delivery. Greater emphasis should be placed on systematic approaches to analyz- ing and synthesizing medical evidence for both clinicians and patients. Many promising private- and public-sector efforts now under way, including the Cochrane Collaboration, the ACP Journal Club, and the Evidence-Based Practice Centers supported by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, represent excellent models and building blocks for a more comprehensive effort. Yet synthesizing the evidence is only the first step in making knowledge more usable by both clinicians and patients. Many efforts to develop clinical practice guide- lines, defined as “systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate health care for specific clinical circum- stances,” flourished during the 1980s and early 1990s (Institute of Medicine, 1992). Although the translation of evidence into clinical practice guidelines is an important first step, however, the dissemination of guidelines alone has not been a very effective method of improving clinical practice (Cabana et al., 1999).
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Far more sophisticated clinical decision support systems will be needed to assist clinicians and patients in selecting the best treatment options and delivering safe and effective care. Certain types of clinical decision support applications, most notably preventive service reminder systems and drug dosing systems, have been demonstrated to improve clinical decisions and should be adopted on a widespread basis (Balas et al., 2000; Bates et al., 1999). More complex applica- tions, such as computer-aided diagnosis, are in earlier stages of development (Kassirer, 1994), but the potential for these systems to contribute to evidence- based practice and consumer-oriented care is great.
The spread of the Internet has opened up many new opportunities to make medical evidence more accessible to clinicians and consumers. The efforts of the National Library of Medicine to facilitate access to the medical literature by both consumers and health care professionals and to design Web sites that organize large amounts of information on particular health needs are particularly promis- ing (Lindberg and Humphreys, 1999).
The development of a more effective infrastructure to synthesize and orga- nize evidence around priority conditions and to improve clinician and consumer access to the evidence base through the Internet offers new opportunities to enhance quality measurement and reporting. A stronger and more organized evidence base should facilitate the development of valid and reliable quality measures for priority conditions that can be used for both internal quality im- provement and external accountability. Broad-based involvement of private- and public-sector groups and strong leadership from within the medical and other health professions are critical to ensuring the success of this effort.
Recommendation 8: The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services should be given the responsibility and neces- sary resources to establish and maintain a comprehensive program aimed at making scientific evidence more useful and accessible to clinicians and patients. In developing this program, the Secretary should work with federal agencies and in collaboration with profes- sional and health care associations, the academic and research com- munities, and the National Quality Forum and other organizations involved in quality measurement and accountability.
The infrastructure developed through this public- and private-sector partner- ship should focus initially on priority conditions (see Chapter 4, Recommenda- tion 5). Its activities should include the following:
• Ongoing analysis and synthesis of the medical evidence • Delineation of specific practice guidelines • Enhanced dissemination efforts to communicate evidence and guidelines
to the general public and professional communities
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• Development of decision support tools to assist clinicians and patients in applying the evidence
• Identification of best practices in the design of care processes • Development of quality measures for priority conditions
It is critical that leadership from the private sector, both professional and other health care leaders and consumer representatives, be involved in all aspects of this effort to ensure its applicability and acceptability to clinicians and patients.
BACKGROUND
Early definitions of evidence-based medicine or practice emphasized the “conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients” (Sackett et al., 1996). In response to concerns that this definition failed to recognize the importance of other factors in making clinical decisions, more recent definitions explicitly incorporate clini- cal expertise and patient values into the decision-making process (Lohr et al., 1998). Contemporary definitions also clarify that “evidence” is intended to refer not only to randomized controlled trials, the “gold standard,” but also to other types of systematically acquired information.
For purposes of this report, the following definition of evidence-based prac- tice, adapted from Sackett et al. (2000), is used:
Evidence-based practice is the integration of best research evidence with clini- cal expertise and patient values. Best research evidence refers to clinically relevant research, often from the basic health and medical sciences, but espe- cially from patient-centered clinical research into the accuracy and precision of diagnostic tests (including the clinical examination); the power of prognostic markers; and the efficacy and safety of therapeutic, rehabilitative, and preven- tive regimens. Clinical expertise means the ability to use clinical skills and past experience to rapidly identify each patient’s unique health state and diagnosis, individual risks and benefits of potential interventions, and personal values and expectations. Patient values refers to the unique preferences, concerns, and expectations that each patient brings to a clinical encounter and that must be integrated into clinical decisions if they are to serve the patient.
Evidence-based practice is not a new concept. One of its earliest proponents was Archie Cochrane, a British epidemiologist who wrote extensively in the 1950s and 1960s about the importance of conducting randomized controlled trials to upgrade the quality of medical evidence (Mechanic, 1998).
Evidence has always contributed to clinical decision making, but the stan- dards for evidence have become more stringent, and the tools for its assembly and analysis have become more powerful and widely available (Davidoff, 1999). Prior to 1950, clinical evidence consisted of case reports, whereas during the latter half of the 20th century, results of about 131,000 randomized controlled
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trials of medical interventions were published. Study designs and methods of analysis have also become more sophisticated, and now include decision analy- sis, systematic review of the literature, meta-analysis, and cost-effectiveness analysis.
Prior to 1990, efforts to incorporate evidence-based decision making into practice encouraged clinicians to follow four steps. According to this approach, when a patient presents a problem for which the decision is not apparent, the clinician should (1) formulate a clear clinical question from that problem, (2) search for the relevant information from the best possible published or unpub- lished sources, (3) evaluate that evidence for its validity and usefulness, and (4) implement the appropriate findings (Davidoff, 1999).
During the last decade, it has become apparent that this strategy of training and encouraging clinicians to independently find, appraise, and apply the best evidence will not alone lead to major improvements in practice (Guyatt et al., 2000; McColl et al., 1998). The relevant information is widely scattered across the medical literature and of varying quality in terms of methodological rigor (Davidoff, 1999). Advanced study is required to master and apply state-of-the- art approaches to analysis of the literature. The demands and rigors of clinical practice do not allow clinicians the time required to undertake this process on a regular basis. Some have proposed a greater role for specially trained clinical librarians to assist clinicians in framing clinical questions and identifying the relevant literature (Davidoff and Florance, 2000). Many efforts are also under way to make it easier for clinicians and patients to access and interpret the findings of the literature.
SYNTHESIZING CLINICAL EVIDENCE
The most common approaches to synthesizing and integrating the results of primary studies are the conduct of systematic reviews and the development of evidence-based practice guidelines. Interest in applying both techniques has increased dramatically in the last 15 years (Chalmers and Haynes, 1994; Chalmers and Lau, 1993).
Systematic Reviews
Systematic reviews are scientific investigations that synthesize the results of multiple primary investigations. Conduct of a systematic review to answer a specific clinical question generally involves four steps (Cook et al., 1997):
• Conduct of a comprehensive search of potentially relevant articles using explicit, reproducible criteria in the selection of articles for review
• Critical appraisal of the scientific soundness of the research designs of the primary studies, including the selection of patients, sample size, and methods of accounting for confounding variables (Cook et al., 1997; Lohr and Carey, 1999)
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• Synthesis of data • Interpretation of results
There are two types of systematic reviews—qualitative and quantitative (Cook et al., 1997). In a qualitative review, the results of primary studies are summarized but not statistically combined. Quantitative reviews, sometimes called meta-analyses, use statistical methods to combine the data and results of two or more studies.
When applied properly, meta-analysis can be a powerful tool for reaching a decision about the efficacy of alternative treatments in a more timely fashion than is possible through the qualitative review of individual studies. A classic ex- ample is the case of the efficacy of thrombolysis in treating myocardial infarction (Davidoff, 1999). In a review of 33 randomized controlled trials published between 1959 and 1988 that examined the efficacy of thrombolysis in reducing acute mortality, it was found that most studies “suggested” some benefit of therapy; however, the outcomes varied considerably from one study to another, and for the most part, the studies did not achieve statistical significance (Lau et al., 1992). But through the use of meta-analysis techniques to combine the results of multiple studies (thus increasing the statistical power), it was possible to demonstrate by 1973 that the therapeutic efficacy of thrombolysis was statisti- cally significant at the 0.05 level. Unfortunately, some medical textbooks in the early 1990s still contained statements that thrombolysis was an unproven therapy (Davidoff, 1999).
Systematic reviews are highly variable in their methodological rigor. In a critical evaluation of 50 articles describing a systematic review or meta-analysis of the treatment of asthma, for example, Jadad et al. (2000b) concluded that 40 publications had serious or extensive flaws. Reviews conducted by the Cochrane Collaboration, discussed below, were found to be far more rigorous than those published in peer-reviewed journals.
Two organized efforts are directed at conducting systematic reviews or meta- analyses. The first, the Cochrane Collaboration, was started in 1992 in Oxford, England. The second, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Evi- dence-Based Practice Centers program, started in 1997 and has resulted in the establishment of 12 centers, located mainly in universities, medical centers, and private research centers, that produce evidence-based reports on specific topics (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000b).
The Cochrane Collaboration is an international network of health care pro- fessionals, researchers, and consumers that develops and maintains regularly updated reviews of evidence from randomized controlled trials and other re- search studies (Cochrane Collaboration, 1999). It currently comprises about 50 Collaborative Review Groups, which produce systematic reviews of various pre- vention and health care issues. The Collaboration maintains the Cochrane Li- brary, a collection of several databases that is updated quarterly and distributed
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annually to subscribers on disk, on CD-ROM, and via the Internet. One of the databases, The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, contains Cochrane reviews, and another, The Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, is a bibliographic database of controlled trials. The Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effective- ness includes structured abstracts of systematic reviews that have been critically appraised by the National Health Services Centre for Reviews and Dissemination in York, England; the American College of Physicians’ Journal Club; and the journal Evidence-Based Medicine. The library also includes a registry of biblio- graphic information on nearly 160,000 controlled trials that provide high-quality evidence on health care outcomes.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s 12 Evidence-Based Prac- tice Centers conduct systematic, comprehensive analyses and syntheses of the scientific literature on clinical conditions/problems that are common, account for a sizable proportion of resources, and are significant for the Medicare or Medic- aid populations (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000b). The centers include universities (Duke University, The Johns Hopkins University, McMaster University, Oregon Health Sciences University, the University of Cali- fornia at San Francisco, and Stanford University); research organizations (Meta- Works, the Research Triangle Institute, and the RAND Corporation); and health care organizations and associations (New England Medical Center, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association). Since December 1998, evidence reports have been released on the following topics: sleep apnea, traumatic brain injury, alcohol dependence, cervical cytology, urinary tract infection, depression, dysphagia, sinusitis, testosterone suppression, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, and atrial fibrillation (Eisenberg, 2000a).
In response to the rapid increase in the volume of and interest in systematic reviews generated by the Cochrane Collaboration, the Evidence-Based Practice Centers, and many other smaller-scale efforts, numerous journals specializing in evidence-based publications have emerged. The first journal devoted exclusively to systematic reviews and meta-analyses was the ACP Journal Club, first pub- lished in 1991. There are now a number of evidence-based journals, including Evidence-Based Medicine, Journal of Evidence-Based Health Care, Evidence- Based Cardiovascular Medicine, Evidence-Based Mental Health, and Evidence- Based Nursing, as well as numerous “best-evidence” departments in other jour- nals (Sackett et al., 2000).
One of the most recent evidence-based resources is Clinical Evidence, an “evidence formulary” resulting from a collaborative effort of the British Medical Journal and the American College of Physicians (Godlee et al., 1999). Clinical Evidence is noteworthy because of its focus and organization around common conditions. First published in June 1999, it includes summaries on the prevention and treatment of about 70 such conditions. The summaries are based on system- atic reviews and, when these are lacking, individual randomized controlled trials.
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Clinical Evidence will be updated periodically, and eventually will lead to a family of products available in electronic and print form.
Practice Guidelines
Clinical practice guidelines can be defined as “systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate health care for specific clinical circumstances” (Institute of Medicine, 1992). Guide- lines build on syntheses of the evidence, but go one step further to provide formal conclusions or recommendations about appropriate and necessary care for spe- cific types of patients (Lohr et al., 1998). As a practical tool to influence practice, guidelines have been used in continuing medical education and clinical practice, as well as to make decisions about benefits coverage and medical necessity.
Guidelines have proliferated at a rapid pace during the last decade. During the early 1990s, the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (now the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality) sponsored an ambitious program for guideline development, which led to the specification of about 20 guidelines across a wide variety of clinical areas (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2000a; Perfetto and Stockwell Morris, 1996). The efforts in this area were eventually curtailed in favor of establishing the Evidence-Based Practice Centers in partnership with private-sector organizations (Lohr et al., 1998). Spe- cialty societies, professional groups, health plans, medical centers, utilization review organizations, and others have also developed many practice guidelines.
Guidelines vary greatly in the degree to which they are derived from and consistent with the evidence base, for several reasons. First, as noted above, there is much variability in the quality of systematic reviews, which are the foundation for guidelines. Second, guideline development generally relies on expert panels to arrive at specific clinical conclusions. Judgment must be exer- cised in this process because the evidence base is sometimes weak or conflicting, or lacking in the specificity needed to develop recommendations useful for mak- ing decisions about individual patients in particular settings (Lohr et al., 1998).
In an effort to organize information on practice guidelines and to identify those having an adequate evidence base, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, in partnership with the American Medical Association and the American Association of Health Plans, has developed a National Guideline Clearinghouse, which became fully operational in 1999 (Eisenberg, 2000a). The Clearinghouse provides online access to a large and growing repository of evidence-based prac- tice guidelines.
Developing and disseminating practice guidelines alone has minimal effect on clinical practice (Cabana et al., 1999; Hayward, 1997; Lomas et al., 1989; Woolf, 1993). But a growing body of evidence indicates that guidelines imple- mented with patient-specific feedback and/or computer-generated reminders lead to significant improvements (Dowie, 1998; Grimshaw and Russell, 1993). More
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recent literature in this area also recognizes the importance of breaking down cultural, financial, organizational, and other barriers, both internal and external to health care organizations, to achieve widespread compliance with evidence-based guidelines (Solberg et al., 2000). To this end, up-front involvement of leaders from the health professions and representatives of patients in the guideline devel- opment process would likely help to ensure widespread adoption of the guide- lines developed.
USING COMPUTER-BASED CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEMS
Until now, we have believed that the best way to transmit knowledge from its source to its use in patient care is to first load the knowledge into human minds . . . and then expect those minds, at great expense, to apply the knowledge to those who need it. However, there are enormous ‘voltage drops’ along this transmission line for medical knowledge.—Lawrence Weed, 1997
A clinical decision support system (CDSS) is defined as software that inte- grates information on the characteristics of individual patients with a computer- ized knowledge base for the purpose of generating patient-specific assessments or recommendations designed to aid clinicians and/or patients in making clinical decisions.1 Work on such systems has been under way for decades with minimal impact on health care delivery. Interest in CDSSs has grown dramatically during the last decade, however, in part because of the promise such systems hold for assisting clinicians and patients in applying science to practice.
Publications reporting the results of clinical trials evaluating the effective- ness of CDSSs have also increased in number and quality in recent years. In a systematic review of controlled clinical trials assessing the effects of CDSSs on physician performance and patient outcomes, Hunt and colleagues identified 68 publications during the period 1974 through 1998, with 40 of these having been published in the most recent 6-year period (Hunt et al., 1998; Johnston et al., 1994).
CDSS applications assist clinicians and patients with three types of clinical decisions: preventive and monitoring tasks, prescribing of drugs, and diagnosis and management. Applications in the first category and most applications to date in the second category deal with less complex and frequently occurring clinical decisions. The software required to assist clinicians and patients with these types of decisions can be constructed using relatively simple rule-based logic, often based on practice guidelines (Delaney et al., 1999; Shea et al., 1996). Applica- tions in the third category are far more complex and require more comprehensive
1This definition is adapted from a physician-oriented definition developed by Hunt et al., 1998.
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patient-specific data, access to a much larger repository of up-to-date clinical knowledge, and more sophisticated probabilistic mathematical models.
Use of a CDSS for prevention and monitoring purposes has been shown to improve compliance with guidelines in many clinical areas. In a meta-analysis of 16 randomized controlled trials, computer reminders were found to improve preventive practices for vaccinations, breast cancer screening, colorectal cancer screening, and cardiovascular risk reduction, but not for cervical cancer screen- ing or other preventive services (e.g., glaucoma screening, TB skin test) (Shea et al., 1996). In another meta-analysis of 33 studies of the effect of prompting clinicians, 25 of which used computer-generated prompts, the technique was found to enhance performance significantly in all 16 preventive care procedures studied (Balas et al., 2000). Computer-generated reminder systems targeting patients have also been shown to be effective (Balas et al., 2000; McDowell et al., 1986, 1989).
Computerized prescribing of drugs offers great potential benefit in such areas as dosing calculations and scheduling, drug selection, screening for interac- tions, and monitoring and documentation of adverse side effects (Schiff and Rucker, 1998). Many studies have been conducted on the use of CDSSs to improve drug dosing, and most (9 out of 15) show some positive effect (Hunt et al., 1998). The use of CDSSs for drug selection, screening for interactions, and monitoring and documentation of adverse side effects is far more limited because these applications generally require the linkage of more comprehensive patient- specific clinical information with the medication knowledge base. Although comprehensive medication order entry systems have been implemented in only a limited number of health care settings, the results of several recent studies have demonstrated that these systems reduce medical errors and costs (Bates et al., 1997, 1998, 1999). Computer-assisted disease management programs in areas in which decision making about medications is complex, such as the use of antibi- otic and anti-infective agents, also have been shown to have a positive impact on quality and cost reduction (Classen et al., 1992; Evans et al., 1998).
The third category, computer-assisted diagnostic and management aids, is by far the most challenging. These systems require (1) an expansive knowledge base covering the full range of diseases and conditions, (2) detailed patient- specific clinical information (e.g., history, physical examination, laboratory data), and (3) a powerful computational engine that employs some form of probabilistic decision analysis.
Interest in computer-assisted diagnosis goes back more than four decades, and yet there have been only a few evaluations of its performance (Kassirer, 1994). In a systematic review of 68 CDSS controlled trials between 1974 and 1998, Hunt and colleagues found only 5 studies (4 of the 5 published before 1990) that assessed the role of CDSSs in diagnosis, only one of which found a benefit from their use (Chase et al., 1983; Hunt et al., 1998; Pozen et al., 1984; Wellwood et al., 1992; Wexler et al., 1975; Wyatt, 1989).
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These early studies generally evaluated how well a computer performed in making or generating plausible diagnoses as compared with the decisions of experts, not the ability of a computer in partnership with a practicing clinician to perform better than the clinician alone (Kassirer, 1994). One recent study com- pared the performance of practicing clinicians with and without the aid of a diagnostic CDSS, and found among the former a significant improvement in the generation of correct diagnoses in hypothesis lists (Friedman et al., 1999). The study included faculty, residents, and fourth-year medical students; while all three groups performed better with the help of the computer, the magnitude of the improvement was greatest for students and smallest for faculty.
Studies conducted to date do not provide a convincing case in support of CDSS diagnostic tools. Yet it is important to recognize that changes under way in health care and computing will likely result in the development of far superior tools in the near future, for three reasons. First, CDSS diagnostic programs have been limited to date in terms of their clinical knowledge base. The cost of maintaining updated syntheses of the evidence for most conditions and translat- ing these syntheses into decision rules has been prohibitively high for commer- cial developers of these systems. As discussed above, however, interest in evi- dence-based practice has led to a logarithmic increase in systematic reviews of the clinical evidence on particular clinical questions, which are available in the public domain.
Second, advances in computer technology, accompanied by dramatic de- creases in the cost of hardware and software, have greatly reduced concerns about the computing requirements of CDSS diagnostic systems. Furthermore, there are early signs of CDSS diagnostic systems becoming available on the Internet, thus further reducing the capital investment and operational costs incurred at the level of a clinical practice (McDonald et al., 1998).
Third, the Internet has opened up new opportunities to address issues related to patient data. As noted, to be effective, CDSS diagnostic systems require detailed, patient-specific clinical information (history, physical results, medica- tions, laboratory test results), which in most health care settings resides in a variety of paper and automated datasets that cannot easily be integrated. Past efforts to develop automated medical record systems have not been very success- ful because of the lack of common standards for coding data, the absence of a data network connecting the many health care organizations and clinicians in- volved in patient care, and a number of other factors. The Internet has the potential to overcome many of these barriers to automated patient data. The World Wide Web offers much of the standardization technology needed to com- bine independent sources of clinical data (McDonald et al., 1998). The willing- ness of patients and clinicians to use these systems will depend to a great extent on finding ways to adequately address concerns about the confidentiality of per- sonally identifiable clinical information and a host of technical, legal, policy, and organizational issues that currently impede many health applications on the
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Internet. But numerous efforts are under way to address these issues as they apply to both the current and the next-generation Internet (Elhanan et al., 1996; National Research Council, 2000).
Fourth, the extraordinary advances achieved in molecular medicine in recent years will further increase the complexity of both the evidence base and the clinical decision-making process, making it imperative that clinicians use com- puter-aided decision supports. Molecular medicine introduces a huge new body of knowledge that will affect virtually every area of practice, and also opens up the possibility of developing individualized treatments linked to a patient’s ge- netic definition (Rienhoff, 2000). CDSS programs offer the prospect of applying more sophisticated forms of decision analysis to the evaluation of various treat- ment options, taking into account both the patient’s genetic definition and prefer- ences (Lilford et al., 1998).
Given the potential of CDSSs to enhance evidence-based practice and pro- vide greater opportunity for patients to participate in clinical decision making, the committee believes greater public investment in research and development on such systems is warranted. In fiscal year 1999, the Agency for Healthcare Re- search and Quality began a new initiative, Translating Research into Practice, aimed at implementing evidence-based tools and information in health care set- tings (Eisenberg, 2000a). The focus of the initiative is on cultivating partnerships between researchers and health care organizations for the conduct of practice- based, patient outcome research in applied settings. In fiscal year 1999, 3-year grants were awarded in support of projects to identify effective approaches to smoking cessation, chlamydia screening of adolescents, diabetes care in medi- cally underserved areas, and treatment of respiratory distress syndrome in preterm infants. The resources for this program should be expanded to support an applied research and development agenda specific to CDSSs.
MAKING INFORMATION AVAILABLE ON THE INTERNET
The Internet is rapidly becoming the principal vehicle for communication of health information to both consumers and clinicians. It is predicted that 90 percent of households will have Internet access by 2005–2010 (Rosenberg, 1999). The number of Americans who use the Internet to retrieve health-related informa- tion is estimated to be about 70 million (Cain et al., 2000). The connectivity of health care organizations has also increased. For example, between 1993 and 1997, the percentage of academic medical libraries with Internet connections increased from 72 to 96 percent, and that of community hospital libraries rose from 24 to 72 percent (Lyon et al., 1998).
The volume of health care information available on the Internet is enormous. Estimates of the number of health-related Web sites vary from 10,000 to 100,000 (Benton Foundation, 1999; Eysenbach et al., 1999). A survey conducted by USA Today found that consumers access health-related Web sites to research an illness
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or disease (62 percent), seek nutrition and fitness information (20 percent), re- search drugs and their interactions (12 percent), find a doctor or hospital (4 percent), and look for online medical support groups (2 percent) (USA Today, 1998).
It is easy for a user to be overwhelmed by the volume of information avail- able on the Web. For example, there are some 61,000 Web sites that contain information on breast cancer (Boodman, 1999), and a simple search for “diabetes mellitus” returns more than 40,000 sites (National Research Council, 2000). Information available on the Internet is also of varying quality: some is incorrect, and some is misleading (Achenbach, 1996; Biermann et al., 1999). Several options have been proposed to assist users in distinguishing the good information from the bad. Silberg et al. (1997) have encouraged Web site sponsors to adhere voluntarily to a set of rules including (1) inclusion of information on authors, along with their affiliations and credentials; (2) attribution, including references and sources for all content; (3) disclosure of Web site ownership, sponsorship, advertising, underwriting, commercial funding, and potential conflicts of inter- est; and (4) dates on which content was posted and updated.
To identify valuable information, users can rely on a number of rating ser- vices that review and rate Web sites, but there are problems with many of these rating services as well. In a recent review, Jadad and Gagliardi (1998) identified 47 rating services, of which only 14 provided a description of the criteria used to produce the ratings, and none gave information on interobserver reliability or construct validity.
One of the richest sources of clinical information on the Internet is the National Library of Medicine’s (NLM) MEDLINE. MEDLINE contains more than 9 million citations and abstracts of articles drawn mainly from professional journals (Miller et al., 2000). In June 1997, NLM made MEDLINE available free of charge on the Web, and usage jumped about 10-fold to 75 million searches annually (Lindberg and Humphreys, 1998).
When MEDLINE was established, it was assumed that its primary audience would be health care professionals, but it is now recognized that the lay public has a keen interest in accessing the clinical knowledge base as well. It is esti- mated that about 30 percent of MEDLINE searches are by members of the gen- eral public and students, 34 percent by health care professionals, and 36 percent by researchers (Lindberg, 1998). In 1998, NLM added 12 consumer health journals to MEDLINE to increase its coverage of information written for the general public, and also launched MEDLINEplus, a Web site specifically for consumers (Lindberg and Humphreys, 1999). MEDLINEplus is divided into eight sections (e.g., health topics, databases, organizations, clearinghouses), each of which provides links to reputable Web sites maintained by the National Insti- tutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and professional organizations and associations.
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The MEDLINEplus section HealthTopics provides users with access to pre- formulated MEDLINE searches on common topics, most of which are diseases or conditions. The topics included were identified through an analysis of the most common search terms used on the NLM home page, which revealed that 90 percent or more were for specific diseases, conditions, or other common medical terms (e.g., Viagra, St. John’s Wort) (Miller et al., 2000). The HealthTopics list numbers more than 300, with some of the most frequently searched topics being diabetes, shingles, prostate, hypertension, asthma, lupus, fibromyalgia, multiple sclerosis, and cancer.
There are many other sources of filtered evidence-based information as well, including the Cochrane Library discussed above. Access to evidence-based guidelines is provided in the United States by the National Guideline Clearing- house (sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality), the Ameri- can Medical Association, and the American Association of Health Plans (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality et al., 2000), and in Canada by the CPG Infobase (sponsored by the Canadian Medical Association) (Canadian Medical Association, 2000). NOAH (New York Online Access to Health) is a library collaboration for bilingual consumer health information on the Internet (Voge, 1998).
Thus many efforts are under way to assist users in accessing useful health care information on the Web. Some believe, however, that much more could be done to achieve a more “powerful and efficient synergy” between the Internet and evidence-based decision making (Jadad et al., 2000a).
DEFINING QUALITY MEASURES
The enhanced interest in and infrastructure to support evidence-based prac- tice have implications for quality measurement, improvement, and accountability (Eisenberg, 2000b). The use of priority conditions as a framework for organizing the evidence base, as discussed in Chapter 4, may also have implications for external accountability programs.
Systematic reviews and practice guidelines provide a strong foundation for the development of a richer set of quality measures focused on medical care processes and outcomes. To date, a good deal of quality measurement for pur- poses of external accountability has focused on a limited number of “rate-based” indicators—rates of occurrence of desired or undesired events. The National Committee for Quality Assurance, through its Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set, makes comparative quality data available on participating health plans and includes such measures as childhood immunization rates, mammogra- phy rates, and the percentage of diabetics who had an annual eye exam (National Committee for Quality Assurance, 1999). The Joint Commission on the Accredi- tation of Healthcare Organizations sponsors the ORYX system for hospitals, which includes measures such as infection rates and postsurgical complication
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rates. Syntheses of the evidence base and the development of practice guide- lines should contribute to more valid and meaningful quality measurement and reporting.
As systematic reviews, development of practice guidelines, and efforts to disseminate evidence focus increasingly on priority conditions—a unit of analy- sis that is meaningful to patients and clinicians—so, too, must accountability processes. To date, efforts to make comparative quality data available in the public domain have focused on types of health care organizations, for the most part health plans and hospitals, and, as noted above, measurement of a limited number of discrete quality indicators for these organizations. Numerous efforts are under way, however, to develop comprehensive measurement sets for various conditions and quality reporting mechanisms. These include the efforts of the Foundation for Accountability, the Health Care Financing Administration’s peer review organizations, and a variety of collaborations involving leading medical associations and accrediting bodies.
The Foundation for Accountability (2000b) has developed condition-spe- cific measurement guides related to a number of common conditions: adult asthma, alcohol misuse, breast cancer, diabetes, health status under age 65, and major depressive disorders. The Foundation continues to work on child and adolescent health, coronary heart disease, end of life, and HIV/AIDS. In addi- tion, it has created FACCTONE, a survey tool designed to gather information directly from patients about important aspects of their health care (Foundation for Accountability, 2000a). The first phase of the survey addresses quality of care for people living with the chronic illnesses of asthma, diabetes, and coronary artery disease. It assesses performance related to patient education and knowl- edge, obtaining of essential treatments, access, involvement in care decisions, communication with providers, patient self-management behaviors, coping, symptom control, maintenance of regular activities, and functional status.
Since 1992, the Health Care Financing Administration, through its Peer Review Organizations, has been developing core sets of performance measures for a number of common conditions, including acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke, pneumonia, breast cancer, and diabetes (Health Care Financing Administration, 2000). Comparative performance data for Medicare fee-for- service beneficiaries by state were recently released for each of these conditions (Jencks et al., 2000). Quality-of-care measures for beneficiaries experiencing acute myocardial infarction have been piloted in four states as part of the Coop- erative Cardiovascular Project (Ellerbeck et al., 1995; Marciniak et al., 1998).
The Diabetes Quality Improvement Project, a collaborative quality measure- ment effort involving the American Diabetes Association, the Foundation for Accountability, the Health Care Financing Administration, the National Commit- tee for Quality Assurance, the American Academy of Physicians, the American College of Physicians, and the Veterans Administration, has been under way for several years. The project has identified seven accountability measures (i.e.,
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hemoglobin A1c tested, poor hemoglobin A1c control, eye exam performed, lipid profile performed, lipids controlled, monitoring for kidney disease, and blood pressure controlled), six of which will be included in the National Committee for Quality Assurance’s Year 2000 Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (Health Care Financing Administration, 1999).
The American Medical Association, working with experts from national medical specialty societies and the quality measurement community, has devel- oped measure sets for physician clinical performance in the areas of adult diabe- tes, prenatal testing, and chronic stable coronary artery disease. The core mea- sure set for adult diabetes, developed with input from the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care, was approved by the American Medical Association in July 2000, while the other two measure sets are undergoing public review and comment (American Medical Association, 2000).
It will be important for the National Quality Forum, a recently created pub- lic–private partnership developed to foster collaboration across public and pri- vate oversight organizations, to consider carefully how best to align comparative quality reporting with the developing infrastructure in support of evidence-based practice and consumer-centered health care. The National Quality Forum, a not- for-profit organization established in 1999 with the participation of both public and private purchasers, is currently developing a strategic measurement frame- work to guide the future development of external quality reporting for purposes of accountability and consumer choice (Kizer, 2000). This activity, now under way, presents a unique opportunity to influence the direction of quality measurement.
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7
Using Information Technology
Throughout this report, the committee has emphasized that health care should be supported by systems that are carefully and consciously designed to produce care that is safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable. This chapter examines the critical role of information technology (IT) in the design of those systems.
IT has enormous potential to improve the quality of health care with regard to all six of the aims set forth in Chapter 2. In the area of safety, there is growing evidence that automated order entry systems can reduce errors in drug prescrib- ing and dosing (Bates et al., 1997, 1998a, 1999). In the area of effectiveness, there is considerable evidence that automated reminder systems improve compli- ance with clinical practice guidelines (Balas et al., 2000; Shea et al., 1996), and some promising studies, although few in number, indicate that computer-assisted diagnosis and management can improve quality (Durieux et al., 2000; Evans et al., 1998). There are many opportunities to use IT to make care more patient- centered, for example, by facilitating access to clinical knowledge through un- derstandable and reliable Web sites and online support groups (Cain et al., 2000); customized health education and disease management messages (Goldsmith, 2000); and the use of clinical decision support systems to tailor information according to an individual patient’s characteristics, genetic makeup, and specific conditions (Garibaldi, 1998) (see Chapter 6 for additional discussion). Both patients and clinicians can benefit from improvements in timeliness through the use of Internet-based communication (i.e., e-visits, telemedicine) and immediate access to automated clinical information, diagnostic tests, and treatment results. Clinical decision support systems have been shown to improve efficiency by
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reducing redundant laboratory tests (Bates et al., 1998b). Finally, Internet-based health communication can enhance equity by providing a broader array of options for interacting with clinicians, although this can only happen if all people, regard- less of race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, geographic location, and other fac- tors, have access to the technology infrastructure (Science Panel on Interactive Communication and Health, 1999).
The committee believes IT must play a central role in the redesign of the health care system if a substantial improvement in health care quality is to be achieved during the coming decade. This is a theme underlying many of the topics addressed in this report. Chapter 5 emphasizes the importance of a strong information infrastructure in supporting efforts to reengineer care processes, manage the burgeoning clinical knowledge base, coordinate patient care across clinicians and settings and over time, support multidisciplinary team functioning, and facilitate performance and outcome measurements for improvement and ac- countability. Chapter 6 stresses the importance of building such an infrastructure to support evidence-based practice, including the provision of more organized and reliable information sources on the Internet for both consumers and clini- cians, and the development and application of clinical decision support tools. And Chapter 9 considers the need to build information-rich environments for undergraduate and graduate health education, as well as the potential to enhance continuing education through Internet-based programs.
Central to many IT applications is the automation of patient-specific clinical information. Efforts to automate clinical data date back several decades, and have tended to focus on creation of an automated medical record. For example, in 1991 the IOM set forth a vision and issued a strong call for nationwide imple- mentation of computer-based patient records (Institute of Medicine, 1991). But progress has been slow. It is important to recognize that a fully electronic medi- cal record, including all types of patient information, is not necessary to achieve many if not most of the benefits of automated clinical data. For example, use of medication order entry systems using data on patient diagnoses, current medica- tions, and history of drug interactions or allergies can result in sizable reductions in prescribing errors (Bates et al., 1998a; Leapfrog Group, 2000). The automa- tion and linking of data on services provided to patients in ambulatory and insti- tutional settings (e.g., encounters, procedures, ancillary tests) would provide a rich source of information for quality measurement and improvement purposes.
The challenges of applying IT to health care should not be underestimated. Consumers and policy makers share concerns about the privacy and confidential- ity of these data (Cain et al., 2000). The United States still lacks national stan- dards for the protection of health data and the capture, storage, communication, processing, and presentation of health information (Work Group on Computer- ization of Patient Records, 2000). Sizable capital investments will also be re- quired. Moreover, widespread adoption of many IT applications will require
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166 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
behavioral adaptations on the part of large numbers of patients, clinicians, and organizations.
The committee believes solutions to these barriers can and must be found given the critical importance of the judicious application of IT to addressing the nation’s health care quality concerns. The time has come to establish a national health information infrastructure that will encourage public- and private-sector investments in IT while providing adequate safeguards for consumers. As dis- cussed in Chapter 4, a sizable portion of the resources of the recommended Health Care Quality Innovation Fund (see Recommendation 6) should be in- vested in projects that implement and evaluate IT applications and are likely to contribute to quality improvements.
Recommendation 9: Congress, the executive branch, leaders of health care organizations, public and private purchasers, and health informatics associations and vendors should make a renewed na- tional commitment to building an information infrastructure to sup- port health care delivery, consumer health, quality measurement and improvement, public accountability, clinical and health services research, and clinical education. This commitment should lead to the elimination of most handwritten clinical data by the end of the decade.
POTENTIAL BENEFITS OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
In less than 5 years, the IT landscape has changed dramatically. The share of households with Internet access grew from 26.2 percent in December 1998 to 41.5 percent in August 2000, an increase of 58 percent in 20 months (U.S. Department of Commerce, 2000). The explosive growth of the Internet has opened up many new promising applications that have implications for the roles of consumers, clinicians, and organizations in the delivery of health care services. A recent report by the National Research Council of The National Academies identified six major health-related application domains: consumer health, clini- cal care, administrative and financial transactions, public health, professional education, and research (see Table 7-1) (National Research Council, 2000). Many of the applications in these domains, such as online searching for health informa- tion by patients and providers, are commonplace. Others, such as remote and virtual surgery and simulations of surgical procedures, are in the early stages of development.
• Consumer Health. A September 1999 poll conducted by Harris Interac- tive found that 70 million of the 97 million American adults who were online had searched for health information in the last year (Cain et al., 2000). Consumers are using the Internet to search for health information, to obtain information
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USING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY 167
useful in selecting a health plan or provider, and to participate in formal and informal support groups. Comparative performance data are available on the Internet for many health plans (National Committee for Quality Assurance, 2000), and depending on the geographic area of interest, there may be relevant informa- tion on hospitals and providers. The Internet can also be used to post customized health education messages according to a person’s profile and needs (Kendall and Levine, 1997).
• Clinical Care. The Internet has the potential to make health care delivery more timely and responsive to consumer preferences. As discussed in Chapter 6, the Internet is playing an increasingly critical role in making scientific publica- tions, syntheses of the evidence, practice guidelines, and other tools required to support evidence-based practice available to both patients and clinicians. Ex- amples of information technologies that are of growing importance in the health care arena are reminder systems (Alemi et al., 1996); telemedicine applications, such as teleradiology and e-mail; and online prescribing (National Health Policy Forum, 2000; Schiff and Rucker, 1998).
• Administrative and Financial Transactions. To date, the area in which information systems have been used most extensively in health care has been to improve the service and efficiency of various administrative and financial trans- actions (Starr, 1997; Turban et al., 1996). In 1999, almost 65 percent of the 4.6 billion medical claims processed by private and public health insurance plans were transmitted electronically (Goldsmith, 2000).
• Public Health. IT can be used to improve the quality of health care at the population level. Applications include incident reporting, videoconferencing among public health officials during emergency situations, disease surveillance, transfer of epidemiology maps and other image files for monitoring of the spread of disease, delivery of alerts and other information to clinicians and health work- ers, and maintenance of registries.
• Professional Education. The Internet can be a powerful tool for under- graduate, graduate, and continuing medical education for all types of health pro- fessionals. A variety of Internet-based educational programs have made their curricula and training materials available on the Web. There are also educational videos, lectures, virtual classrooms, and simulation programs to teach surgical skills.
• Research. The Internet opens up many options for improving research- ers’ access to databases and literature, enhancing collegial interaction, and short- ening the time required to conduct certain types of research and disseminate results to the field. These applications are already gaining widespread accep- tance.
Of course, not all computer health applications are Internet-based. There are computerized order entry systems, reminder systems, and other applications that run on legacy systems (older IT systems, often built around mainframes, owned
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168
T A
B L
E 7
-1 H
ea lt
h- R
el at
ed A
pp li
ca ti
on s
fo r
th e
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rn et
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pp li
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g fo
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ic ia
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h ea
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a nd
s up
po rt
g ro
up s
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nl in
e ac
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t o
pe rs
on al
h ea
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re co
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om pl
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p at
ie nt
s ur
ve ys
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ni ca
l ca
re •
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rc he
s of
m ed
ic al
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ou ti
ne c
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de li
ve ry
( e.
g. ,
e- vi
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) an
d ch
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c di
se as
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th c
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s to
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• R
em in
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a nd
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d ec
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pp or
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ia ns
( pe
rh a p
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) •
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ot e
m on
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of p
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m c
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fe r
of m
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m ag
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a n sa
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of p
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c h e d
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en t
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fo rm
ul a r
y, e
tc .
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
169 P
ub li
c he
al th
• V
id eo
co nf
er en
ci ng
a m
on g
pu bl
ic h
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ve il
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is ea
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pi de
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s •
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ns fe
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s fo
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m en
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ro m
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io na
l R es
ea rc
h C
ou nc
il , 2
00 0.
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Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
170 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
by some hospitals, medical centers, and group practices) (Turban et al., 1996). In the future, however, the Internet will likely be the platform of choice for many if not most health applications because of the ready access it provides to both consumers and clinicians, as well as other financial and technical considerations.
It must be acknowledged that although the potential benefits of IT are com- pelling, the evidence in support of these benefits varies greatly by type of appli- cation. As discussed in Chapter 6, there is strong evidence to support the effec- tiveness of computerized reminder systems in improving compliance with practice guidelines. For computerized medication order entry systems, recent studies substantiate reductions in errors and unnecessary services, but such studies are few in number (Bates et al., 1998a). A recent review of 80 controlled trials carried out between 1966 and 1996 concluded that telephone-based distance medicine or telemedicine technologies are beneficial in the areas of preventive care and the management of osteoarthritis, cardiac rehabilitation, and diabetes care (Balas et al., 1997). In a review of 15 controlled trials in which diabetic patients received computer-generated information, it was found that 12 of the 15 trials documented positive clinical outcomes, such as improved hemoglobin and blood glucose levels (Balas et al., 1998).
In summary, the strength of the evidence on the effects of various IT applica- tions is highly varied. Many applications, such as simulation of surgical proce- dures for educational purposes and remote and virtual surgery, are in the early developmental stages. Others may be highly promising, but their adoption and testing are hampered by the lack of computerized patient information (e.g., com- puter-aided diagnosis), regulatory or legal impediments (e.g., e-mail communica- tions across state lines), and payment issues (e.g., for e-visits). Still other appli- cations, such as telemedicine, have not been rigorously evaluated (Grigsby and Sanders, 1998; Institute of Medicine, 1996).
AUTOMATED CLINICAL INFORMATION
Much of the potential of IT to improve quality is predicated on the automa- tion of at least some types of clinical data. Automated clinical data are required by many of the most promising IT applications, including computer-aided deci- sion support systems that couple medical evidence with patient-specific clinical data to assist clinicians and patients in making diagnoses and evaluating treat- ment options (see Chapter 6) (Burger, 1997; Weed and Weed, 1999). Automated clinical data also open up the potential to glean medical knowledge from patient care (Institute of Medicine, 2000). An example is the extraordinary gains in cancer survival for children as compared with adults, attributable in part to the participation of virtually all pediatric cancer patients in clinical trials that system- atically collect, pool, and analyze data and disseminate results to all participants (Simone and Lyons, 2000). Automated clinical and administrative data also enable many types of health service research applications, such as assessment of
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clinical outcomes associated with alternative treatment options and care pro- cesses; identification of best practices; and evaluation of the effects of different methods of financing, organizing, and delivering services.
Both private- and public-sector groups have identified the need to move forward expeditiously with the automation of clinical information. In 1991, the IOM issued a report concluding that computer-based patient records are an “es- sential technology” for health care and that electronic records should be the standard for medical and all other records related to health care. In that same year, the U.S. General Accounting Office issued a report stating that automated medical records offer great potential to improve patient care, increase efficiency, and reduce costs, and calling for the development of standards to ensure uniform electronic recording and transmission of medical information. A 1993 report of the U.S. General Accounting Office called for leadership and the acceleration of efforts to develop standards. In 1997, a revised edition of the 1991 IOM report noted the strides that had been made in the power and capacity of personal computers and other computer-based technologies, the remarkable growth of the Internet for research and some health applications, the increasing level of com- puter literacy among health professionals and the public, and the linkage of organizations and individuals in local and regional networks that were beginning to tackle the development of population databases.
Some health care organizations have made important advances, but overall progress has been slow. In a few large systems—most notably the health systems of the Department of Veterans Health Affairs—integrated electronic records sys- tems have been implemented. There are also examples of robust, well-integrated hospital-based information systems (National Research Council, 2000), such as Intermountain Health Care (in Salt Lake City, Utah), but they are few and notable for their rarity. Many other organizations have automated major portions of clinical information systems—laboratory data, order entry, and the like—and others are on their way to becoming paperless in the next few years (McDonald et al., 1997; Warden and Lawrence, 2000).
There are numerous barriers to the automation of clinical information. The remainder of this section addresses four of these barriers: privacy concerns, the need for standards, financial requirements, and human factors issues.
Privacy Concerns and the Need for Standards
Two of the greatest impediments to the widespread automation of clinical information are the absence of national policies pertaining to privacy, security, and confidentiality and the lack of standards for the coding and exchange of clinical information (e.g., definitions and nomenclature, patient identifiers, and electronic transfer) (Dwyer, 1999; Kleinke, 1998; McDonald, 1998; U.S. Depart- ment of Commerce, 1994). Indeed, the issues of protecting privacy and data standardization are closely interrelated. In 1998, for example, plans of the De-
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172 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
partment of Health and Human Services to issue recommendations for establish- ing unique patient identifiers were put on hold in response to public outcry over potential violations of medical privacy (Goldman, 1998).
There is general agreement that privacy protections are needed for consum- ers, but there is also recognition that unless carefully balanced, such protections may limit the future prospects of IT (Detmer, 2000a). Public opinion polls conducted during the last decade document high and increasing levels of concern about privacy, raising questions about whether people’s fear of violations of their privacy may lead some to forego seeking necessary health services or to withhold personal information from clinicians (Goldman, 1998). Others point out that, if too stringent, privacy protections will impede the adoption of many IT applica- tions critical to addressing health care quality concerns (Detmer, 2000a).
The demands of health care with regard to security and availability are both more stringent and more varied than those of other industries (Institute of Medi- cine, 1994). Automated records can make it much easier for hackers to assemble lists or to find (or alter) information about individuals. At the same time, there are many different sources and types of health data, and clinical information must be available to all clinicians and others involved in care delivery whenever needed. Well-crafted policies can be implemented to ensure timely access for those with a valid need to access the data, including treating clinicians and pa- tients, while denying access to unauthorized users. Information security tech- nologies, such as encryption, authentication of both the sender and receiver of data, and audit trails to detect unauthorized users, are available to support such policies (Detmer, 2000a; National Research Council, 1998; U.S. General Ac- counting Office, 1999). Legal enforcement of privacy and confidentiality rights with strong remedies can serve as both a deterrent to unauthorized users and a method of redress for individuals whose privacy rights have been violated.
The lack of commonly accepted definitions and nomenclature for the collec- tion and coding of data and standards for the exchange of information has also been recognized as an obstacle to broad adoption of clinical information tech- nologies (Dwyer, 1999; Kleinke, 1998; McDonald, 1998; U.S. Department of Commerce, 1994). Data standards are needed to facilitate sharing and communi- cation of the data across different health care information systems, and to ensure that the data are complete, accurate, and comparable (National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, 2000). Numerous groups, including the American National Standards Institute’s Healthcare Informatics Standards Board, High Level 7, the American Sociey for Testing and Material, the American Standards Committee, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, international organizations, and numerous governmental groups, have developed standards for claims forms, datasets, diagnostic and procedure classifications, vocabularies, and messaging formats (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 1999; Cushman and Detmer, 1998). The Library of Medicine has made extensive efforts to standardize vocabulary (including the construction and maintenance of
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a metathesaurus as part of the unified medical language system). But these efforts, as important as they are, amount to a patchwork of standards that address some areas and not others, and are not adhered to by all users.
To begin addressing the need for comprehensive national standards, Con- gress passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act in 1996, creating a federal mandate to develop standards for all electronic health transmis- sions (Health Care Financing Administration, 2000). The law directed the Secre- tary of Health and Human Services to make recommendations to Congress re- garding the privacy of individually identifiable health information by August 1997, and if Congress failed to pass privacy legislation by August 1999, the Secretary of DHHS was directed to issue health privacy regulations by January 2000. The law also provided that the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics was to report to the Secretary of DHHS by August 21, 2000, on recom- mendations and legislative proposals pertaining to data standards for patient medi- cal record information (National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, 2000).
Congress failed to enact legislation implementing a comprehensive package of privacy protections by the August 1999 deadline. Therefore, DHHS worked to develop these regulations, based on the Secretary’s recommendations to Con- gress in 1997 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 1997). These regulations were extremely controversial and generated over 50,000 comments when published in proposed rulemaking form. However, DHHS was able to finalize and announce them in December 2000 (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2000).
DHHS also has efforts under way to develop national standards for the definition, collection, coding, and exchange of patient medical record informa- tion, but progress has been slow. In July 2000, the National Committee on Vital Health Statistics forwarded a report to the Secretary of Health and Human Ser- vices addressing a variety of process, technical, organizational, financing, and other issues related to the development of national standards (National Commit- tee on Vital and Health Statistics, 2000). Some progress has been made toward developing coding standards for data elements; however, none has emerged as a comprehensive standard (Institute of Medicine, 1997), and, as noted above, the adoption of a standardized health identifier has been suspended. Chief informa- tion officers and other health care executives have reported they do not believe that health records can be restructured to comply with electronic formats in the time frame required by the law (Shinkman and Jonathan, 2000).
In the absence of strong national leadership in establishing standards and defining appropriate legal and regulatory structures for an IT-driven health care delivery system, states and various branches of the federal government have responded to issues and concerns primarily on an ad hoc basis. For example, more than two-thirds of states have made legislative efforts to affect various types of health information practices, resulting in an increasingly complex array of laws (Cushman and Detmer, 1998). In other instances, existing legal and
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regulatory structures are being applied to IT issues, creating confusion and prob- ably ineffective oversight. For example, online pharmacies, whereby the physi- cian enters orders into pharmacy computers often using a handheld wireless electronic prescription pad, have given rise to a set of jurisdictional issues. These issues relate both to federal and state responsibilities and, at the federal level, to questions about the responsibilities of different agencies (i.e., Federal Trade Com- mission, Food and Drug Administration, Drug Enforcement Administration, De- partment of Justice, U.S. Customs Service, and U.S. Postal Service) for consumer protection, rooting out of fraud and misinformation, drug quality, advertising of prescription drugs, and importation and domestic mailing of pharmaceutical prod- ucts (National Health Policy Forum, 2000).
Financial Requirements
The 21st-century health care system will require a significant financial in- vestment in information technology—far greater than current investments by most health care organizations. Capital will be needed to purchase and install new technology, while installation of the new systems is likely to produce tempo- rary disruptions in the delivery of patient care and result in sizable short-term costs to manage the transition. Some specialized training and education will also be needed to help the workforce adapt to the new environment.
In addition, some health care organizations have invested heavily in legacy systems—older computer systems built around mainframes (Turban et al., 1996). There is no easy way to shift from such systems to state-of-the-art information systems based on an open client–server architecture, personal computer net- works, and more flexible, nonproprietary protocols. These are important consid- erations for all health care organizations when making decisions about investing in IT. Recent reductions in Medicare payments under the 1997 Balanced Budget Act have likely contributed to an even more cautious approach to long-term investment in technology on the part of many health care institutions.
Access to capital may be particularly limited for certain types of health care organizations. Not-for-profit hospitals and health plans must obtain capital from bond rather than equity markets. Many small physician group practices have a limited ability to obtain capital. Large for-profit health plans may have ready capital to invest in IT, but absent strong, long-term partnerships with provider groups, lack the leverage and incentive to implement such systems.
These capital decisions are also being made in an environment in which benefits are difficult to quantify. Unlike billing or pharmaceutical transactions, clinical transactions have only an indirect effect on profitability, and demonstrat- ing the value of clinical information systems in improving the quality of care has been difficult although, as discussed above, evidence has begun to accumulate about their usefulness in specific settings and applications. Moreover, as dis-
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cussed in Chapter 8, current payment policies do not adequately reward improve- ments in quality.
There are some indications that the use of IT is slowly becoming more widespread. In 1997, the health information technology industry sold $15 billion worth of products to health care organizations (Kleinke, 1998). The development of Web-based applications for use on the Internet may also open the door to new forms of financing the expenses of IT. For example, if IT shifts from an equip- ment purchase to a service expense, it can be bought on a monthly basis and upgraded easily in response to both technological advances and changes in medi- cal practice. Maintaining up-to-date applications that reflect the evolution of technology and the knowledge base and making them available by subscription at a Web site rather than requiring users in individual organizations to purchase and maintain them is likely to provide great impetus for the development and use of these systems.
Human Factors Issues
One of the most challenging, and least understood, barriers to the application of useful information technologies in health care relates to human factors. These barriers include both workforce and patient issues.
The health care sector is labor-intensive, with about 700,000 physicians, over 2 million nurses, and many other health care workers being involved in the delivery of patient care to varying degrees (Health Resources and Services Ad- ministration, 2000). The workforce is highly variable in terms of IT-related knowledge and experience, and probably also in terms of receptivity to learning or acquiring these skills. Some clinicians may also be wary of embracing new IT applications because of frustrating experience with earlier IT applications that failed to prove useful in solving diagnostic and therapeutic problems (Kassirer, 2000). Moreover, the development of new data infrastructures and the incorpora- tion of new IT applications into clinical practice generally entails disruptions in patient care, resulting in lost revenues for many clinicians.
Many IT applications require the forging of new relationships between clini- cians and institutional providers, which may be slow to develop. For example, some have observed that the deeply ingrained economic distrust and cultural conflict between physicians and hospitals has impeded the adoption of IT appli- cations that require Web-based integration (Kleinke, 2000).
IT will undoubtedly alter the clinician and patient relationship, and in some cases, these changes may be threatening to clinicians. The standardization and automation of various types of clinical data opens up many new opportunities to make comparative quality data available to consumers who must chose among clinicians, sites of care, and treatment options, and to bolster oversight and ac- countability programs (Kleinke, 2000). The availability of clinical knowledge on
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the Internet will lead to more informed patients who will be increasingly likely to question clinician recommendations.
Not all patients will embrace these new roles of IT. Although consumers are migrating to the Internet at a rapid pace, there will likely be some proportion of individuals who do not have access either by personal choice or because of economic or other constraints (Conte, 1999). Consequently, there will be a need for the health system to operate in the old and the new, automated ways in parallel for the foreseeable future (Ferguson, 1999).
NEED FOR A NATIONAL HEALTH INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE
Many developments now under way augur well for the future adoption of IT by the health care sector. A growing body of evidence supports the conclusion that various types of IT applications lead to improvements in safety, effective- ness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity. Some progress is being made on the specification of standards for protecting privacy, and various private- and public-sector standardization efforts are being undertaken to provide the foundation for a more expansive effort focused on achieving national consen- sus. The extraordinary growth of the Internet has opened up a plethora of new applications; provided a highly accessible platform for tapping the clinical knowl- edge base, running applications, and sharing data; and lowered capital require- ments.
Nonetheless, IT has barely touched patient care. The vast majority of clini- cal information is still stored in paper form. Only a fraction of clinicians offer e- mail as a communication option to patients (Hoffman, 1997). Few patients benefit even from very simple decision aids, such as reminder systems, which have been shown repeatedly to improve compliance with practice guidelines. Many medical errors, ubiquitous throughout the health care system, could be prevented if only clinical data were accessible and readable, and prescriptions were entered into automated order entry systems with built-in logic to check for errors and oversights in drug selection and dosing. The pace of change is unac- ceptably slow. Much more can and should be done.
To achieve a substantial improvement in quality, the United States, like other industrialized countries, will need to begin developing a comprehensive national health information infrastructure (Detmer, 2000b). As defined by the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics, such a structure is “a set of technolo- gies, standards, applications, systems, values, and laws that support all facets of individual health, health care, and public health (Work Group on Computeriza- tion of Patient Records, 2000). A national health information infrastructure is not a centralized government database, but rather “rules for the road” that offer a way to connect distributed health data in the framework of a secure network.
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As discussed above, some elements of such a structure are in various stages of development, but at the current pace, many more years will be required for its completion. To further the development process, the country must move forward expeditiously with the promulgation of national standards to protect data privacy. Moreover, these standards should be reevaluated and fine-tuned periodically to strike the right balance between protecting consumer privacy and providing ac- cess to clinical data for legitimate purposes, such as care delivery, quality evalu- ation, research, and public health (Detmer, 2000a). A high priority for the com- ing 2 years should be to achieve national consensus on comprehensive standards for the definition, collection, coding, and exchange of clinical data.
As technological barriers are overcome, much greater attention should be focused on legal, societal, organizational, and cultural issues (Work Group on Computerization of Patient Records, 2000). Legal and regulatory structures that have the unintended consequence of impeding the adoption of useful IT applica- tions must be identified and modified (Moran, 1998). Health care organizations and the health professions will need strong leadership and a clear direction as they move forward with what will be a dramatic transformation of care delivery (Shortliffe, 2000).
Finally, efforts should also be made to better inform the American public about IT issues, and to ensure that all individuals have the opportunity to benefit from the extraordinary innovations now under way. The American public should be fully informed of both the benefits and risks of automated clinical data and electronic communication, as well as the various options available for protecting privacy. Steps must also be taken to ensure that all Americans have ready access to the Internet, should they so desire, and that the benefits of IT reach practice settings that serve a disproportionate share of the most vulnerable populations.
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8
Aligning Payment Policies with Quality Improvement
Many factors influence how health care organizations and professionals de- liver care to patients. For example, information can be used to compare perfor- mance with that of peers and motivate improvement. Similarly, tools such as practice guidelines, clinical pathways, or protocols aim to change clinical prac- tice to make it more consistent around a definition of best practice. Health care professionals and organizations are also motivated by public acknowledgment and honorary recognition. Recognition of professional accomplishment and in- novation is a strong motivator of improvement.
Payment policies are another strong influence on how health care organiza- tions and professionals deliver care and how patients select and use that care (Hillman, 1991). Thus, to achieve the aims of the 21st-century health care system set forth in Chapter 2, it is critical that payment policies be aligned to encourage and support quality improvement. Yet financial barriers embodied in current payment methods can create significant obstacles to higher-quality health care. Even among health professionals motivated to provide the best care possible, the structure of payment incentives may not facilitate the actions needed to system- atically improve the quality of care, and may even prevent such actions. For example, redesigning care processes to improve follow-up for chronically ill patients through electronic communication may reduce office visits and decrease revenues for a medical group under some payment methods. Current payment policies are complex and contradictory, and although incremental improvements are possible, more fundamental reform will be needed over the long run.
The goals of any payment method should be to reward high-quality care and to permit the development of more effective ways of delivering care to improve
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the value obtained for the resources expended. These goals are relevant regard- less of whether care is delivered in a predominantly competitive or regulated environment, and whether the ultimate purchaser is an employer or the patient/ consumer. Payment policies should not create barriers to improving the quality of care.
Recommendation 10: Private and public purchasers should exam- ine their current payment methods to remove barriers that cur- rently impede quality improvement, and to build in stronger incen- tives for quality enhancement.
Although some purchasers are pursuing payment approaches that include rewards for quality, all existing payment methods could be modified to create stronger incentives for quality improvement. Purchasers should identify ways to (1) recognize quality, (2) reward quality, and (3) support quality improvement. For example, quality could be recognized by developing better quality measures and making their results more broadly available to covered populations, whether through new forms of information or improvements in the ways existing informa- tion is shared. Quality could be rewarded by using direct payment mechanisms or by redirecting volume to health plans and providers recognized for providing high-quality care by offering stronger incentives for people to seek out better quality care (e.g., adjustments to out-of-pocket costs). Quality improvement could be supported by exploring the potential for shared-risk arrangements that could encourage making significant changes in care processes to improve quality. Although more fundamental change may be required in the long run, immediate improvements can and should be pursued.
Recommendation 11: The Health Care Financing Administration and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, with input from private payers, health care organizations, and clinicians, should develop a research agenda to identify, pilot test, and evaluate various options for better aligning current payment methods with quality improvement goals.
Although most payment methods have an objective of cost containment or reflect consideration of issues of access (e.g., in determining levels of copay- ments), they do not have the explicit goal of ensuring quality care or facilitating quality improvement. Approaches to incorporating such an explicit goal into payment policy should be explored. This research agenda should include work in the following areas: blended or bundled methods of payment for providers, multiyear contracts, payment modifications to encourage use of electronic inter- actions between providers and patients, risk adjustment, and alternative ap- proaches for addressing the capital requirements necessary to improve quality. Blended or bundled payments may offer providers greater flexibility in incorpo- rating quality. Multiyear contracts can encourage longer-term relationships
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among providers, purchasers, and payers to permit investment in improved qual- ity of care. Payment methods that support electronic or other forms of communi- cation between providers and patients can improve contacts with the health sys- tem. Payment methods that are appropriately adjusted for the risk of the patients served can support the provision of needed care and improved sources. Capital will be needed for the redesigning and reengineering of health care that will be required to improve quality. A better understanding is needed of how these, as well as other mechanisms, can enhance the effects of payment policy on the provision of high-quality health care.
The potential to link payment methods to priority conditions should also be explored. As noted in Chapter 4, priority conditions can provide a framework for aligning payment methods with patient needs and the ways care is organized and measured. If payment methods were designed to encompass the scope of services received by patients, providers could allocate resources according to patient needs, across provider types and settings of care. Pilot testing should include an evalu- ation of the use of bundled payments for priority conditions to provide incentives for redesigning care processes and to permit resources to be allocated according to the scope and types of services needed by patients.
The committee believes certain principles should guide the development of payment policies to reward quality, regardless of the specific payment method used for any given transaction. The aim of these principles is to guide payment policy reforms that can support care that is more patient-centered, evidence- based, and systems-based. Payment arrangements should facilitate alignment of the units of patient care delivered (including consistency with best practice) with the needs of consumers and patients, the unit of payment, and the level at which information is collected and shared. To achieve alignment that can reward qual- ity care, payment methods should:
• Provide fair payment for good clinical management of the types of pa- tients seen. Clinicians should be adequately compensated for taking good care of all types of patients, neither gaining nor losing financially for caring for sicker patients or those with more complicated conditions. The risk of random inci- dence of disease in the population should reside with a larger risk pool, whether that be large groups of providers, health plans, or insurance companies.
• Provide an opportunity for providers to share in the benefits of quality improvement. Rewards should be located close to the level at which the re- engineering and process redesign needed to improve quality are likely to take place.
• Provide the opportunity for consumers and purchasers to recognize qual- ity differences in health care and direct their decisions accordingly. In particular, consumers need to have good information on quality and the ability to use that information as they see fit to meet their needs.
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184 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
• Align financial incentives with the implementation of care processes based on best practices and the achievement of better patient outcomes. Substantial improvements in quality are most likely to be obtained when providers are highly motivated and rewarded for carefully designing and fine-tuning care processes to achieve increasingly higher levels of safety, effectiveness, patient-centeredness, timeliness, efficiency, and equity.
• Reduce fragmentation of care. Payment methods should not pose a bar- rier to providers’ ability to coordinate care for patients across settings and over time.
The remainder of this chapter examines in greater detail the relationship between payment methods and the ability of health care organizations and profes- sionals to undertake quality improvement activities. In the first section, the theoretical incentives of current payment methods are briefly reviewed. The second section focuses on barriers in the payment system that inhibit the achieve- ment of significant improvements in quality. The third section describes how existing payment methods could be adapted to support quality improvement. Although difficult to accomplish in today’s environment, examples are provided to illustrate how some health care organizations are attempting to incorporate greater attention to quality in their payment arrangements. Any payment method can be improved to support quality. However, fundamental misalignments will remain; thus fixing current payment methods may be important, but not suffi- cient. The final section therefore explores the need for a new approach to pay- ment policy that can better align the needs of patients with the unit and type of payment method.
INCENTIVES OF CURRENT PAYMENT METHODS
Payment processes link together many different actors in health care. Pur- chasers, consumers and patients, health plans and insurers, and health care pro- viders are all connected through various financial transactions (see Figure 8-1). Purchasers or funders of health care include public and private purchasers, such as employers and the Health Care Financing Administration; individual consum- ers and families; and federal, state, and local governments that may offer direct subsidies to certain providers (e.g., public hospitals) or for certain services (e.g., immunizations). Many purchasers buy coverage for their employees or covered populations through contractual arrangements with health plans or insurers. These health plans and insurers, in turn, contract with individual providers and/or pro- vider groups to deliver health care services. In some cases, purchasers and providers may also be directly linked through contracting approaches under which employers contract directly with a provider group to deliver care.
Payment linkages also exist within the boxes shown in Figure 8-1. Purchas- ers and individuals are linked when purchasers provide a choice of coverage to
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ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT 185
their workers or covered populations and when individuals contribute to the cost of that coverage. Similarly, different types of providers can be linked through payment, such as when individual physicians receive payment through a larger medical group or when hospitals and physicians are linked financially in shared- risk arrangements. Because of these complex and diverse linkages, any given approach to payment policy can exert a powerful influence on the way services are provided to consumers and patients, and can produce unintended conse- quences.
Although this chapter focuses primarily on payments involving a payer and a provider, the committee recognizes the need to have a better understanding of how consumer decision making influences payment relationships. Consumers pay for health coverage both when they contribute to the cost of premiums and when they pay directly for health services through copayments, deductibles and payment for noncovered services. Although a great deal of research has been done recently on how consumers use information in selecting a health plan, less attention has been focused on how their decision making affects the payment relationship.
The committee believes consumers and patients should have a direct role in rewarding quality care. To have this role, consumers should have choices, re- ceive information about their choices, and have the power to act on those choices. Not all consumers have a choice of health plans (Trude, 2000), but all have a choice of providers (and some services) within even a single health plan.1 Yet
FIGURE 8-1 Linkages through payment arrangements.
Public and private purchasers
Individuals
Direct public subsidies
Health plans or insurers
Hospitals
Physicians
Other providers
Source of Funds Payment for Services Payment for
Health Coverage
1Increasing interest in defined contribution plans suggests the potential for consumers to entertain more choices.
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186 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
little information is made available to consumers at the level of providers or specific services, particularly relative to quality differences. As a consequence, consumers rarely switch health plans or providers for quality reasons (Cunning- ham and Kohn, 2000). Additional research is needed to understand how con- sumer decision making might affect the way payment flows may be altered in the future. A better understanding is also needed of how to communicate effectively with patients about best practices and evidence-based practice so that quantity is not automatically equated with quality.
The remainder of this section focuses on the right side of Figure 8-1— payment to providers for the direct delivery of services, especially the relation- ship between a health plan or insurer and providers. Other issues of financing health care, such as the source of funds or insurance coverage, are beyond the scope of this report, although the committee believes they are important issues and merit analysis. The following subsections provide a brief overview of com- mon payment methods and the theoretical incentives offered by each. Four types of payment methods are reviewed: methods that pay by prospectively deter- mined budgets regardless of whether services are used, per case payment meth- ods that pay for a bundle of services used in a case, methods that pay by a unit of care as the units are used, and blended methods that combine approaches (Aas, 1995).
Budget Approaches
Under budgeted payment approaches, a budget is set for some defined set of services over a specified period of time and becomes a spending ceiling. A total budget can be set on a per capita basis or be based on historical costs (Aas, 1995). Capitation is a form of budgeting in which the budget is based on a fixed fee for each enrolled person to cover a specified level of health care, regardless of the amount of service actually provided (Aas, 1995; Anderson and Weller, 1999).
The advantages of a budgetary approach are that it provides an incentive to control costs and produce care efficiently, and can encourage innovation in cost- reducing technologies, use of lower-cost settings of care, and investment in health promotion and disease prevention. The approach also can make costs more predictable for the funder. Additionally, it can provide flexibility to providers in deciding how to spend the budgeted amount and coordinate care with other providers encompassed by the budget. Disadvantages include the potential for risk selection to avoid patients who might be high-cost users of care, and the potential to provide insufficient or reduced quality of services to minimize costs and stay within budget (Aas, 1995; Barnum et al., 1995; Lee, 1997). There is also the potential for conflicting incentives if physicians and hospitals are paid under separate risk pools, which could encourage a physician to admit a patient to the hospital (or refer the patient to a specialist) to reduce his or her own costs (Aas, 1995; Barnum et al., 1995).
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ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT 187
A variant of the budget approach applied specifically to physician payment is salary. The advantage of the salary approach is good control over total costs and the dissociation of treatment decisions from a physician’s financial gain or loss. The main disadvantage is the potential for reduced productivity if sufficient rewards are not built in (Aas, 1995).
Per Case Payment
Per case payment methods were introduced in 1983 by Medicare for short- term hospitals providing acute care services to Medicare beneficiaries (Cleverley, 1992). A prospectively set payment amount is determined on the basis of the diagnosis that resulted in the patient’s hospital admission. From the hospital’s perspective, the incentive is to reduce the costs of caring for patients within each diagnosis related group (DRG) in order to benefit from the savings achieved. From the purchaser’s perspective, spending can be controlled directly through payment rates and updates (Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, 2000a). Medicare prospective payment for hospitals is generally believed to have reduced spending growth and increased efforts by hospitals to control costs, as evidenced by shorter lengths of stay and increased margins (Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, 2000a). On August 1, 2000, Medicare instituted a per case pay- ment method for hospital outpatient care using ambulatory payment classifica- tion (APC) groups (Hallam, 2000; Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, 2000b).
Per case payment methods could be applied to the concept of priority condi- tions. For example, the mix of services covered under a payment method could be extended to include a comprehensive bundle of services that could be provided across different settings of care and over a defined period of time, similar to an episode of care. The advantage of this approach is that it would permit providers to design care and allocate resources for a population of patients (e.g., diabetics). Such an approach could also support the formation of multidisciplinary teams that would span settings of care to improve coordination among providers and foster the use of alternative modalities for treatment, such as e-mail for monitor- ing patients over time. Additional research would be needed to determine how to define an episode of care, particularly as applied to a chronic condition (Aas, 1995).
Payment by Unit of Care
Payment methods may be based on some unit of care. For example, under fee-for-service payment for physicians, the unit of payment is a visit or proce- dure. For hospitals, the unit of payment might be a patient day (per diem pay- ment). These are retrospective payment methods in that care is paid for after it is used, although the rate to be paid may be set in advance.
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188 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
In general, payment by unit of care offers little incentive to contain total costs since the incentive is to produce more of the unit of care that is being reimbursed. Under fee-for-service specifically, there is a potential for overuse of services by increasing the intensity of care and treating more patients. Also, since the method is based on individual units of care or service, it can be difficult to coordinate payment across the many members of a care team. The main advantages of payment by some unit of care are that it reduces the incentive for risk selection (i.e., avoiding people who are likely to be high users of care), and that physicians may specialize in difficult-to-treat medical problems. For per diem payment methods, there can also be an incentive to produce care efficiently to maximize profits per day (Aas, 1995; Barnum et al., 1995; Dudley et al., 1998).
Blended Methods
Approaches for bundling payments to providers have received increasing attention in recent years as a mechanism to align more closely the incentives faced by different providers involved in the care of a single patient. The central characteristic of bundled payment is that it covers multiple providers. The advan- tage of bundled payment methods is the opportunity to use resources more effi- ciently if some services across the continuum of care are substitutes for each other. For example, monitored home care could substitute for some office visits. Even if there is no substitution, a payer can make one entity responsible for a bundle of services and provide that entity with an incentive to deliver an efficient combination of services (Welch, 1998). Any possible gains associated with shifting patients among services is diminished.
Concerns with bundled payment approaches include questions about which entity should receive the payment and be held responsible for care (Welch, 1998). Possible responsible entities include health plans, hospitals, and physician groups. Another concern is feasibility in rural areas, where providers may face special difficulties in managing a continuum of services. Concerns have also been raised regarding the technical issues involved in building billing systems that can com- bine services offered by multiple providers (Schmitz, 1999). Additionally, legis- lative changes may be required to bundle payments for some combination of services, such as acute and postacute care (Welch, 1998).
One evaluated program that illustrates the potential of bundled payment is found in the Medicare Participating Heart Bypass Center demonstration, begun in 1991 by the Health Care Financing Administration (Cromwell et al., 1997). Four hospitals were paid a single fee for all inpatient institutional and physician care for heart bypass patients. Hospitals and physicians could split the fee in whatever manner they chose; however, no additional inpatient billing was permitted. The average total costs fell in three of four hospitals, and length of stay for patients in the program declined in all four hospitals. The savings were achieved because of changes in physician practice patterns that occurred when hospital and physician
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ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT 189
incentives were aligned. Surgeons took a more active role in discharge planning, review of drug protocols, and elimination of unnecessary standard orders for routine testing.
Payment methods could be combined along several dimensions (Aas, 1995; Barnum et al., 1995). First, a payment approach could blend methods for a specific type of provider. For example, physicians could be paid using a combi- nation of fee for service and a target rate of growth in overall spending for physician services. Medicare applied this approach when it combined a fee schedule with a sustainable growth rate system for updating physician payment rates (Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, 2000c). Second, methods could be blended by the type of service provided. For example, a provider could be paid under capitation, with certain services designated for separate payment (Maguire et al., 1998). Third, methods could be blended by category of provider. For example, in an integrated delivery system, physicians could be paid under capitation and hospitals paid on a per diem basis. Finally, methods could be blended by time horizon. For example, providers could be paid under a prospec- tively determined budget, with a retrospective adjustment for the mix of patients actually seen.
Summary
In general, payment methods based on budget for a range of care are better at controlling the total costs of that care, but can create concerns regarding underuse. They may also require greater institutional investment in information and man- agement systems so the provider organization can monitor care and costs. Pay- ment on a per unit basis has the opposite effect: it is often easier for providers to manage, but is usually less amenable to controlling total costs.
The payment methods used most commonly today are based on payment for some unit of care as it is used (see Table 8-1). Physicians are typically paid through fee-for-service methods and hospitals through billed (discounted) charges, per diem or per case. Some surveys suggest that capitation may be increasing for physicians (Kane et al., 1998; Simon and Emmons, 1997); how- ever, other sources suggest its use may be flat or declining (Lesser and Ginsburg, 2000). The use of capitation for hospitals may also be declining in favor of per diem, perhaps influenced by reductions in length of stay so that health plans prefer to “rent beds” on as as-needed basis (Rauber, 1999). Information is not available on the frequency of use of budget approaches. It is important to note, however, that most providers receive payment from a variety of payers that may rely on different methods. Therefore, any given provider faces a mix of incen- tives and rewards, rather than a consistent set of expectations. This mix has a significant influence on how payment methods can inhibit quality improvement, as discussed in the following section.
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190
T A
B L
E 8
-1 C
ur re
nt P
ay m
en t
M et
ho ds
f or
P hy
si ci
an s
an d
H os
pi ta
ls B
as ed
o n
P ri
va te
ly I
ns ur
ed P
at ie
nt s
P ay
m en
t M
et ho
ds F
or P
hy si
ci an
s P
ay m
en t
M et
ho ds
F or
H os
pi ta
ls
F ee
f or
S er
vi ce
/ S
al ar
ie d
C ap
it at
io n
B il
le d
C ha
rg es
o r
P er
D ie
m P
er C
as e
C ap
it at
io n
D is
co un
te d
F ee
f or
S er
vi ce
D is
co un
te d
C ha
rg es
P ri
m ar
y ca
re :
7 2%
P ri
m ar
y ca
re :
3 %
P ri
m ar
y ca
re :
2 5%
30 %
43 %
18 %
8% S
pe ci
al ty
c ar
e:
82 %
S pe
ci al
ty c
ar e:
3%
S pe
ci al
ty c
ar e:
15
%
N O
T E
: D
at a
ar e
ba se
d on
C om
m un
it y
T ra
ck in
g S
tu dy
( C
T S
), I
ns ur
an ce
F ol
lo w
ba ck
S ur
ve y,
1 99
6- 19
97 , c
on du
ct ed
b y
th e
C en
te r
fo r
S tu
dy in
g H
ea lt
h S
ys te
m C
ha ng
e.
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C T
S I
ns ur
an ce
F ol
lo w
ba ck
S ur
ve y
is a
s up
pl em
en t
to t
he C
T S
H ou
se ho
ld S
ur ve
y, a
l ar
ge ,
na ti
on al
ly r
ep re
se nt
at iv
e lo
ng it
ud in
al s
ur ve
y. In
fo rm
at io
n on
th e
pr iv
at el
y in
su re
d ob
ta in
ed f
ro m
th e
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se ho
ld S
ur ve
y w
as u
se d
to c
on ta
ct in
su re
rs /h
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an s
an d
ob ta
in in
fo rm
at io
n on
c ha
ra ct
er is
ti cs
o f
th e
he al
th i
ns ur
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p ro
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s th
ey o
ff er
. In
su re
rs a
nd h
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h pl
an s
w er
e as
ke d
to r
ep or
t th
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pi ca
l m
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d of
p ay
m en
t us
ed f
or e
ac h
ty pe
o f
se rv
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fo r
ea ch
pr od
uc t.
T he
se r
es po
ns es
w er
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en m
at ch
ed t
o H
ou se
ho ld
S ur
ve y
re sp
on de
nt s
to d
es cr
ib e
th ei
r in
su ra
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co ve
ra ge
. E
st im
at es
a re
e nr
ol le
e- w
ei gh
te d,
re pr
es en
ti ng
a ll
p eo
pl e
un de
r ag
e 65
w it
h pr
iv at
e in
su ra
nc e.
T ot
al s
m ay
n ot
s um
to 1
00 b
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se o
f ro
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rr or
.
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s pr
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as e
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( D
R G
).
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be ne
fi ci
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s en
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n M
ed ic
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h ea
lt h
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cc or
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t o
a Ju
ne 2
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F ac
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, ab
ou t
16 p
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f M
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(“ T
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w w
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5. 6
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m an
ag ed
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em ai
nd er
a re
i n
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fo r
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( N at
io na
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m m
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a. go
v/ m
ed ic
ai d/
tr en
ds 99
.h tm
).
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
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ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT 191
Finally, as was noted at the beginning of the chapter, different payment methods are designed to meet different objectives, but none automatically has quality improvement as an objective. Such an objective must therefore be explic- itly designed into any payment method.
BARRIERS TO QUALITY IMPROVEMENT IN CURRENT PAYMENT METHODS2
There is a growing body of evidence that quality improvement can translate into dollar savings (Classen et al., 1997; Clemmer et al., 1999; Conrad et al., 1996; Jarlier and Charvet-Protat, 2000). Poor quality is costly in several ways. First, quality-related problems can result in waste, such as when a step in the care process fails so that treatment must be repeated (e.g., the CT scan has to be redone), or extra resources are required to fix the failed process (e.g., treat an avoidable complication). Second, quality-related problems can lead to ineffi- ciencies, as when two processes can produce the same outcome, but the more costly alternative is selected. An additional issue is that some processes may produce superior outcomes but utilize more resources, therefore resulting in cost increases. There is no advantage to this kind of quality improvement. In an environment that evaluates costs but not results, Anderson and Daigh (1991) suggest that quality waste accounts for 25–40 percent of all hospital costs.
Despite the evidence that poor quality costs money, however, health care organizations and professionals have not adopted quality-based process manage- ment to compete in today’s marketplace. In fact, there are cases in which signifi- cant financial losses have resulted in the elimination of quality projects rather than the intensification of such efforts (Shulkin, 2000). Indeed, a variety of barriers embodied in current payment methods prevent health care organizations from pursuing quality improvement. The following subsections describe ex- amples of four such payment barriers: perverse payment methods, adverse risk selection, annual contracting arrangements, and up-front investments required by provider groups.
Perverse Payment Mechanisms
Two examples of how payment mechanisms can inhibit quality improve- ment were provided at the IOM workshop held on April 24, 2000, by Dr. Brent James of the Intermountain Health System, Salt Lake City, Utah:
2Much of the discussion in this section draws on a paper prepared by Brent James, M.D. presented at an IOM-sponsored workshop on the relationship between payment and quality improvement held on April 24, 2000.
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192 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
Example 1 A physician group paid primarily on a fee-for-service basis instituted a
new program to improve blood sugar control for diabetic patients. Specifically, pilot studies suggested that tighter diabetic management could decrease hemo- globin A1c levels by 2 percentage points for about 40 percent of all diabetic patients managed by the physician group. Data from two randomized con- trolled trials demonstrated that better sugar controls should translate into lower rates of retinopathy, nephropathy, peripheral neurological damage, and heart disease (The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research Group, 1993). The savings in direct health care costs (i.e., reduced visits and hospital epi- sodes) from avoided complications have been estimated to generate a net sav- ings of about $2,000 per patient per year, on average, over 15 years (Demers et al., 1997). Across the more than 13,000 diabetic patients managed by the physician group, the project had the potential to generate over $10 million in net savings each year. The project was costly to the medical group in two ways. First, expenses to conduct the project, including extra clinical time for tighter management, fell to the physician group. Second, over time, as diabetic com- plication rates fell, the project would reduce patient visits and, thus revenues as well. The savings from avoided complications would fall to the insurer or a self-funded purchaser.
Example 2 A delivery system refined and implemented the American Thoracic Soci-
ety’s practice guideline on community-acquired pneumonia in ten rural Utah hospitals, focusing on indications for hospitalization and choice of initial antibi- otics. In a prospective nonrandomized controlled trial using other Utah hospi- tals as controls, compliance with the guideline in the intervention hospitals increased from 22 to 40 percent (p < 0.001); the proportion of patients suffering significant complications fell from 15.3 to 11.6 percent (p < 0.001); inpatient mortality rates fell from 7.2 to 5.3 percent (p = 0.015); and costs fell by 12.3 percent (p < 0.001), primarily as a result of expenses avoided through the lower complication rate. The cost savings in those ten small rural hospitals totaled more than $500,000 per year, but an analysis of net operating income showed a loss to the facilities of over $200,000 per year. The reason was that as the complication rate fell, patients shifted from diagnosis related groups (DRGs) associated with complications (such as DRG 475, respiratory system diagnosis with ventilator support, carrying a per case payment of about $16,500 and pro- viding a small excess of payment beyond treatment costs) to classifications such as DRG 89 (simple pneumonia and pleurisy, age > 17, with complications or comorbidities, carrying a per case payment of about $4,730, which failed to cover the full costs of care).
Quality problems can be grouped in three categories (Chassin et al., 1998). Overuse is the provision of a health care service under circumstances in which its potential for harm exceeds the possible benefit. Underuse is the failure to pro- vide a health care service when it would have produced a favorable outcome for a patient. With misuse an appropriate service is provided, but a preventable
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ALIGNING PAYMENT POLICIES WITH QUALITY IMPROVEMENT 193
complication occurs, and the patient does not receive the full potential benefit of the service. Efforts to correct each of these kinds of problems are affected differently by alternative payment methods, given the theoretical incentives de- scribed in the previous section. An example is provided below of what happens at the delivery level in trying to correct each type of quality problem, along with the effects of different payment methods.
Correcting Problems of Overuse. An example of correcting problems of overuse is a reduction in unnecessary surgical procedures. If a physician (or medical group) were paid under fee-for-service methods, the physician would lose revenues because fewer procedures would be performed. However, physi- cians paid under a budgeted approach (such as capitation or a shared risk arrange- ment) could benefit financially because fewer resources would be used in caring for affected patients. Hospitals would lose revenues under most payment meth- ods (billed charges, per case, or per diem) because of the reduced volume of care, but, like physicians, would potentially gain financially under a capitation or shared-risk arrangement.
Correcting Problems of Underuse. An example of correcting problems of underuse is the provision of needed services to those who were previously un- treated. Physicians paid under fee-for-service methods would potentially gain financially by seeing more patients who need care, but could lose under capita- tion or risk-sharing arrangements if patients in their current panel received more services. Similarly, hospitals would gain under most payment methods (billed charges, per diem, per case) because they would be serving more patients, but could suffer financial losses under capitation or shared-risk methods for the same reasons as physicians.
Correcting Problems of Misuse. An example of correcting problems of misuse is a reduction in infections acquired by patients while receiving needed health care services. Under fee-for-service payment, physicians would poten- tially lose revenues if fewer services were needed by patients because there were fewer infections. Under capitation or risk-sharing arrangements, physicians could benefit by expending fewer resources to manage the avoided infections. Hospi- tals would face a potentially mixed set of effects. Under billed charges, the hospital could lose revenues if reduced infections meant fewer services provided. Hospitals could gain under per diem methods if the length of stay remained the same for patients, but they used fewer resources each day because of the avoided infections. However, hospitals could also potentially lose under per diem pay- ment if the avoided infections reduced patients’ length of stay. A mixed effect is possible as well under per case payment. A hospital could gain financially if fewer resources were required per case, but could potentially lose financially if patients fell into a lower-paying DRG because of avoided infections (as in ex- ample 2). Generally, hospitals would gain financially under capitation or risk- sharing arrangements because patients would require fewer resources.
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194 CROSSING THE QUALITY CHASM
In sum, efforts to improve quality by correcting overuse, underuse, or misuse all have an impact on provider revenues; no payment method is neutral. Under the most common payment methods, correcting problems of underuse and those of overuse would have opposite effects: providers would gain financially by correcting the former problems, but they would lose by correcting the latter. Correcting problems of misuse would produce mixed effects for both physicians and hospitals, especially since physicians get most of their revenues from fee-for- service payment, and hospitals get a substantial portion of their revenues from per case payment. Thus the most common payment methods have insufficient incen- tives to fix problems of overuse and present great difficulties in fixing problems of misuse (because of the mixed effects, which can also make it difficult for hospitals and physicians to work together). There is a greater likelihood of financial gain from fixing problems of underuse. This reinforces the perception that improving quality costs money.
Even when care delivery groups want to improve the quality of the clinical processes and outcomes they routinely deliver to their patients, they can be se- verely limited in their ability to pursue such strategies if providers lose revenues from many quality improvement activities because of the expenses of implement- ing the improvements and the revenues lost as a result of reduced care delivery. Many health care professionals and organizations conduct activities that are harm- ful to their bottom line (e.g., provision of uncompensated care). However, it is not possible to sustain broad-based efforts to achieve a substantial improvement in quality if such efforts are financially harmful to those undertaking them. Fur- thermore, as earlier improvement efforts worsen their financial position, provider groups will not have the resources necessary to pursue additional clinical im- provement projects. Therefore, although a payer may reap the initial benefits from quality improvement through reduced intensity or volume of care, the in- ability of providers to sustain such strategies on a long-term basis will hinder the ability to achieve continuous and lasting improvement.
Two broad options are possible to address problems associated with perverse payment mechanisms. One possible approach is to provide mechanisms to facili- tate more shared-risk arrangements that include not only hospitals and physicians aligning purpose, but also payer involvement. Shared-risk arrangements could include capitation, but could also include negotiated arrangements around an agreed-upon budget amount, which might or might not result in per capita pay- ment. Payers gain from reduced care delivery, but hospitals and physicians are responsible for changing the way care is delivered. Shared-risk arrangements could provide mechanisms for all parties involved to gain from changes in care. Alternatively, since fee-for-service payments (or billed charges for hospitals) remain in common use, mechanisms could be developed to compensate providers for the expenses associated with developing and implementing quality improve- ment programs. This compensation could take the form of making a direct
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payment or directing increased volume to those providers with recognized and measurable quality improvement initiatives. Both of those options reflect the need for resources to shift if broad-based and lasting quality improvement is to be achieved.
Adverse Risk Selection
Adverse risk selection occurs when an organization that bears financial risk (whether a health plan or provider group) attempts to avoid enrolling or caring for sick patients who have conditions that result in high and/or continuing costs. Both insurers and providers are concerned that undertaking quality improvement and publicizing quality outcomes will attract patients more likely to have condi- tions that make them high users of care and high-cost (Dudley et al., 1998). For example, if a health plan has a good program for identifying and managing those with diabetes, it is likely to enroll more diabetic patients. Since few purchasers adjust payment for this type of risk, the health plan bears the burden. Such health plans in turn, are unlikely to give their providers incentives to design programs that will attract a disproportionate share of people with diabetes. If financial risk is delegated to the provider group, the providers bear the financial burden of care for this population. The concern is related mainly to chronic conditions rather than acute care needs since the former represent ongoing expenses.
Risk-adjustment methods are an attempt to provide payment to health plans and providers that is commensurate with the health risks of the population served so that the organizations compete on efficiency, service, and quality instead of risk selection (Bowen, 1995). In the context of payment policy, risk is defined as how precisely future medical costs of an enrollee or group can be predicted (Gauthier et al., 1995). Risk adjustment is important because the distribution of medical expenditures is highly skewed, with a small fraction of individuals ac- counting for a substantial proportion of expenditures in any given year (Luft, 1995; Maguire et al., 1998). It has been estimated that the top 1 percent of spenders account for 30 percent of health care expenditures, whereas the bottom 50 percent account for only 3 percent (Berk and Monheit, 1992). Although some expenditures are unpredictable (such as trauma related to an auto accident), some are predictable (such as people with a chronic illness who are recognized as incurring continuing costs). Since some expenditures are predictable, organiza- tions that assume financial risk for the care of a group can potentially avoid recognized high users of care and their costs.
There are a number of different approaches to adjust for risk, such as use of specific adjustment methods, withholds and risk pools, carve-outs, and reinsur- ance (Newhouse et al., 1997). Prospective risk-adjustment methods, several of which have been developed in recent years, have gained attention (particularly by the Health Care Financing Administration). Two leading models are adjusted
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clinical groups (ACGs, formerly referred to as ambulatory care groups) and diagnostic cost groups (DCGs) (Newhouse et al., 1997). Both methods use diagnostic information to improve predictability as compared with the demo- graphic adjustments used by Medicare to pay health plans.
ACGs were developed at The Johns Hopkins University to classify risks by using diagnoses reported in ambulatory visits (Starfield et al., 1991). The system assigns diagnoses to a risk group based on five clinical dimensions, such as a condition’s duration, severity, and diagnostic certainty. Both inpatient and am- bulatory versions are available.
Initial development on DCGs was conducted through a consortium of re- searchers at Boston University, Health Economics Research, and the Harvard University School of Medicine, and is based on inpatient diagnoses for prior hospitalizations. The DCG model has been expanded to include both inpatient and ambulatory information and to account for multiple medical conditions pa- tients may experience (Ellis et al., 1996).
Another method is clinical risk groups (CRGs), developed by 3M Health Information Systems (Averill et al., 1999). This clinical classification system assigns each patient to a risk group that relates past clinical information to the amount and type of health services the individual will consume in the future. Additionally, a survey-based approach has been developed at Kaiser-Permanente Health Plan for the working-age population. This method uses a chronic disease checklist and self-reported health status and functional status (using the RAND SF-36) to assess health risk (Hornbrook and Goodman, 1996).
The challenges involved in developing a fair and adequate risk-adjustment system cannot be underestimated. All current methods are limited in their ability to predict variation in expenditures. The Health Care Financing Administration implemented a transitional risk-adjustment system in January 2000 using a form of the DCG model, and is moving forward with an expanded model that will include inpatient, hospital outpatient, and physician encounter data. A number of models for this more comprehensive approach are being considered. It should be noted that improving risk-adjustment methods will likely necessitate more clini- cal information (rather than just claims information), which in turn will require significantly improved information systems (Dudley et al., 2000).
The goals for risk adjustment need to be balanced with the goals of quality improvement. In risk adjustment, the objective is to identify the subpopulation at risk of high utilization and high cost, whereas in quality improvement, the objec- tive is to identify all patients with a particular condition who could benefit from treatment (Dudley et al., 2000). On the one hand, if there is a potential for higher payment, health care organizations are likely to identify as many at-risk patients as possible and collect whatever information is necessary. On the other hand, doing so could bias quality measures through possible upcoding and might not provide incentives to design efficient and effective systems of care. The potential for payment methods to be based on similar patients with common conditions,
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including definitions of best practice, may help mediate some of the possible adverse effects.
Annual Contracting Arrangements
In theory, capitation and shared-risk arrangements provide incentives to pur- sue quality improvement strategies that minimize costs over the long term by keeping people healthy. To the extent that turnover in health plan membership and contracting arrangements occurs, however, suboptimization may result if the organization that undertakes the quality improvement does not see the benefits from those efforts.
Annual contracting arrangements can produce turnover in three ways. First, health plans and purchasers can alter annually the plans offered to consumers and force a change in health plan enrollment. Second, health plans and providers can alter annually the composition of provider networks, forcing patients to switch providers. Third, annual enrollment by individuals in health plans can produce turnover for the plans even if there is no change in the two former arrangements.
Annual contracting cycles may hinder a health care organization’s ability to pursue quality improvement initiatives if the organization believes the benefits will accrue to a competitor. If a health plan has even modest enrollee turnover, and a quality improvement project requires an up-front investment while the financial savings span years, patients may very well have shifted to another plan by the time the health benefits and related savings accrue. The same is true for a provider group that may develop a good program for difficult-to-manage diabet- ics and is able to improve compliance with treatment, but is dropped from the health plan’s provider panel, so that those now well-controlled patients go to a competitor’s diabetic program. Such turnover can eliminate the benefit for many proposed clinical improvement projects.
Longer-term arrangements among provider groups, health plans, and pur- chasers may be advisable to facilitate the investments needed to achieve quality improvement and ensure gains to the partners from the benefits that are generated over time (whether in the form of savings or improved outcomes). However, patients and consumers should be able to shift coverage or source of care for quality-related reasons. The ability of consumers and patients to do so can be a strong motivator for clinicians and health plans to offer such good care that people will not want to leave.
Up-Front Investments Required by Provider Groups
Provider groups face two specific managerial issues that are affected by payment arrangements and can hamper efforts by health care organizations to pursue quality improvement: (1) the difficulty of measuring the impact of quality improvement on the organization’s bottom line and (2) infrastructure challenges
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encountered by those organizations seeking to implement broad-based quality improvement programs. Up-front investments are likely to be required to address both of these issues.
Difficulty of Measuring the Impact of Quality Improvement on the Bottom Line
When evaluating the potential for a quality improvement project to improve a health care organization’s bottom line, the expense of the proposed improve- ment is compared with the potential savings in variable costs. Variable costs are expenses that fluctuate directly with patient volumes, such as medications, dis- posable equipment, other supplies, and staffing levels, and are achieved relatively quickly. The impact of the proposed clinical quality improvement initiative is rarely evaluated in terms of savings in fixed costs, since those costs accrue over a longer time period. Fixed costs are expenses that a physician, clinic, hospital, or delivery system must pay regardless of patient volumes, such as payments for buildings, diagnostic and other equipment, licensing and regulatory fees, mal- practice insurance, and minimum required staffing.
Most health care costs are considered fixed, although there is likely variation in how individual health care organizations define their fixed or variable costs. For example, many consider labor costs to be fixed in the short term, but variable over the long term. However, it has been estimated that 60 to 75 percent of all expenses fall into the fixed cost category (Lave and Lave, 1984; Williams, 1996), leaving only about 25 to 40 percent of the savings generated by quality-based elimination of clinical waste (the proportion accounted as variable expenses) to appear quickly on an organization’s balance sheet. The remaining 60 to 75 percent of the potential savings, representing the fixed cost portion, appears as unused capacity within the organization. If a care delivery group can recruit additional patients to reduce excess capacity, an immediate benefit will be real- ized. The organization’s fixed costs will be spread across a larger patient popu- lation (all of the old patients, plus a number of new ones) so that the effective fixed cost per patient will fall, creating a larger financial margin for each patient treated. However, if the organization cannot increase patient volume, several years can be required to affect the fixed costs. Thus, the proportion of fixed costs in health care affects the ability to measure the impact of quality improvement efforts on an organization’s bottom line.
Infrastructure Investments
An organization that wants to use clinical quality as a business strategy must make a substantial investment in skill building and culture change. Clinical process management, a health care delivery organization’s core business func- tion, has traditionally been seen as a secondary responsibility of the voluntary medical staff. Practicing physicians are asked to contribute time without com-
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pensation and to serve on clinical oversight committees, taking time away from their primary patient care role. An organization must make a substantial invest- ment in medical and other clinical leadership, as well as build an effective man- agement and information infrastructure to use for tracking outcomes, assessing performance, and setting clinical improvement goals. This investment should include tools and training in quality methods, but also adequate information systems that can be applied to clinical quality improvement (see Chapter 7).
ADAPTING EXISTING PAYMENT METHODS TO SUPPORT QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
As noted earlier, the IOM held a workshop on April 24, 2000, to discuss the relationship between payment and quality improvement. At the workshop, sev- eral examples were provided to illustrate how various existing payment meth- ods—including fee for service, capitation, a blended method, and a shared-risk (budget) method—could be adapted to support quality improvement. This sec- tion describes the examples presented at the workshop.
Adapting Fee-for-Service Payment
Dr. Glenn Littenberg described how fee-for-service payment could be adapted to provide incentives for quality improvement by encouraging coopera- tion and providing reimbursement for care outside of the traditional office visit, which is not always optimal for meeting patients’ needs. The approach involves developing relative values for the elements of work performed over time by physicians and other health professionals. For example, physicians provide care between visits, including coordination of complex cases, phone consults with patients and other professionals, and follow-up on tests performed. These activi- ties do not require face-to-face contact, but can occupy a significant amount of professional time. A Current Procedural Technology (CPT) code could be devel- oped for use of electronic media with the patient not present for specific commu- nications, for research, for clinical updates, and for coordination of care with other health professionals within a 30-day period. Codes could also be developed and relative values assigned for other organizational innovations designed to improve quality (e.g., anticoagulation clinics, which would include the clinical groups that have key roles, such as physicians, pharmacists, nurses, and dietary staff).
Despite the growth of alternative payment methods, fee-for-service payment remains important. Even in capitated systems, many individual physicians are paid using a fee-for-service method. Additionally, fee-for-service payment lev- els often serve as the benchmark for other payment methods. As a result, finan- cial support for activities that would improve quality care and rely on fee-for- service payment remains one avenue for building in rewards for quality care.
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Adapting Capitation Payment
Dr. Sam Ho described how PacifiCare Health System has developed a pay- ment structure that rewards quality care provided by the 700 medical groups with which the plan contracts. PacifiCare pays the majority of medical groups by capitation for all professional services. Hospitals are also paid predominantly through capitation. The health plan retains risk for certain hospital, pharmacy, and ancillary services (e.g., durable medical equipment). The core of the system is a report card program that provides quality performance information to both physicians and consumers. The provider profile contains about 80 measures enabling medical groups to compare their own performance over time, as well as with regional and national benchmarks. The consumer-focused performance report currently contains 32 indicators, with more being added each year. Pre- liminary analysis conducted by PacifiCare indicates that the medical groups with higher scores on “best practice” are seeing statistically significant increases in membership and high member retention rates.
Two specific elements of the PacifiCare approach are worth noting. First, the approach focuses on the availability of data, relying on depth and breadth of data. Second, much of the information is directed toward consumers as decision makers. Rather than being directed at selection of a health plan, the information is at the medical group level, where consumers can evaluate their own trade-offs among cost, quality, access, and any other dimensions of importance to them.
Adapting Blended Payment Methods
Ann Robinow of the Buyers Health Care Action Group, Minneapolis, Min- nesota, described what some have termed a direct contracting approach. The group contracts with “care systems,” defined as groups of primary care physi- cians and affiliated specialists and facilities that could assume responsibility for the provision of a full continuum of care (Christianson et al., 1999). Payment is blended in that a budget target is set prospectively and adjusted retrospectively. Each year, care systems set a financial target for all care to enrollees (including pharmacy) that becomes the price to consumers and the benchmark for financial performance. The prices are risk adjusted every quarter using ACGs by compar- ing the care system’s performance for the most recent 12-month period with the target (Christianson et al., 1999), which is adjusted each quarter to reflect the relative illness burden of patients during the same time period for which financial information is being collected. Because it is a claims-based system in which each employer pays its own fees, fee levels are increased or decreased over time so that the fees approximate the target submitted (fees increase if the organization is below target and decrease if the target is exceeded). Consumers receive com- parative information at the care system level. Ms. Robinow indicated that the group’s own analysis indicates people are moving from the higher-cost to the
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lower-cost systems and that systems with higher satisfaction scores have also had higher enrollment gains.
Two notable elements of this approach are its focus on the care system and consumer involvement. The focus on the care system places responsibility at the level at which processes of care can be modified to improve quality. Providing comparative information to consumers at this level of the care system gives them information about care delivery and not just health coverage. This information is perceived as being more valuable for patients.
Adapting Shared-Risk (Budget) Arrangements
Dr. Brent James of Intermountain Health Care described the organization’s recent experience in moving toward shared-risk arrangements in which partner- ships are established with purchasers, and risk is shared around a budget based on the expectations of caring for a population. Costs are typically projected on the basis of a particular set of disease entities in clinical programs that represent the work of smaller groups. These are referred to as care processes. These groups do not manage just one activity (e.g., mammography), but rather a number of pro- cesses for a single condition (e.g., breast cancer). The price is negotiated among the partners. If Intermountain is able to produce care for the population below budget, all the partners share in the savings.
Intermountain perceives several advantages to this approach. First, it per- mits the organization to share in the benefits of quality improvement. Second, care can be organized around processes that are meaningful to health profession- als, patients, and purchasers, which helps align incentives and work priorities. Third, the approach uses a budgeted target to impose financial discipline, but does not rely on capitation, which means it can be applied to smaller groups of practitioners and patients that would not assume actuarial risk. The challenge is the need for good data to set budgets fairly and monitor clinical processes of care.
NEED FOR A NEW APPROACH
Although incentives to improve quality could be strengthened through incre- mental improvements in existing payment methods, more significant reform of the payment system will be needed over the long term. All health care organiza- tions face serious barriers in pursuing broad-based efforts at quality improve- ment, and providers face a mix of incentives from different payment methods. Conceptually, a provider group could manage effectively in an environment that was entirely fee for service or entirely capitation, but the present environment is a mix of both. An organization that manages to succeed predominantly under fee-for-service payment will fail under the incentives of capitation. On the other hand, an organization that manages to succeed under capitation will fail on the portion of care that is paid through fee for service. Thus, health care organiza-
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tions are faced with a financial situation in which it is almost impossible to manage for quality.
There are several ways to improve the way payment methods reward quality care. One option is to refine existing payment methods to provide greater re- wards for quality. As noted in the preceding discussion, all existing payment methods can be improved to reward quality better. However, although these incremental improvements are important to pursue, a more fundamental restruc- turing of the payment system is needed. One of the common threads that runs through most of the recent innovations in payment is greater attention to sub- populations with common clinical needs.
Chapter 4 describes the need for a classification system around priority conditions to facilitate the provision of care based on the common reasons for which people seek care. Although it would be premature to recommend payment based on priority conditions, it is appropriate to study their feasibility as a tool for aligning the scope of services provided with the scope of payment. For example, a patient with a chronic condition may be seeking the acute care services tradi- tionally covered under insurance, but may also need, for example, services re- lated to counseling and behavior change, support groups, e-mail access for com- munication between visits, strongly managed and continuous coordination with other health professionals, and medical supplies. However, today’s payment approaches offer a chronically ill patient face-to-face office visits as the primary mechanism for receiving care and rarely encompass the range of services needed across the continuum of care. Furthermore, the fragmentation of payment by service can make it difficult for care to be coordinated efficiently across multiple settings. There is a misalignment among what the patient needs, the services provided, and how needed services are paid for. Organizing care and payment around priority conditions could offer a framework for aligning payment incen- tives around a common clinical purpose that is consistent with meeting patient needs as completely and efficiently as possible.
The committee recognizes that such redesign could require significant changes in the purpose and structure of the insurance function. The role of health plans could shift toward a heavy emphasis on obtaining information from various configurations of providers and, in turn, releasing information to the public. Consumers’ responsibilities could also shift if they are to become more directly involved in comparing options for care and the arrangements through which they wish to receive care. Despite the challenges, however, the committee believes good-quality care can be recognized and rewarded through payment policies.
Although this chapter focuses on current payment policy and its shortcom- ings, the committee also discussed a set of larger economic issues. The commit- tee recognizes that the recommendations in this report will reduce costs in some areas and increase costs in others. In general, correcting problems of overuse and misuse is likely to result in cost reductions, whereas correcting problems of underuse is likely to increase costs (Chassin et al., 1998). Quality problems
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related to overuse increase costs through the provision of services from which patients do not benefit. Patients may also be exposed to unnecessary risks asso- ciated with treatment (Fisher and Welch, 1999). Quality problems related to misuse increase costs when tests and procedures have to repeated or when avoid- able complications increase treatment needs. On the other hand, quality prob- lems related to underuse represent artificial “savings,” as patients do not receive beneficial services, such as immunizations.
In terms of the specific recommendations in this report, there are several potential areas in which cost savings may be produced. Greater use of informa- tion technology (see Chapter 7) should result in costs savings in several ways. First, automation of certain functions may reduce some labor costs. This has happened in other industries, such as manufacturing. Second, information tech- nology may permit substitution of less costly alternatives of care. For example, to the extent that monitoring of patients can occur partly through e-mail, some office visits may be eliminated, as in the case of patients with controlled chronic conditions who may be able to visit their physician’s office twice a year instead of quarterly, relying on electronic communication between visits. Third, use of computerized drug prescribing has been shown to reduce medication errors, which are known to increase costs (Bates et al., 1997, 1998, 1999).
Cost reductions may also be possible with better application of the evidence base (see Chapter 6). Standardizing care around best practices and reducing variation in treatment patterns should result in reduced and/or more predictable costs of care. The use of effective decision support systems can reduce variation in practice through improved compliance with practice guidelines (Balas et al., 2000; Shea et al., 1996).
Finally, cost savings may be achieved through greater use of multidisciplinary teams (see Chapter 5). When teams are well coordinated and are able to suffi- ciently plan care and share information, it may become possible to substitute less- costly personnel for higher-cost personnel. Developing and using care teams properly can improve coordination across settings and over time to reduce ineffi- ciencies associated with handoffs among members of the care team.
The committee recognizes, however, that not all activities to improve quality will be cost-reducing. In addition to cost increases associated with correcting problems of underuse, as noted above, there will also be costs associated with implementing changes in the organization and delivery of care. Even if a change ultimately reduces cost, the process of evolving from the current system to the system of the 21st century may incur significant costs. Although some public support can help move such a process forward, health care organizations them- selves will need to invest in change, just as other industries (e.g., banking) have invested in transforming their business procedures. Key transitional areas that are likely to increase costs in the short- to mid-term time frame include (1) the need to train people for new jobs in health care (or in other fields) as some workers are displaced by new approaches to organizing and delivering care,
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(2) investment in information technology and associated training costs, (3) the need to maintain duplicative systems temporarily while redesigning care pro- cesses (i.e., retaining the old process while the new process is being implemented and refined), and (4) capital investment to support redesign and reengineering of the current system.
It is not known how cost increases and decreases will ultimately balance over time. Regardless of the final calculus, however, what can be obtained is better value for the resources expended. Good value does not lie in spending over $1 trillion on health care that leaves some people receiving care they do not need and others not receiving the care they need. There should be a strong commitment to evaluating the economic and other impacts associated with improving the quality of care. However, such evaluations may not be amenable to existing measure- ment approaches. For example, benefits from information technology have in- cluded easier access to medical histories, improved access to summary patient details, support for protocols or guidelines, and quicker reporting of results of treatment (Lock, 1996). These benefits are difficult to quantify and to incorpo- rate into a traditional return-on-investment analysis. Therefore, assessing the impact of new approaches and innovative programs designed to improve quality may require new measurement approaches.
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9
Preparing the Workforce
Health care is not just another service industry. Its fundamental nature is characterized by people taking care of other people in times of need and stress. Patients are ill, families are worried, and the ultimate outcome may be uncertain. Stable, trusting relationships between a patient and the people providing care can be critical to healing or managing an illness. The people who deliver care are the health system’s most important resource.
All of the issues raised in the previous chapters of this report have important implications for the health care workforce, potentially requiring different work in new types of organizations that may use fewer people. Accountabilities and standards of care may change; relationships between patients and health profes- sionals are certain to do so.
The health care workforce is large, having employed almost 6 million people in 1998 (Occupational Employment Statistics, 2000) with a wide variety of edu- cational backgrounds, specialization, and skills. Professional hierarchies are well established and reinforced by training, laws, and regulations, as well as culture and history. In general, health professionals are also conservative, stressing the application of precedent and risk avoidance in clinical practice, particularly rela- tive to changes that may affect the quality of care for patients. As a result, any change can be exceedingly slow and difficult to accomplish, especially if there is not a clear understanding of why the change may be needed or of its impact on current practices.
The importance of appropriately preparing the workforce for the changes in health care delivery that will be necessitated by the recommendations in this report cannot be underestimated. There are many serious challenges facing the
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health care workforce, including difficulties in retention of personnel, the im- pending crisis in nursing supply, and the need for strong leadership within the health care system to guide and support what will be a very difficult transition. When clinicians are under stress themselves, it is difficult to take care of patients who are ill and stressed. Indeed, this was one of the key transitional issues identified during the committee’s deliberations. It is a broad topic that can only be introduced here, but the committee emphasizes the need for additional study to understand the effects of the changes recommended herein on how the workforce is prepared for practice, how it is deployed, and how it is held accountable.
Recommendation 12: A multidisciplinary summit of leaders within the health professions should be held to discuss and develop strate- gies for (1) restructuring clinical education to be consistent with the principles of the 21st-century health system throughout the con- tinuum of undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education for medical, nursing, and other professional training programs; and (2) assessing the implications of these changes for provider credentialing programs, funding, and sponsorship of education pro- grams for health professionals.
Recommendation 13: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality should fund research to evaluate how the current regula- tory and legal systems (1) facilitate or inhibit the changes needed for the 21st-century health care delivery system, and (2) can be modi- fied to support health care professionals and organizations that seek to accomplish the six aims set forth in Chapter 2.
This chapter briefly examines three specific issues: clinical training and education, regulation of the health professions, and legal liability issues. Clinical training and education is seen as particularly important for changing the culture of health care practice to support achievement of the aims set forth in Chapter 2. Greater understanding is needed of why prior efforts at modifying clinical educa- tion have not had the desired impact and of the supportive strategies needed to overcome such barriers.
CLINICAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING
To achieve the six aims proposed in Chapter 2, additional skills may be required of health professionals—not just physicians, but all clinicians who care for patients. Prior chapters have identified a number of changes affecting health care delivery, including a shift from acute to chronic care, the need to manage a continually expanding evidence base and technological innovations, more clini- cal practice occurring in teams and complex delivery arrangements, and changing patient–clinician relationships. The need to balance cost, quality, and access in
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health care will put pressures on clinical education programs, particularly given the outlay of public dollars for clinical education.
The types of new or enhanced skills required by health professionals might include, for example, the ability to:
• Use a variety of approaches to deliver care, including the provision of care without face-to-face visits (e.g., using electronic communications to provide follow-up care and routine monitoring) (see Chapter 3).
• Synthesize the evidence base and communicate it to patients (see Chapter 6).
• Combine the evidence base, knowledge about population outcomes, and patient preferences to tailor care for an individual patient (Weed and Weed, 1999a) (see Chapter 6).
• Communicate with patients in a shared and fully open manner to support their decision making and self-management (to the extent they so desire), includ- ing the potential for unfettered access to the information contained in their medi- cal records (see Chapter 3).
• Use decision support systems and other tools to aid clinical decision making in order to minimize problems of overuse and underuse and reduce waste (Weed and Weed, 1999a) (see Chapter 6).
• Identify errors and hazards in care; understand and implement basic safety design principles, such as standardization and simplification (Institute of Medi- cine, 2000) (see Chapter 5).
• Understand the course of illness and a patient’s experience outside of the hospital (where most training is conducted).
• Continually measure quality of care in terms of both process and out- comes; develop and implement best practices (Berwick et al., 1992) (see Chapter 5).
• Work collaboratively in teams with shared responsibility (Chassin, 1998) (see Chapter 5).
• Design processes of care and measure their effectiveness, even when the members of the team that cares for a patient are not in the same physical locale (Berwick et al., 1992).
• Understand how to find new knowledge as it continually expands, evalu- ate its significance and claims of effectiveness, and decide how to incorporate it into practice (Chassin, 1998) (see Chapter 6).
• Understand determinants of health, the link between medical care and healthy populations, and professional responsibilities.
Teaching these skills will likely require changes in curriculum. Although some schools have added courses that are consistent with the desired skills, the needed content is likely to evolve over time. For example, many schools now have courses in patient communications, information systems, and biostatistics.
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However, communicating with patients to improve adherence to a recommended treatment is different from communicating with patients who are key decision makers and full partners in their care. Using information technology to do a MEDLINE search is important, but not the same as using the technology as a central component in delivering care and using decision support as an aid to clinical decision making. Knowing biostatistics aids in understanding the pub- lished literature, but is not the same as using statistics to design processes of care to reduce variations in practice. Likewise, care provided by multidisciplinary teams involves more than knowing the responsibilities of people in a clinical department; it should involve knowing how to form and use teams to customize care across settings and over time, even when the members of the team are in entirely different physical locations.
Although curriculum changes are essential in providing new skills to health professionals, they are not sufficient by themselves. It is also necessary to ad- dress how health professional education is approached, organized, and funded to better prepare students for real practice in an information rich environment. Two examples are teaching evidence-based practice and training in multidisciplinary teams.
The traditional emphasis in clinical education, particularly medical educa- tion, is on teaching a core of knowledge, much of it focused on the basic mecha- nisms of disease and pathophysiological principles. Given the expansiveness and dynamic nature of the science base in health care, this approach should be ex- panded to teach how to manage knowledge and use effective tools that can support clinical decision making (Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group, 1992; Weed and Weed, 1999c). Effective teaching of evidence-based practice requires faculty role models, an emphasis on teaching the application of critical appraisal skills in actual patient care settings, and experience in conducting litera- ture searches and applying methodological rules to the evaluation and under- standing of evidence (Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group, 1992). In a survey of 269 internal medicine residency programs, it was found that only 99 offered a freestanding program in evidence-based medicine (Green, 2000). The curricula for these 99 programs varied greatly: 77 included critical appraisal of the literature; 52 provided information on how to search for evidence; 44 covered issues related to the articulation of a focused clinical question; 35 covered the application of evidence to individual decision making; and 23 included integra- tion of the evidence into decision making in actual practice. Nearly all programs provided access to MEDLINE, while only about one-third provided access to the Cochrane Library (see Chapter 6).
Similarly, as more care is provided by teams, more opportunities for multidisciplinary training should be offered (Institute of Medicine, 1996a). People should be trained in the kinds of teams in which they will provide care, starting with initial professional training and continuing through graduate train- ing and ongoing professional development. Multidisciplinary training is difficult
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to implement because of professional boundaries, the traditional hierarchical structure of health care, clinical specialization, faculty experience, and educa- tional isolation. Changing the situation will require an examination of clinical curricula, funding for education, and faculty preparation. Although there was great interest and innovation in multidisciplinary training during the 1960s, little lasting change resulted (Pew Health Professions Commission, 1993). The ability to plan care and practice effectively using multidisciplinary teams takes on in- creasing importance as the proportion of the population with chronic conditions grows, requiring the provision of a mix of services over time and across settings.
A changing relationship between clinicians and their patients also calls for new skills in communication and support for patient self-management, especially for patients with chronic conditions. Collaborative management requires col- laboration between clinicians and patients in defining problems, setting goals, and planning care; training and support in self-management; and continuous follow-up (Von Korff et al., 1997). Patients with chronic conditions who are provided with knowledge and skills for self-management have been shown to experience improvements in health status and reduced hospitalizations (Lorig et al., 1999). Clinicians need to have skills to train patients in techniques of good self-management.
Teaching a different set of skills also has implications for the capabilities of health care organizations that conduct training programs if these skills and behav- iors are to be reinforced in training beyond basic coursework. For example, training can emphasize the importance of information technology in clinical care, but that message is not reinforced if students continue their training in health care organizations that are not equipped with such systems or where the faculty are not prepared to use the skills themselves. This is a particular challenge for training in ambulatory settings and physician offices. Although many would agree that more training needs to be offered in such settings, additional support may be required for this purpose.
Although improved methods of training the next generation of clinicians are important, efforts must also be made to retool practicing clinicians. Traditional methods of continuing education for health professionals, such as formal confer- ences and dissemination of educational materials, have been shown to have little effect by themselves on changing clinician behaviors or health outcomes (Davis et al., 1995). Continuing education needs to emphasize a variety of interventions, particularly reminder systems, academic detailing, and patient-mediated meth- ods, and use a mix of approaches, including Web-based technologies. Reorienta- tion of credentialing processes to assess a clinician’s proficiency in evidence- based practice and the use of decision support tools may be necessary to provide strong incentives for clinicians to undertake this important learning process. The development of clinical leadership is another area that needs attention. Clinical leadership will be required to direct the changes discussed, but there will also be
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a need for new leaders who are able to function effectively in and lead complex delivery systems.
Finally, there are implications for the training and development of nonclinical administrative and management personnel, as well as governance. By making budgetary and resource decisions for health care organizations, these groups, with input from and in collaboration with the clinical community, influence priorities and the pace at which they are implemented. For example, the admin- istration of a hospital can provide sufficient resources to support the implementa- tion of medication order/entry systems that help clinicians provide safer care, or they can slow the pace at which such systems are implemented by not ensuring sufficient resources or training. Training and development for both management and governance should recognize the important role these groups play in collabo- rating with clinicians to make possible the types of changes needed for the health system of the 21st century.
There have been many prior examinations of clinical education, particularly medical education. The structure and form of medical education were set through the Flexner report of 1910. That report called for a 4-year curriculum comprising 2 years of basic sciences and 2 years of clinical teaching, university affiliation (instead of proprietary schools), entrance requirements, encouragement of active learning and limited use of lectures and learning by memorization, and emphasis on the importance of problem solving and critical thinking (Ludmerer, 1999; Regan-Smith, 1998).
More than 20 different reports followed Flexner’s, each calling for the re- form of medical and clinical education. The striking feature of these reports is their similarity in the problems identified and proposed solutions. Christakis (1995) reviewed 19 reports and found eight objectives of reform among them: serve changing public interest, address physician workforce needs, cope with burgeoning knowledge, foster generalism and decrease fragmentation, apply new educational methods, address the changing nature of illness, address the changing nature of practice, and improve the quality and standards of education. Enarson and Burg (1992) reviewed 13 studies of medical education and summarized the recommended changes under the categories of (1) methods of instruction and curriculum content (including the need for a broad general education, definition of educational objectives, acquisition of lifelong learning skills, and expansion of training sites); (2) internal structure of medical school (including integration of medical education across the continuum of preparation, control of education programs in multidisciplinary and interdepartmental groups, and definition of budget for teaching); and (3) the relationship between medical schools and exter- nal organizations (including integration of accreditation processes, assessment of readiness for graduate training, and use of licensing exams).
Many believe that changes in medical education are needed. In their survey of medical school deans, Cantor et al. (1991) found that 68 percent believed
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fundamental change in medical education was needed. This was true for their own institutions as well as medical education overall. Petersdorf and Turner (1995) report that the education given to students is “dated and arcane” and not in tune with societal needs. In interpreting their survey of young physicians, Cantor et al. (1993) found that “while medical training has remained largely unchanged, the demands placed on practicing physicians have changed dramatically.”
Some believe that the premises of the current apprenticeship model of medi- cal education are so faulty in today’s complex health care environment that they need drastic overhaul (Chassin, 1998). Others have suggested that “research’s stranglehold on medical education reform needs to be broken by separating re- searchers from medical student teaching and from curriculum decision making” (Regan-Smith, 1998). Teaching should be an explicit and compensated part of one’s job. Still others have called for new relationships between medical schools and academic health centers that would permit the latter to focus on making the best decisions for patient care and allow medical schools to control education and its location (Thier, 1994). In such a circumstance, academic health centers might be affiliated with several medical schools and medical schools might be affiliated with multiple health centers to allow for greater flexibility by the partners.
Medical curriculum has not been static over the years, but has undergone extensive changes (Anderson, 2000; Milbank Memorial Fund and Association of American Medical Colleges, 2000). However, many believe that in general, the current curriculum is overcrowded and relies too much on memorizing facts, and that the changes implemented have not altered the underlying experience of educators and student (Ludmerer, 1999; Regan-Smith, 1998). Despite the changes that have been made, the fundamental approach to clinical education has not changed since 1910. A number of reasons have been cited for so little response to so many calls for reform:
• Lack of funding to review curriculum and teaching methods and of re- sources to make changes in them (Griner and Danoff, 2000; Meyer et al., 1997)
• Emphasis on research and patient care, with little reward for teaching (Cantor et al., 1991; Griner and Danoff, 2000; Ludmerer, 1999; Petersdorf and Turner, 1995; Regan-Smith, 1998)
• Need for faculty development to ensure that faculty are available at train- ing sites and able to teach students effectively (Griner and Danoff, 2000; Weed, 1981)
• Decentralized structure in medical schools, with powerful department chairs (Cantor et al., 1991; Marston, 1992; Petersdorf and Turner, 1995; Regan- Smith, 1998)
• No coordinated oversight across the continuum of education, and frag- mented responsibilities for undergraduate and graduate education, licensing, cer- tification, etc. (Enarson and Burg, 1992; Ludmerer, 1999)
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• Difficulty in assessing the impact of changes in teaching methods or curriculum (Ludmerer, 1999)
Although much has been written on medical education, future work on the clinical preparation of the workforce should include examining issues related to the education of all health professionals individually and the way they interact with each other. Separation of clinical training programs and dispersed oversight of training programs, especially across the continuum of initial training, graduate training, and continuing development, inhibit the types and magnitude of change in clinical education. For example, various aspects of medical education are affected by the policies of the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, the Association of American Medical Colleges, the Accreditation Council for Gradu- ate Medical Education, 27 residency review committees, the American Board of Medical Specialties and its 24 certifying boards, the Bureau of Health Profes- sions at the Department of Health and Human Services, the American Medical Association, the American Osteopathic Association and its 18 certifying boards, the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, and various professional societies involved in continuing medical education. Similarly, nurs- ing education is influenced by the policies of the American Association of Col- leges of Nursing, the National League for Nursing, the American Nurses Creden- tialing Center, the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, the American Nurses Association, and various specialty nursing societies. Academic health centers and faculty also play a strong role in shaping the education experience of their students. Such diffusion of responsibilities for clinical education makes it difficult to create a vision for health professional education in the 21st century.
REGULATION OF THE PROFESSIONS
If innovative programs are to flourish, they will require regulatory environ- ments that foster innovation in organizational arrangements, staffing and work relationships, and use of technology. The 21st-century health care system de- scribed in this report cannot be achieved without substantial change in the current environment of regulation and oversight.
In general, regulation in this country can be characterized as a dense patch- work that is slow to adapt to change. It is dense because there is a forest of laws, regulations, agencies, and accreditation processes through which each care deliv- ery system must navigate at the local, state, and federal levels. It is a patchwork system because the regulatory and accreditation frameworks at the state level are often inconsistent, contradictory, and duplicative, in part because the needs, pri- orities, and available resources of the states are not equal. And the regulating process is slow in that it is unable to keep pace with changes in health care. The health care delivery system is under great pressure to innovate and change to
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incorporate new knowledge and technologies. Regulatory and accreditation re- quirements can, at times, be at odds with needed innovations (Pew Health Profes- sions Commission, 1993). Statutes and regulations, while not the only factors that influence the practices of nonphysician clinicians, are powerful determinants of their authority and independence (Cooper et al., 1998).
A key regulatory issue that affects the health care workforce and the way it is used is scope-of-practice acts, implemented at the state level. The general public does not have adequate information to judge provider qualifications or compe- tence, so professional licensure laws are enacted to assure the public that practi- tioners have met the qualifications and minimum competencies required for prac- tice (Pew Health Professions Commission, 1993; Safriet, 1994). Along with licensure, such state laws that define the scope of practice for specific types of caregivers serve as an important component of the overall system of health care quality oversight.
One effect of licensure and scope-of-practice acts is to define how the health care workforce is deployed. In general, medical practice acts are defined broadly so that individual practitioners are licensed for medicine (not a specific spe- cialty), and are thereby permitted to perform all activities that fall within med- icine’s broad scope of practice. Although a dermatologist would not likely per- form open-heart surgery, doing so is not restricted by licensure. However, patients often seek out information about a physician’s reputation and credentials, and professional societies also monitor the activities of their members. Other health professions have more narrowly defined scopes of practice, having to carve out their responsibilities from the medical practice act in each state (Safriet, 1994).
Although scope-of-practice acts are motivated by the desire to establish minimum standards to ensure the safety of patients, they also have implications for the changes to the health care system recommended in this report. Since, any change can potentially affect scope-of-practice acts, it can be difficult to use alternative approaches to care, such as telemedicine, e-visits, nonphysician pro- viders, and multidisciplinary teams, all of which can help in caring for patients across settings and over time (see Chapter 3).
Current systems of licensure raise both jurisdictional and liability issues for some clinical applications of telemedicine, such as centralized consultation ser- vices to support primary care (Institute of Medicine, 1996b) or the provision of online, continuous, 24-hour monitoring and clinical management of patients in intensive care units for hospitals that have no or too few critical care intensivists on staff to provide this coverage (Janofsky, 1999; Rosenfeld et al., 2000). Inte- grated delivery systems that cross state lines and telemedicine have rendered geographic boundaries obsolete (Finocchio et al., 1998), making it more difficult for those charged by statute to protect the public.
Scope-of-practice acts can include provisions that inhibit the use of non- physician practitioners, such as advanced practice nurses and physician assis- tants, for primary care (Pew Health Professions Commission, 1993; Safriet, 1994).
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In some states, advanced practice nurses can diagnose, treat, and prescribe; in others they work only under the direction of a physician (Cooper et al., 1998). Inconsistencies are exacerbated by variation in the scope of practice by setting of care. For example, advanced practice nurses may be permitted a broader scope of practice in rural areas or community health clinics than in other settings (Safriet, 1994). Such policies are enacted to address problems of underservice that exist in certain areas. Although patient needs do not necessarily differ in rural versus urban areas of a state, the available resources of talent, capital, and personnel often vary considerably.
Scope-of-practice acts can also affect the ability to form cohesive care teams that draw on individuals from different disciplines to complement one another in patient care. The skills of some nonphysician providers may overlap with a subset of physician services, often creating tensions among clinicians (Cooper et al., 1998). For example, although there is a difference in their knowledge and training for practice, certified registered nurse anesthetists and anesthesiologists have a subset of skills that overlap (Cromwell, 1999). Separate governance structures and standards are maintained for different types of health professionals even though they may perform a subset of overlapping functions, practice to- gether in the same state and at the same health care institutions, and serve the same population of patients (Finocchio et al., 1998). The complexity of rules across disciplines and settings makes it a challenge to form multidisciplinary teams and establish best practices, especially those that draw on caregivers based in different settings (e.g., hospital, physician’s office, and home). Scope-of- practice laws are not the only barrier to greater use of multidisciplinary teams (Sage and Aiken, 1997), but are an important one.
Because licensure and scope-of-practice acts are implemented at the state level, there is a great deal of variation among the states in who is licensed and what standards for licensure and practice are applied. State licensure is not constitutionally based, but rather founded in tradition (Safriet, 1994). On the one hand, state licensure permits regulations to be tailored to meet local needs, re- sources, and patient expectations. On the other hand, the resulting state-by-state variation is not always logical given the growth of the Internet and the formation of large, multistate provider groups that cut across geographic boundaries. Even with new technologies and organizational arrangements, however, public protec- tions must still be ensured. In response, some have proposed nationally uniform scopes of practice (O’Neil and the Pew Health Professions Commission, 1998) or, at least, more coordinated, publicly accountable policies (Grumbach and Coffman, 1998). The National Council of State Boards of Nursing has endorsed a mutual recognition model for interstate nursing practice that retains state licen- sure authority, but provides a mechanism for practice across state lines (similar to a driver’s license that is granted by one state and recognized in other states) (Finocchio et al., 1998). Still others have argued the relative merits of state-based versus national licensing systems (Federation of State Medical Boards, 1998).
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The committee does not recommend one approach over another, but does call for greater coordination and communication among professional boards both within and across states as this issue is resolved over time.
Although the preceding examples suggest that some regulations may be duplicative or outdated for today’s clinical practice, gaps exist in other areas as well. For example, current licensure and scope-of-practice laws offer no assur- ance of continuing competency. In a field with a continually expanding knowl- edge base, there is no mechanism for ensuring that practitioners remain up to date with current best practices. Responsibility for assessing competence is dispersed among multiple authorities. For example, a licensing board may question compe- tence only if it receives a complaint, but does not routinely assess competency after initial licensure. A health care organization may assess competence when an individual applies for privileges or employment. Professional societies and organizations may require examination for certification, but are just beginning to assess competence in addition to knowledge for those health professionals who voluntarily seek certification. There are no consistent methods for ensuring the continued competence of health professionals within current state licensing func- tions or other processes.
At least two approaches have been suggested to address this gap. First, some researchers have suggested that licensure be based on a professional’s demon- strated ability to perform certain functions or on a certain level of practice (Coo- per et al., 1998; Weed and Weed, 1999b). In aviation, for example, pilots are granted a private, commercial, or air transport license by the Federal Aviation Administration. Generally, pilots first obtain a private, single-engine license and then progressively add multi-engine and instrument qualifications to obtain a commercial license. They can then accumulate flying hours and experience to qualify for an air transport license, subsequently obtaining particular types of ratings for specific aircraft (Bisgard, 2000). In addition, professional pilots are recertified at regular intervals throughout their flying career. Taking such an approach in health care would represent a profound paradigm shift, with a grada- tion of licensure being based on the services in which a health professional has demonstrated competence to serve patients.
A second approach has been suggested, involving an additional level of oversight in which teams of practitioners, in addition to individuals, would be licensed or certified to perform certain tasks (Pew Health Professions Commis- sion, 1993). For example, an individual receiving care for diabetes could go to a “certified” diabetes team that would ensure specific competencies and resources within the delivery team. The team could be collocated or comprise a dispersed network of individual providers practicing and communicating with each other as a team. The certification requirements could be used as a measure of quality by consumers and as a tool for quality improvement by teams seeking to obtain such certification.
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It would be premature for the committee to offer a recommendation related to licensure, scope-of-practice, or other regulations. In raising these issues, how- ever, we recognize their importance in supporting or hindering the types of changes recommended in this report. Thus we call for additional, in-depth study aimed at understanding the areas and forms of regulation that are most beneficial for patients and in which modification may be needed to achieve the 21st-century health care system envisioned in this report. Properly conceived and executed, regulation can both protect the public’s interest and support the ability of health care professionals and organizations to innovate and change to meet the needs of their patients.
LEGAL LIABILITY ISSUES
The recommendations in this report represent, in many instances, a very different way of delivering services to patients. Achieving the aims set forth in Chapter 2 will require significant innovations in the delivery of care, innovations that may also raise concerns associated with traditional forms of accountability, especially liability issues. Delivering care that is patient-centered, evidence- based, and systems-minded has implications for traditional methods of account- ability, particularly with regard to patients’ participation in their care, efforts to define standards of care consistent with the evidence base rather than local tradi- tions, and the responsibilities of individual practitioners who deliver care within larger systems that have the capacity for improvement.
Innovations in care can contribute to increased threats of litigation because, by definition, innovation implies a change from previous practice, and medical advances are often imperfect when first applied in clinical practice. Mohr (2000) cites an early example of compound fractures. Through a change in treatment, patients may have avoided an amputation, but they did not always regain full functioning of the limb and pursued litigation against the physician. Significant innovation in health care will occur in many areas with the use of new processes of care and new technologies that will alter how and by whom services are delivered to patients. It is not yet clear how these new processes and technolo- gies, such as e-mail, will affect the liability of health professionals in the future.
Although less studied, changes in organizational approaches raise similar issues. For example, patients may receive care from members of a care team other than a physician or be counseled by e-mail rather than in a face-to-face visit. Such changes can be disorienting to patients if not well understood and in the short run, and create new hazards and new risks of litigation. Thus there is a need for good educational efforts and communication with patients about the changes taking place. It is also necessary, however, to examine the extent to which current liability approaches inhibit the kinds of changes needed to improve the quality and safety of care. For example, liability concerns can affect the
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willingness of physicians and other clinicians to share information about areas in which quality improvement is needed if they believe the information may subse- quently be used against them (Institute of Medicine, 2000). The committee’s previous report on patient safety calls for peer review protection of data that are used inside health care organizations or shared with others solely for purposes of improving safety and quality, as well as an improved climate for identifying areas needing improvement (Institute of Medicine, 2000).
Legal issues are also likely to influence the development of evidence-based practice. The legal system influences health care through two types of deci- sions—medical malpractice and benefits coverage—both of which involve judg- ments about the quality of care (Rosoff, 2001). Should the legal system fail to incorporate evidence-based thinking into its decision-making processes (whether related to medical malpractice or other decisions), clinicians and health care organizations will be subject to confusing and conflicting incentives and de- mands.
Legal decisions that involve determining whether care provided was consis- tent with the “standard practice in the relevant medical community” (Rosoff, 2001) often rely on expert testimony. It is unclear how courts will incorporate clinical evidence and clinical practice guidelines into legal decision making. To date, clinical practice guidelines have had little effect on litigation. In a legal search covering the period January 1980 to May 1994, Hyams et al. (1996) found only 37 cases involving clinical practice guidelines. But clinical practice guide- lines probably have had some effect on prelitigation decisions, since surveys show that medical malpractice attorneys consider guidelines in making decisions about whether to take on malpractice cases and conducting settlement negotia- tions (Hyams et al., 1996).
Alternative approaches to liability, such as enterprise liability or no-fault compensation, could produce a legal environment more conducive to uncovering and resolving quality problems. Enterprise liability shifts liability from indi- vidual practitioners to responsible organizations (Abraham and Weiler, 1994; Sage et al., 1994). For example, workplace injuries to employees are handled through a form of no-fault, enterprise liability. Although analysis of such ap- proaches is beyond the scope of the present study, the committee believes they merit a focused, in-depth analysis.
RESEARCH AGENDA FOR THE FUTURE HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE
Modifying training, regulatory, and legal environments is not a quick strat- egy for changing practice. These environments are closely interrelated with the delivery setting. Training programs are not likely to change unless the delivery setting does so, but the setting cannot change if people are not trained to practice differently. Similarly, the delivery setting cannot change without modifications
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in regulation and legislation, but adjustments in practice often prompt additional regulation to protect against unwanted consequences.
A comprehensive approach is needed for the many aspects of health care workforce planning. Many prior efforts in such planning have focused on at- tempting to determine an appropriate supply of clinicians. Previous studies have examined the adequacy of supply for selected disciplines (e.g., physicians) or the mix of providers within a discipline (e.g., primary care and specialty mix of physicians), or have assumed a specific organizational model (e.g., supply of physicians needed given extensive enrollment in HMOs). Although a compre- hensive workforce agenda should address issues of supply, it would be difficult to conduct any such studies meaningfully without first addressing how clinicians might be deployed given different approaches to training, regulation, and liabil- ity. It is not sufficient to ask how many health professionals are needed; one must also ask what types are needed (Pew Health Professions Commission, 1993). Ultimate assessments of supply depend on how responsibility for patients is divided among licensed clinicians, as well as on society’s expectations (Cromwell, 1999). Workforce planning should shift from determining the supply of clini- cians in specific disciplines who continue to perform the same tasks using the same methods toward assessing the adequacy of supply given that care is pro- vided through processes that rely on multidisciplinary approaches, modern tech- nological support, and continuous care. The starting point for addressing work- force issues should not be the present environment of licensure, reimbursement, and organization of care, but a vision of how care ought to be delivered in the 21st century. A comprehensive agenda on workforce planning should cover the fol- lowing key issues:
• Training and Education Issues
– What is the vision for the education and training of health professionals for the 21st century? What is the relationship between the education of health care providers and quality of care?
– How is the vision relayed throughout the continuum of education? How can new health professionals learn most effectively the basic skills related to patient-centeredness, evidence-based practice, and systems think- ing? How can such skills be reinforced in graduate training programs? How can they be meaningfully relayed to professionals already in practice?
– What are the implications of changes in clinical education for the health care organizations that serve as training sites? What is the potential effect on the role and mission of academic health centers?
– What are the implications of changes in clinical education for licensing and accreditation processes? For funding approaches to support clinical education?
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• Legal and Regulatory Issues
– How can regulatory and other oversight processes be coordinated to reinforce the principles of patient-centeredness, evidence-based practice, and systems thinking? What specific legal and regulatory constraints inhibit changes in processes of care? Where are different types of regulations needed? In what areas can existing regulations be streamlined or reduced?
– How can greater coordination among licensing boards within an indi- vidual state and across states be facilitated? How can the continuing compe- tence of health professionals be assessed and ensured?
– Can liability reform support the principles of patient-centeredness, evidence-based practice, and systems thinking? Are alternative models, such as enterprise liability, desirable?
– What is the link between regulation of health professions and quality of care?
– What are the appropriate links among licensure, accountability, and liability?
• Workforce Supply
– Given a greater understanding of the previous issues (e.g., what training is provided, the need for greater flexibility in deploying human resources, and alternative approaches to accountability), what are the implications for the needed supply and mix of health professionals?
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Appendix A
Report of the Technical Panel on the State of Quality to the Quality of
Health Care in America Committee
Millions of Americans receive high-quality health care in the United States. Our capacity to provide the most sophisticated and effective care is unrivaled, and there is no evidence that any other system achieves better quality. Yet there is abundant evidence that serious and extensive quality problems exist throughout the U.S. health care system, resulting in harm to many Americans. Opportunities for improvement exist in all areas of clinical practice, across the continuum of care.
As a result of overuse, underuse, and misuse of health care services, our society pays a substantial price. The opportunity costs of poor quality include years of life lost or spent with major or minor impairments, pain and suffering, disability costs, and lost productivity. In many areas, especially those involving overuse and misuse of health care services, that improving quality is also likely to lower health care costs.
BACKGROUND
The Quality of Health Care in America (QHCA) Project, a part of the Insti- tute of Medicine’s Special IOM Initiative on Quality, was established in June 1998 and charged with developing a strategy to produce a significant improve- ment in quality over the coming decade.
The Committee on the Quality of Health Care in America, chaired by Will- iam C. Richardson, Ph.D., was responsible for this 2-year project.
Four advisory groups were established to assist the QHCA Committee in carrying out its charge. To provide a broad base of expertise, these advisory
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groups consisted of both committee members and other distinguished leaders within the health care arena. Each advisory group was chaired by a member(s) of the QHCA Committee. One of these four groups, the Technical Advisory Panel on the State of Quality, chaired by Mark Chassin, M.D., was asked to review and synthesize literature on the state of quality in the health care industry. Other members of this panel included: Arnold Epstein, M.D., M.A.; Brent James, M.D.; James P. Logerfo, M.D.; Harold Luft, Ph.D.; R. Heather Palmer, M.B., B.Ch.; Kenneth B. Wells, M.D. This appendix presents the panel’s findings.
REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE
In developing its approach to this effort, the State of Quality Panel reviewed an earlier synthesis of the literature on quality that was carried out by investiga- tors at the RAND Corporation (Schuster et al., 1998). This earlier review covered papers that, for the most part, were published between 1993 and mid-1997. To extend that earlier work, the IOM commissioned an updated synthesis from the investigators at RAND. This update covered the literature included in the earlier review with the addition of (1) papers published between July 1997 and August 1998, and (2) selected publications identified by members of the State of Quality Panel. A draft of this commissioned paper was reviewed by the State of Quality Panel at its November 1998 meeting, and subsequently revised in accordance with the panel’s suggestions. The final version, provided at the end of this appen- dix, was completed in January 1999.
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS
A synthesis of findings from the literature on the quality of health care provides abundant evidence of poor quality. There are examples of exemplary care, but the quality of care is not consistent. Thus, the average American cannot assume that he or she will receive the best care modern medicine has to offer.
There are many examples of overuse, underuse, and misuse of health care services. Overuse refers to the provision of health services for which the potential risks outweigh the potential benefits. Underuse indicates that a health care ser- vice for which the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks was not pro- vided. Misuse occurs when otherwise appropriate care is provided, but in a man- ner that does or could lead to avoidable complications.
Overuse of health care services is common. Examples include the following:
• performance of major surgery (e.g., hysterectomy, coronary artery bypass graft) without appropriate reasons;
• provision of antibiotics for the common cold and other viral upper respi- ratory tract infections for which they are ineffective;
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• insertion of tubes in children’s eardrums in the absence of clinically ap- propriate indications; and
• performance of chiropractic spinal manipulation for certain back condi- tions for which there is no evidence of benefit.
Lack of insurance is a major contributing factor to underuse. Even with comprehensive insurance coverage, however, much of the population fails to receive recommended preventive services, and many patients do not receive the full range of clinically indicated services for acute and chronic conditions. Ex- amples include the following:
• Cardiac care In a study of 3,737 Medicare patients with a diagnosis of heart attack who were eligible for treatment with beta blockers, only 21 percent were found to have received beta blockers within 90 days of discharge. The adjusted mortality rate for patients with treatment was 43 percent below that of patients without treatment (Soumerai et al., 1997).
• Pneumococcal vaccine In 1989, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended that people 65 years and older receive a one-time vaccination for pneumonia, and in 1996, this recommendation was modified to apply to all immunocompetent people aged 65 and older. Yet studies of the proportion of elderly who had been vaccinated produced estimates in the range of only 28 to 36 percent (CDC, 1995; Kottke et al., 1997).
• Acute care for pneumonia Two studies of hospitalized patients with pneu- monia found serious shortcomings in the proportion of patients receiving appro- priate components of care (Kahn et al., 1990; Meehan et al., 1997).
In recent years, increased attention has been focused on misuse. Studies of misuse are particularly challenging because actual or potential adverse events often go undocumented and unreported. But studies of preventable deaths and adverse drug events point to frequent and sometimes serious errors. For example, one study of over 4,000 hospitalized patients found that there were 19 prevent- able or potential adverse drug events per 1,000 patient days in intensive care units and 10 preventable or potential adverse drug events per 1,000 patient days in general care units (Cullen et al., 1997).
LEVEL OF HARM CAUSED BY POOR QUALITY
The existing literature does not allow a comprehensive estimate of the bur- den of harm due to poor quality. The literature on health care quality covers only a portion of the full range of quality concerns. For the most part, published studies focus on individuals who come into contact with the health care system. From a population perspective, the opportunity cost of poor quality must also
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include the health benefits lost as a result of limited access due to financial or other barriers and poor patient adherence to therapeutic advice. These opportu- nity costs include years of life lost or spent with major or minor impairments, pain and suffering, disability costs, and lost productivity.
The literature also does not reveal how frequently the various types of qual- ity problems occur. For example, some kinds of overuse problems may have a greater likelihood of being documented than some types of misuse or underuse problems because the data necessary to document overuse are more likely to reside in administrative datasets or medical records.
From the available literature, it is also not possible to produce estimates of the costs of eliminating certain types of quality problems or the benefits likely to be derived. But there is no doubt that major improvements are possible in many clinical areas and health care settings, across the full continuum of care.
NEED FOR FURTHER WORK
The panel’s work represents a modest effort to review the state of health care quality. Specifically, the literature review was commissioned for this study lim- ited in the following ways:
• It focused only on publications in leading peer-reviewed journals. Other sources of information, such as the data and analyses of Medicare Peer Review Organizations (PROs) or analyses using malpractice data, were not included. The Medicare PRO program is a particularly promising source of information on quality because the PROs have been conducting quality review projects involv- ing physicians, hospitals, and health plans for over 10 years.
• The review did not focus in depth on specific clinical areas. An intensive review by clinical area would provide a more complete picture of the full spec- trum of quality problems and their frequency of occurrence.
• The review did not include the many publications based on reports of patient experience or satisfaction.
• The review did not include the body of studies reporting the impact of quality improvement activities. Thus it permits only anecdotal observations on the effectiveness of various of attempts to improve quality.
• Although the publications included in the review appeared in peer-re- viewed journals, the panel made no attempt to assess the scientific rigor of the methodologies employed.
Despite the above limitations, the panel believes that more in-depth reviews would not change its general conclusions that there are many areas in which quality of care can be improved. At the same time, additional research might be helpful for several reasons:
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• A fuller understanding of quality problems would be useful in identifying specific areas in which those problems are greatest, as well as the most promising opportunities for improvement.
• Condition-specific analyses would provide better estimates of the poten- tial benefits foregone as a result of poor quality and the best strategies for im- provement.
• Additional work focused in particular clinical areas might also be helpful in raising awareness of practitioners and others who are skeptical about the existence of quality problems in their areas of expertise. Condition-specific analy- ses of quality that employ rigorous and valid measures could help build stronger support for quality improvement initiatives.
• Additional reviews of the literature should be conducted to identify fac- tors that contribute to poor quality and effective strategies for improvement. For example, review of the literature on quality substantiates that for certain complex procedures, higher volume leads to better outcomes. But we do not know whether this result is attributable to the greater skill of an experienced surgeon, the greater standardization of processes in high-volume settings, or some other factor. Abun- dant evidence exists that quality can be improved, and there is much to be learned from the review of various improvement strategies about the roles of patients, clinicians, and systems and the use of various types of incentives.
• Additional conceptual work, literature and data analysis, and develop- ment of measures are needed to improve capacities for quality-of-care assessment in certain key areas of medicine. An example is quality assessment in the areas of mental health, substance abuse, and neurologic disorders, and quality assessment for special populations, such as the frail elderly, poor children, and ethnic minorities.
REFERENCES
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Cullen D.J., et al. 1997. Preventable Adverse Drug Events in Hospitalized Patients: a Comparative Study of Intensive Care and General Care Units. Critical Care Medicine 8:1289–97.
Kahn, K.L., W.H. Rogers, L.V. Rubenstein, et al. 1990. Measuring Quality of Care with Explicit Process Criteria before and after Implementation of the DRG-Based Prospective Payment Sys- tem. Journal of the American Medical Association 264:1969–73.
Kottke, T.E., L.I. Solberg, ML. Brekke, et al. 1995, Aspirin in the Treatment of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Elderly Medicare Beneficiaries: Patterns of Use and Outcomes. Circulation 92:2841–7.
Meehan, T.P., M.J. Fine, H.M. Krumholz, et al. 1997. Quality of Care, Process and Outcomes in Elderly Patients with Pneumonia. Journal of the American Medical Association 278:2080–4
Schuster, Mark A., Elizabeth A. McGlynn, and Robert H. Brook. 1998. “How Good Is the Quality of Health Care in the United States?” 1998. 76 (4) Milbank Quarterly 517–563.
Soumerai, S.B., T.D. McLaughlin, E. Hertzmark, G. Thibault, and L. Goldman. 1997. Adverse Outcomes of Underuse of Beta-Blockers in Elderly Survivors of Acute Myocardial Infarction. Journal of the American Medical Association 277:115–21.
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231
The Quality of Health Care in the United States:
A Review of Articles Since 1987
Mark A. Schuster, M.D., Ph.D.;1 Elizabeth A. McGlynn, Ph.D.;2
Cung B. Pham, B.A.;3 Myles D. Spar, M.D.;4 and Robert H. Brook, M.D., Sc.D.5
Submitted January 1999
Quality of health care is on the national agenda. In September 1996, Presi- dent Clinton established the Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry, which has released its final report on how to define, measure, and promote quality of health care (Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry, 1998).
Much of the interest in quality of care has developed in response to the dramatic transformation of the health care system in recent years. New organiza- tional structures and reimbursement strategies have created incentives that may affect quality of care. Although some of the systems are likely to improve quality, concerns about potentially negative consequences have prompted a movement to assure that quality will not be sacrificed to control costs.
The concern about quality arises more from fear and anecdote than from facts; there is little systematic evidence about quality of care in the United States. The nation has no mandatory national system and few local systems to track the quality of care delivered to the American people. More information is available on the quality of airlines, restaurants, cars, and VCRs than on the quality of health care.
In 1997, the National Coalition on Health Care (NCHC) commissioned us to review the academic literature for articles that provide evidence of the quality of care in the United States (Schuster et al., 1998). The Institute of Medicine’s
Authors’ affiliations: 1Health Sciences, RAND; Department of Pediatrics, UCLA 2Health Sci- ences, RAND 3Department of Pediatrics, UCLA 4HSR&D Field Program, Sepulveda Veterans Administration Medical Center; and 5Health Sciences, RAND; Department of Medicine, UCLA.
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Technical Advisory Panel on the State of Quality commissioned an update to include studies published between January 1997 and July 1998. In this report, we summarize our findings from both the original study and the update. In the absence of a national quality tracking system, we believe such a summary is the best way to provide an overview of the quality of care delivered in the United States. We provide examples to illustrate quality in diverse settings, for diverse conditions, and for diverse demographic groups, and to offer insight into the quality that exists nationwide.
DEFINING QUALITY
The Institute of Medicine has defined quality as “the degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge” (Lohr, 1990). Good quality means providing patients with appropriate services in a technically competent manner, with good communication, shared decision making, and cul- tural sensitivity.
Quality can be evaluated based on structure, process, and outcomes (Donabedian, 1980). Structural quality evaluates health system capacities, pro- cess quality assesses interactions between clinicians and patients, and outcomes offer evidence about changes in patients’ health status. The best process mea- sures are those for which there is research evidence that better processes lead to better outcomes. For example, controlling blood pressure reduces mortality from stroke and heart disease; performing routine mammography identifies breast can- cer at an earlier stage so that a cure is more likely; prescribing inhaled corticoster- oids reduces the likelihood and severity of asthma flare-ups. Similarly, the best outcome measures are those which are tied to processes of care, in other words, those over which the health care system has influence. For example, the survival rate for pancreatic cancer would not be a good outcome measure because we do not yet have treatments that meaningfully affect survival. By contrast, pain level in patients with pancreatic cancer is a reasonable outcome measure.
All three dimensions can provide valuable information for measuring qual- ity, but most of the quality-of-care literature focuses on measuring processes of care. Two measurement approaches dominate in the literature: (a) assessing appropriateness of care and (b) adherence to professional standards.
(a) An intervention or service (e.g., a lab test, procedure, medication) is considered appropriate if, for individuals with particular clinical and personal characteristics, its expected health benefits (e.g., increased life expectancy, pain relief, decreased anxiety, improved functional capacity) exceed its expected health risks (e.g., mortality, morbidity, anxiety anticipating the intervention, pain caused by the intervention, inaccurate diagnoses) by a wide enough margin to make the intervention or service worth doing (Brook et al., 1986). A subset of appropriate
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care is necessary or crucial care. Care is considered necessary if there is a reason- able chance of a nontrivial benefit to the patient and if it would be improper not to provide the care—in other words, if it might be considered ethically unaccept- able not to provide this care (Kahan et al., 1994; Laouri et al., 1997).
(b) Another way to measure process quality is to determine whether care meets or adheres to professional standards. This assessment can be done by creating a list of quality indicators that describe a process of care that should occur for a particular type of patient or clinical circumstance and by evaluating whether patients’ care is consistent with the indicators. Quality indicators are based on standards of care, which are either found in the research literature and in statements of professional medical organizations or determined by an expert panel. Current performance can be compared against a physician’s or a plan’s own prior performance, against the performance of other physicians and plans, or with reference to a benchmark that establishes a goal. Indicators can cover a specific condition (e.g., children with sickle cell disease should be prescribed daily penicillin prophylaxis starting by no later than six months of age, until at least five years of age), or they can cover general aspects of care regardless of condition (e.g., patients prescribed a medication should be asked about medica- tion allergies).
HOW WE CONDUCTED OUR LITERATURE SEARCHES
This report draws on two searches of the scientific literature. The original NCHC report was based on a search for quality-of-care articles from the MEDLINE PLUS database (1993 to present) conducted in June 1997 and on relevant studies identified from the bibliographies of these articles. This database incorporates both the National Library of Medicine (NLM)’s MEDLINE data- base and the Health Planning and Administration’s HEALTH database. The NCHC report excluded articles published before 1987. In conducting our litera- ture search, we did not aim to be exhaustive, but rather to find examples that encompass a broad range of conditions and settings. (The inclusion criteria are described in the next section.)
For this update, we conducted a systematic search of articles published be- tween January 1, 1997, and July 31, 1998, using the NLM’s Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) to search for appropriate articles. This system is designed so that each MeSH term corresponds to a single concept appearing in the biomedical literature. Trained NLM indexers assign relevant MeSH terms to each database entry (usually about 10–12 per entry) (NLM, 1997a). The more than 17,000 MeSH terms are organized in a tree format, with multiple hierarchical layers of subheadings (NLM, 1997b)(Our search terms appear at the end of the report).
We conducted our search on August 24, 1998, and obtained 2,402 entries. Two authors reviewed each entry and its abstract to determine whether the study had potential for inclusion in our summary tables. Based on this initial screening,
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we retrieved more than 200 articles. Each was reviewed by two authors to deter- mine whether the article was eligible for inclusion in this report. Some articles identified in the literature search were not available from the library by the completion date of the report.
Because we did not find any studies of misuse in our update search, we conducted a supplemental search using key words such as “adverse,” “event#,” and “preventable” that produced additional relevant articles. In addition, several studies were recommended by members of the Institute of Medicine’s Technical Advisory Panel on the State of Quality.
Criteria for Including Studies
We include only data from large or diverse U.S. populations—for example, the nation, an entire state, an entire city, or several hospitals. Studies from mul- tiple offices of a single managed care organization are also considered eligible, but we do not include data from studies that cover only a single hospital or clinic. Although such studies are informative and the cumulative weight of their find- ings compelling, they are especially subject to concerns that they provide evi- dence of isolated problems rather than insight into the quality of care delivered more broadly.
We include baseline data from quality improvement interventions as well as data for comparison/control/nonintervention groups from such interventions. We report baseline rather than follow-up data because the former are more likely to be representative of the quality of care provided around the country. Quality measurement conducted after a specific intervention shows the potential for in- terventions to improve quality, but until such interventions are commonplace, these post-intervention results are unlikely to represent what is taking place in most parts of the country. In addition, even the post-intervention results from such studies virtually always show room for further improvement.
We report results only from studies for which we can identify a standard of good quality and exclude those for which there is no standard. For example, some studies show variations in practices that may reflect variations in quality. How- ever, the studies cannot determine which hospital or clinic or group of physicians is providing better or worse quality care.
Types of Studies Not Included
There are several ways to measure quality of care that are not represented among the studies listed in our summary tables. Although these approaches are valuable components of the quality-of-care toolbox, they have not been used in a way that provides an overview of quality in the United States.
Studies often compare outcomes across multiple institutions to show which have better and which have worse outcomes, but the studies do not always present
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a standard against which to compare outcomes. As a consequence, we do not know if the institution with the best outcomes is not nearly as good as it should be, or if the institution with the worst outcomes is nonetheless doing quite well. We only know how they compare with each other. If the outcomes are not risk-adjusted, it can be even more difficult to interpret them. This does not mean that studies cannot use outcomes to shed light on variations in quality. For ex- ample, prescription of beta blockers after a heart attack is a frequently used measure of quality. One study found that only about one in five eligible patients with a heart attack received beta blockers within 90 days of hospital discharge and also that those who received the treatment were much less likely to die than those who did not (Soumerai et al., 1997). Another study showed that poorer quality of care for children with asthma was associated with more hospitaliza- tions (Homer et al., 1996).
We found a similar limitation with using satisfaction ratings, which some consider a type of outcome. We do not report on levels of satisfaction because it is difficult to determine what is an acceptable level of satisfaction. There is generally no standard to which to compare the results, and we do not know whether the institution with the best satisfaction ratings could and should be doing much better.
Studies of access to care are not typically classified as quality-of-care stud- ies, but a person who is unable to obtain health care could hardly be said to be receiving good quality care. Access studies are beyond the scope of this report. However, we need to keep in mind that quality-of-care studies often measure quality only for people who have interacted with the health care system and so tend to overstate quality of care received by the population as a whole (Franks et al., 1993a, 1993b; Lurie et al., 1984, 1986; Sorlie et al., 1994).
In general, structural measures have not been consistently shown to relate either to process quality or outcomes, but there are exceptions. For example, volume of care provided (in other words, the number of procedures performed or the number of patients cared for) by an institution or clinician has often been found to relate to quality (Hannan et al., 1989, 1995; Kelly and Hellinger, 1986; Kitahata et al., 1996; Luft et al., 1979; Phibbs et al., 1996; Riley and Lubitz, 1985; Stone et al., 1992).
Another type of study does not provide direct evidence of quality of health care but is useful for identifying reasons for poor quality. Studies in which physi- cians report what they generally do or what they would do for a particular scenario can be informative, especially when physicians report practices that indicate poor quality. Although these studies do not describe care provided to individual patients, they can indicate a need for further education or other efforts to improve clinical practices.
Finally, we note that our search mechanism almost certainly missed articles with relevant data. Many studies not intended as quality-of-care studies provide
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data that shed light on quality of care. Some of these were identified through our search, but it is likely that many others were not.
PROFILE OF QUALITY OF CARE IN THE UNITED STATES
We divided our review of quality in the United States into three categories: underuse (Table A-1), overuse (Table A-2), and misuse (Table A-3). Underuse indicates that a health care service for which the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks (i.e., necessary care) is not provided. Overuse indicates the re- verse—a health care service is provided when the potential risks outweigh the potential benefits (i.e., inappropriate care). Misuse occurs when otherwise appro- priate care is provided in a way that leads to or could lead to avoidable complica- tions. Examples of misuse include when an antibiotic appropriate to the patient’s infection is prescribed despite the fact that the patient has a documented allergy to the antibiotic, or when two drugs, each of which is appropriate for a patient’s condition, are prescribed despite contraindications to prescribing them together. An incorrect dose or dosing schedule is also considered misuse.
In each summary table, we list (and sometimes describe) the health care service for which quality is reported, the sample on which the report is based, the data source for the sample, the findings, and the reference. The tables report data from 73 articles.
Perhaps the most striking revelation to emerge from this review is the sur- prisingly small amount of systematic knowledge available on the quality of health care delivered in the United States. Even though health care is a huge industry that affects the lives of most Americans, we have only snapshots of information about particular conditions, types of surgery, and locations of care.
Gaps Between Ideal Care and Actual Care
The dominant finding of our review is that there are large gaps between the care people should receive and the care they do receive. This is true for preven- tive, acute, and chronic care, whether one goes for a checkup, a sore throat, or diabetic care. It is true whether one looks at overuse, underuse, or misuse. It is true in different types of health care facilities and for different types of health insurance. It is true for all age groups, from children to the elderly. And it is true whether one is looking at the whole country or a single city.
A few examples emphasize this point. An annual influenza vaccine is recom- mended as a preventive measure for all adults 65 years or older, a group at especially high risk for complications and death from influenza (U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, 1989, 1996). However, in 1993, only 52 percent of people in this age group in the United States received the vaccine; among people who had been to the doctor at least once that year, the percentage was slightly higher at 56 percent (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1995b).
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A major issue in acute care is the overuse of antibiotics, which has led to the development of strains of bacteria that are resistant to available antibiotics (Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention, 1994a). Antibiotics are almost never an appropriate treatment for people with a common cold because almost all colds are caused by a virus, for which antibiotics are not effective. However, in a study of Medicaid beneficiaries diagnosed with a cold in Kentucky during a one-year period from 1993 to 1994, 60 percent filled a prescription for an antibiotic (Mainous et al., 1996). In a national study of patient visits in 1992, 51 percent of adult patients and 44 percent of patients younger than 18 years old diagnosed with a common cold were treated with antibiotics (Gonzales et al., 1997; Nyquist et al., 1998).
Other types of medications are also not always used in the most appropriate manner. Among hospitalized elderly patients with depression who were dis- charged on antidepressant medication, 33 percent were on a dose below the recommended level (Wells et al., 1994b). In a study of 634 patients with depres- sion or depressive symptoms in Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles, 19 percent were treated with minor tranquilizers and no antidepressants (Wells et al., 1994a), despite the lack of evidence that tranquilizers work for depression and the risk that they will cause side effects or addiction (Depression Guideline Panel, 1993).
Patients with chronic conditions, for which certain routine examinations and tests are crucial in order to prevent complications, do not all get the care they need. Diabetes mellitus causes several complications that are less likely to occur with good care. One of these complications is an eye condition called diabetic retinopathy, which is the leading cause of new blindness among persons aged 20 to 74 in the United States. It is recommended that patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus have an annual dilated eye examination (the clinician uses drops to enlarge the pupil to see behind it more easily) starting five years after diagnosis and that patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus have the exam annually starting at the time of diagnosis. In a national study in 1989, only 49 percent of adults with either type of diabetes had undergone a dilated eye exami- nation in the past year (66 percent in the past two years), and 61 percent had undergone any type of eye exam in the past year (79 percent in the past two years). Twenty percent of diabetics had no eye exam in the past two years. Among diabetics who were at particularly high risk for vision loss because they already had retinopathy or because they had had diabetes for a long time, 61 percent and 57 percent, respectively, had a dilated examination in the past year (Brechner et al., 1993).
Sometimes surgery is performed on people who do not need it. A study of seven managed care organizations revealed that about 16 percent of hysterecto- mies performed during a one-year period from 1989 to 1990 were carried out for inappropriate reasons. An additional 25 percent were done for reasons of uncer- tain clinical benefit (Bernstein et al., 1993b). There are also examples of patients who need surgery but do not receive it. In a study of four hospitals, 43 percent of
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patients with a positive exercise stress test demonstrating the need for coronary angiography had received it within 3 months; 56 percent had received it within 12 months (Laouri et al., 1997).
Adverse events are injuries caused by medical management of a disease rather than by the disease itself. A review in New York State in 1984 found that 1.0 percent of hospitalizations had an adverse event due to negligence (Brennan et al., 1991). A study of two Boston hospitals found an adjusted rate of prevent- able adverse drug events of 1.8 per 100 non-obstetric hospital admissions; 20 percent of these events were life-threatening (Bates et al., 1995).
Not all studies have found such poor quality. In a study of patients from 10 academic medical centers who had cataract surgery, 2 percent had the surgery for inappropriate reasons (Tobacman et al., 1996). In a study of patients in New York State who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery, 1.6 percent had sur- gery for inappropriate reasons (Leape et al., 1996). Nonetheless, the majority of studies described in the tables show much room for improving quality.
How Managed Care Affects Quality
Many have been quick to conclude that managed care is responsible for much of the poor quality care found in the U.S. health care system. However, studies published in the research literature neither clearly confirmed nor refuted this conclusion. Some studies find that managed care organizations provide better care than fee-for-service; some find that fee-for-service provides better care; still others find that the care is about the same (Miller and Luft, 1993, 1994). Results vary depending on the setting, the type of care assessed, and the methodology.
Examining how managed care affects quality is complicated by the research approach, which has generally lumped together managed care organizations with- out distinguishing them by type (e.g., group- and staff-model health maintenance organizations, independent practice associations, preferred provider organiza- tions, point-of-service plans) or by features (e.g., comprehensiveness of the ben- efits package, nonprofit versus for-profit status). For purposes of examining qual- ity, it would be more useful to assess the effect of specific characteristics of managed care organizations. For example, including immunizations in a benefits package may have a larger impact on immunization rates than whether the care is offered by a managed care organization or a fee-for-service provider.
A final important constraint on examining managed care’s affect on quality is the pace of change in this industry. Indeed, managed care is changing so rapidly (Landon et al., 1998) that most currently available studies are already out of date. We do not have a quality measurement system that enables timely assess- ment of the rapid changes occurring in the health care marketplace. Even the most widely used systems (e.g., the Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set, described below) are far from universal and do not include both managed care and fee-for-service.
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Trends in Quality-of-Care Assessment
Because the Technical Advisory Panel specifically requested an update on studies published in 1997–1998, we examined these studies as a group. There are several notable findings. First, few of these later studies reported on overuse of care. By contrast, our original review produced many examples of overuse. These early studies were based principally on the UCLA/RAND appropriateness method (Brook, 1994), which was one of the key methods used for quality assessment in the late 1980s and early 1990s. We do not know why the number of appropriate- ness studies has declined in recent years. Perhaps the many studies published throughout the prior decade convinced researchers that a great deal of inappropri- ate care is being provided, and they saw no need to make the same point over and over again. Or perhaps researchers now prefer other types of research questions and methodologies.
Most of the recent studies provided examples of underuse. The findings are similar to those in the original review. For most types of care that researchers choose to study, we find that although many people do receive high quality care, many others do not. For example, a national study found that smoking status of adult patients was known by about two-thirds of primary care physicians after seeing their adult patients (Thorndike et al., 1998). Most preventive screening tests in the various studies were performed on more than half of the studied population but far from all. Blood pressure screening was particularly high (88 percent at last visit in one study [Kottke et al., 1997]), and in at least one study, cholesterol screening was high as well (84 percent) (Davis et al., 1998). Papani- colaou tests also appear to be provided to a large percentage of eligible women (Kottke et al., 1997). Quality continues to vary for acute care as well. The vast majority of hospitalized patients with pneumonia had timely oxygenation mea- surements (89 percent), but a lower percentage received blood cultures before antibiotics (57 percent) (Meehan et al., 1997).
Most of the studies of underuse were in chronic care. Mental health care falls below standards, with 70 percent of schizophrenics in one study receiving poor symptom management, and 79 percent of those experiencing medication side effects receiving poor management of them (Young et al., 1998). Cardiac care was the major area in which quality-of-care studies were conducted over the past decade, and the care patterns documented in the earlier studies continue among the recent ones. Excellent clinical research has shown repeatedly that certain medications should and should not be used for people with myocardial infarctions or unstable angina, yet several quality-of-care studies show that many patients are still not getting proper treatments (e.g., Berger et al., 1998; Krumholz et al., 1998; Simpson et al., 1997; Soumerai et al., 1998). As mentioned above, one study with particularly striking results found that only 21 percent of eligible patients with a heart attack received beta blockers within 90 days of hospital discharge (Soumerai et al., 1997). Although patients with cardiovascular dis-
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ease—a subset of the population that unambiguously needs cholesterol testing— had very high rates of cholesterol testing (96 percent), a much lower percentage of these patients received comprehensive treatment when their tests were abnor- mal (McBride et al., 1998).
Other Sources of Information About Quality of Care
In this paper, we have described reports of quality that have appeared in the research literature. There are also some systems that measure quality in select sectors of the United States, most notably the National Committee for Quality Assurance’s (NCQA) Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS). HEDIS is a performance measurement tool designed to help purchasers and consumers evaluate managed care plans and to hold plans accountable for the quality of their services. In 1996, more than 330 plans—over half the U.S. plans representing more than three-quarters of all commercial managed care enroll- ees—were reporting HEDIS measures on their commercial enrollees. Average adherence rates for select indicators made publicly available by NCQA fell pri- marily in the 60 to 70 percent range, with the extremes at 38 percent for diabetic eye exams (past year) and 84 percent for initiation of prenatal care in the first trimester (Thompson et al., 1998). Thus, HEDIS’s findings are consistent with those of the studies we have reported. Whether assessing quality as part of a research study or as part of a marketplace tool, the evidence repeatedly shows that quality falls short of standards.
CONCLUSIONS
There is good reason to be proud of the U.S. health care system, and evi- dence from international studies does not show consistent superiority elsewhere in the world (Gray et al., 1990; Pilpel et al., 1992; McGlynn et al., 1994; Froehlich et al., 1997; Meijler et al., 1997; Tamblyn et al., 1997; Wong et al., 1997). The United States is responsible for many important advances in health care technol- ogy, and state-of-the-art care is available in both large and small communities throughout the country. However, just because outstanding care is available does not mean that it is always provided or that everyone has access to such care. Most people in the studies reported here did receive excellent care. What is notable is that many did not.
The quality of health care provided in the United States varies among hospi- tals, cities, and states. Whether the care is preventive, acute, or chronic, it fre- quently does not meet professional standards. We can do much better. The solu- tion is not simply a matter of spending more money on health care. A large part of our quality problem is the amount of inappropriate care provided in this country. Eliminating such nonbeneficial and potentially harmful care would generate large savings in human and financial costs. However, there are also many examples of
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people who receive either too little or technically poor care; fixing these prob- lems may increase expenditures.
Some people might conclude that quality is good enough based on the evi- dence we have presented in this report—in other words, that the standards used in the various studies are too high. We would disagree with such a conclusion.
Clinicians and health plans that are motivated to improve the quality of care they deliver can use information on quality to focus their improvement efforts. For example, a group of all cardiothoracic surgeons practicing in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, using continuous quality improvement and other tech- niques to improve their practices, reduced their combined mortality rates by 24 percent (O’Connor et al., 1996). Government action also has the potential to spur improvement. In New York State (NYS), risk-adjusted mortality for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery decreased 41 percent from 4.17 percent in 1989 (when the NYS Department of Health began disseminating information regarding the outcomes of CABG surgery) to 2.45 percent in 1992 (Hannan et al., 1994). Between 1987 (before the NYS reporting program began) and 1992, unad- justed 30-day mortality rates following CABG declined by 33 percent in NYS Medicare patients, compared with a 19 percent decline nationwide, giving NYS the lowest statewide risk-adjusted CABG mortality rate in the country (Peterson et al., 1998).
If quality-of-care information is made available regularly and in an interpret- able form, consumers and large purchasers can use it to make informed decisions when choosing among clinicians and plans, which will, in turn, give providers an added incentive to improve quality. Policy makers can also use information about quality of care to determine the impact of public and private changes in the health care marketplace. We are currently experiencing a dramatic shift in the organiza- tion and financing of health services delivery in the United States. The private sector has been the driving force behind this transformation, but the public sector is beginning to use its market power as well. Incentives to move Medicaid and Medicare beneficiaries into managed care represent one of many examples of public sector change.
Although quality assessment organizations, accreditation organizations, and government agencies are currently doing work to measure quality of care, most of this activity has begun during the past decade. The rapid development of the field is encouraging, but it is confined to organizations that cover specific sections of the country or restrict themselves to certain segments of the health care market- place. Their work, as well as the findings of individual studies such as those listed in Tables A-1 to A-3, provides some evidence of the situation throughout the country.
But changes in the U.S. health care delivery system are occurring more rapidly than evaluations of them can be performed. Much of the information concerning the relation between the organization of the health care system and quality of care is already outdated. At present, the United States has only a
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patchwork of systems that measure quality, with little uniformity, breadth, or ability to produce rapid results. Furthermore, these systems do not yet assess most providers of health care in the United States. There is no system that pro- vides a comprehensive assessment of quality of care for the nation—including how quality varies by population subgroups (e.g., gender, age, race/ethnicity, income, region of country, size of community) and how quality is changing over time. Efforts such as HEDIS could eventually lead to development of a compre- hensive, national quality assessment system, but such a system may not develop rapidly unless there is an organized effort to ensure that it does.
The United States cannot afford to let this situation continue. A systematic strategy for routine monitoring and reporting on quality, as well as the informa- tion systems needed to support such activities, will be essential if we are to preserve the best of the American health care system while striving to improve the efficiency with which high-quality services are provided.
This strategy could be organized by the federal government, the private sector, or a public–private partnership. It could involve coordination among all three. But in any case, the strategy will need to cover the aspects of quality that patients, purchasers, and providers care about; it will need to collect data in a way that is manageable, reasonable, and affordable; and it will need to produce infor- mation in a format that is useful for making a variety of decisions.
The United States is capable of implementing a quality measurement system that can provide the multiple participants in the health care system with the information they need to ensure delivery of high-quality care. In light of the changes that the health care system has been experiencing, a strategy to measure and consequently to improve quality is needed now.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Partial funding was provided by the National Coalition on Health Care and the Institute of Medicine. We are indebted to Allison L. Diamant, M.D., M.S.P.H., Mark Chassin, M.D., M.P.P., M.P.H., Janet Corrigan, Ph.D., Molla Donaldson, D.Ph., Rachel Spilka, Ph.D., and Joseph H. Triebwasser, M.D., for comments on drafts of this paper. We are also indebted to James Tebow, Ph.D., Lauren N. Nguyen, M.P.H., Yuko Sano, A.B., Sinaroth Sor, M.D., and Myra Wong, A.B., for document and research assistance.
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250 T
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Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
251 st
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r ec
ei ve
d C
D C
, 19
95 b
ye ar
s ol
d is
r ec
om m
en de
d (U
S P
S T
F ,
≥ 65
y ea
rs o
ld f
ro m
a pn
eu m
oc oc
ca l
va cc
in e.
19 89
). I
n 19
96 ,
th e
re co
m m
en da
ti on
w as
sa m
pl e
of p
eo pl
e m
od if
ie d
to s
pe ci
fy o
ne -t
im e
va cc
in at
io n
re pr
es en
ta ti
ve o
f th
e U
.S .
fo r
al l
im m
un oc
om pe
te nt
i nd
iv id
ua ls
≥ 6
5 ci
vi li
an ,
no ni
ns ti
tu ti
on al
iz ed
ye ar
s ol
d (U
S P
S T
F ,
19 96
). po
pu la
ti on
.
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ro
m a
s am
pl e
of 7
,9 97
M ai
le d
su rv
ey s
w it
h ph
on e
36 %
o f
pe op
le ≥
6 5
ye ar
s K
ot tk
e ra
nd om
ly s
el ec
te d
pa ti
en ts
fo ll
ow -u
p of
p at
ie nt
s w
ho ol
d ha
d ev
er h
ad a
et al
., 19
97 ≥
20 y
ea rs
o ld
w ho
h ad
vi si
te d
on e
of 4
4 cl
in ic
s pn
eu m
oc oc
ca l
va cc
in e.
vi si
te d
a cl
in ic
d ur
in g
th e
fr om
A ug
us t
1, t
o st
ud y
pe ri
od ,
6, 83
0 (8
5% )
S ep
te m
be r
9, 1
99 4,
i n
th e
co m
pl et
ed s
ur ve
ys .
M in
ne ap
ol is
-S t.
P au
l m
e t ro
po li
ta n
a r e a
w it
h c o
nt ra
c t s
w it
h on
e of
t w
o m
an ag
ed c
a r e
c o m
pa ni
e s .
C an
c e r
S c r
e e n
in g
B re
as t
C an
c e r
Sc re
e n in
g R
e c om
m en
da ti
on s
va ry
. In
1 98
9, t
he 21
,6 01
w om
en ≥
5 0
ye a r
s B
e h a v
io ra
l R
is k
F a c
to r
58 %
h ad
c li
ni c a
l br
e a st
C D
C ,
19 93
a U
S P
S T
F r
e c om
m en
de d
a n a
nn ua
l c l
in ic
a l ol
d fr
om a
s am
pl e
of p
e o pl
e S
ur ve
il la
nc e
S ys
te m
, 19
92 .
e x am
i n
th e
pr io
r ye
a r ;
br e a
st e
xa m
( C
B E
) fo
r w
om en
≥ 4
0 ye
a r s
re pr
e s e n
ta ti
ve o
f th
e U
.S .
46 %
h ad
m am
m og
ra ph
y in
ol d
a n d
m am
m og
ra ph
y e v
e r y
1– 2
ye a r
s fo
r po
pu la
ti on
( e x
c l ud
in g
th e
pr io
r ye
a r ;
40 %
h ad
w om
en 5
0– 75
y e a
rs o
ld (
U S
P S
T F
, 19
89 ).
A rk
a n sa
s a n
d W
yo m
in g,
bo th
e xa
m in
a t io
ns i
n th
e
c o nt
in ue
s
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
252 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
In 1
99 6,
i t
re co
m m
en de
d m
am m
og ra
ph y
an d
in cl
ud in
g th
e D
is tr
ic t
pr io
r ye
ar .
ev er
y 1–
2 ye
ar s
w it
h or
w it
ho ut
a nn
ua l
of C
ol um
bi a)
. cl
in ic
al b
re as
t ex
am f
or w
om en
5 0–
69 ye
ar s
ol d
(U S
P S
T F
, 19
96 ).
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ro
m a
s am
pl e
of 7
,9 97
M ai
le d
su rv
ey s
w it
h ph
on e
72 %
o f
w om
en ≥
5 0
ye ar
s K
ot tk
e ra
nd om
ly s
el ec
te d
pa ti
en ts
fo ll
ow -u
p of
p at
ie nt
s w
ho ol
d ha
d a
br ea
st et
al .,
19 97
≥ 20
y ea
rs o
ld w
ho h
ad vi
si te
d on
e of
4 4
cl in
ic s
ex am
in at
io n
in t
he p
ri or
vi si
te d
a cl
in ic
d ur
in g
th e
fr om
A ug
us t
1, t
o tw
o ye
ar s;
6 8%
o f
w om
en st
ud y
pe ri
od ,
6, 83
0 (8
5% )
S ep
te m
be r
9, 1
99 4,
i n
th e
50 y
ea rs
o r
ol de
r ha
d a
co m
pl et
ed s
ur ve
ys .
M in
ne ap
ol is
-S t.
P au
l m
am m
og ra
m i
n th
e pr
io r
m et
ro po
li ta
n ar
ea w
it h
tw o
ye ar
s. co
nt ra
ct s
w it
h on
e of
t w
o m
an ag
ed c
ar e
co m
pa ni
es .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
22 1
w om
en >
5 0
ye ar
s ol
d. In
te rv
ie w
s ur
ve y
of w
om en
38 %
o f
w om
en h
ad n
ot S
to ne
r et
a l.
, in
f a r
m h
ou se
ho ld
s re
c e iv
e d a
m am
m og
ra m
i n
19 98
ra nd
om ly
s am
pl e d
f ro
m s
ix th
e pr
io r
18 m
on th
s. so
ut he
rn M
in ne
so ta
c o un
ti e s
, 19
92 .
C e r
v i c a
l C
an c e
r Sc
re e n
in g
W om
en w
it h
a n i
nt a c
t ut
e r us
( ha
vi ng
a W
om en
≥ 1
8 ye
a r s
ol d
w it
h N
H IS
, 19
92 .
67 %
h ad
a P
a p s
m e a
r in
C D
C ,
19 96
c e rv
ix )
sh ou
ld h
av e
a P
a p a n
ic ol
a o u
(P a p
) a n
i nt
a c t
ut e r
us f
ro m
a th
e pr
io r
3 ye
a r s.
sm e a
r a f
te r
in it
ia ti
on o
f se
xu a l
i nt
e r c o
ur se
sa m
pl e
of 1
28 ,4
12 p
eo pl
e a n
d e v
e r y
1– 3
ye a r
s th
e r e a
ft e r
. S
om e
re pr
e s e n
ta ti
ve o
f th
e U
.S .
or ga
ni z a
ti on
s re
c o m
m en
d st
a r ti
ng P
ap c i
vi li
a n ,
no ni
ns ti
tu ti
on a l
iz e d
sm e a
rs f
or a
ll w
om en
w ho
h av
e re
a c he
d po
pu la
ti on
. 18
y e a
rs o
ld ,
re ga
rd le
ss o
f se
xu a l
h is
to ry
(U S
P S
T F
, 19
89 ).
T he
se r
e c om
m en
da ti
on s
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
253 ha
ve s
in ce
b ee
n re
it er
at ed
( U
S P
S T
F ,
19 96
).
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ro
m a
s am
pl e
of 7
,9 97
M ai
le d
su rv
ey s
w it
h ph
on e
84 %
o f
w om
en h
ad a
P ap
K ot
tk e
ra nd
om ly
s el
ec te
d pa
ti en
ts fo
ll ow
-u p
of p
at ie
nt s
w ho
sm ea
r in
t he
p ri
or t
w o
et al
., 19
97 ≥
20 y
ea rs
o ld
w ho
h ad
vi si
te d
on e
of 4
4 cl
in ic
s ye
ar s.
vi si
te d
a cl
in ic
d ur
in g
th e
fr om
A ug
us t
1, t
o st
ud y
pe ri
od ,
6, 83
0 (8
5% )
S ep
te m
be r
9, 1
99 4,
i n
th e
co m
pl et
ed s
ur ve
ys .
M in
ne ap
ol is
-S t.
P au
l m
et ro
po li
ta n
ar ea
w it
h co
nt ra
ct s
w it
h on
e of
t w
o m
an ag
ed c
ar e
co m
pa ni
es .
C ol
on C
an ce
r Sc
re en
in g
R ec
om m
en da
ti on
s va
ry .
In 1
98 0,
t he
A du
lt s
≥ 40
y ea
rs o
ld f
ro m
N H
IS ,
19 92
14 %
o f
m en
a nd
1 5%
o f
C D
C ,
19 96
A m
er ic
an C
an ce
r S
oc ie
ty r
ec om
m en
de d
a sa
m pl
e of
1 28
,4 12
p eo
pl e
w om
en h
ad F
O B
T i
n th
e an
nu al
f ec
al o
cc ul
t bl
oo d
te st
in g
(F O
B T
) re
pr es
en ta
ti ve
o f
th e
U .S
. pr
io r
ye ar
; 44
% o
f m
en a
nd st
ar ti
ng a
t 50
y ea
rs o
ld .
S om
e ot
he r
ci vi
li an
, no
ni ns
ti tu
ti on
al iz
ed 43
% o
f w
om en
h ad
e ve
r or
ga ni
za ti
on s
m ad
e si
m il
ar po
pu la
ti on
. ha
d F
O B
T ;
11 %
o f
m en
re co
m m
en da
ti on
s. I
n 19
89 ,
th e
U S
P S
T F
an d
7% o
f w
om en
h ad
di d
no t
m ak
e re
co m
m en
da ti
on s
(U S
P S
T F
, pr
oc to
si gm
oi do
sc op
y in
t he
19 89
), b
ut i
n 19
96 ,
it r
e c om
m en
de d
a n nu
a l pr
io r
3 ye
a r s.
F O
B T
, si
gm oi
do sc
op y
(p e r
io di
c i ty
un sp
e c if
ie d)
, or
b ot
h st
a r ti
ng a
t 50
y e a
rs ol
d (U
S P
S T
F ,
19 96
).
S am
e a s
a bo
ve .
25 0
w om
en 4
0– 65
y e a
rs M
ed ic
a l r
e c or
ds f
or 51
% –5
9% o
f w
om en
h ad
U dv
a r he
ly i
ol d
w ho
h ad
n o
m a j
or pa
ti e n
ts f
ro m
f ou
r gr
ou p
F O
B T
e ve
ry 2
y e a
rs o
r e t
a l.
, 19
91 il
ln e s
se s,
w ho
r e c
e i ve
d pr
a c ti
c e s
in M
a s sa
c h us
e t ts
, fl
e x ib
le s
ig m
oi do
sc op
y pr
im a r
y c a
re a
t on
e of
t he
N ov
em be
r 1,
1 98
5, t
o e v
e r y
5 ye
a r s.
gr ou
p pr
a c ti
c e s,
a nd
w ho
O c t
ob e r
3 1,
1 98
7. w
e r e
e l ig
ib le
f or
p re
ve nt
iv e
c a re
. c o
nt in
ue s
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
254 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
C ar
d ia
c R
is k
F ac
to rs
Sm ok
in g
C ou
ns el
in g
T he
U S
P S
T F
r ec
om m
en ds
a c
om pl
et e
8, 77
8 sm
ok er
s ≥
18 y
ea rs
N H
IS ,
19 91
. 37
% o
f sm
ok er
s w
ho h
ad a
C D
C ,
19 93
b hi
st or
y of
t ob
ac co
u se
a s
w el
l as
t ob
ac co
ol d
fr om
a s
am pl
e of
vi si
t w
it h
a ph
ys ic
ia n
or ce
ss at
io n
co un
se li
ng o
n a
re gu
la r
ba si
s 43
,7 32
p eo
pl e
ot he
r he
al th
c ar
e (U
S P
S T
F ,
19 89
, 19
96 ).
T he
A ge
nc y
fo r
re pr
es en
ta ti
ve o
f th
e U
.S .
pr of
es si
on al
d ur
in g
th e
H ea
lt h
C ar
e P
ol ic
y an
d R
es ea
rc h
(A H
C P
R )
ci vi
li an
, no
ni ns
ti tu
ti on
al iz
ed pr
io r
ye ar
h ad
b ee
n ad
vi se
d re
co m
m en
ds t
ha t
pr im
ar y
ca re
p hy
si ci
an s
po pu
la ti
on .
to q
ui t
sm ok
in g.
id en
ti fy
p at
ie nt
s’ s
m ok
in g
st at
us a
nd co
un se
l sm
ok er
s at
e ve
ry v
is it
( A
H C
P R
, 19
96 ).
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ro
m a
s am
pl e
of 7
,9 97
M ai
le d
su rv
ey s
w it
h ph
on e
53 %
o f
sm ok
er s
w er
e as
ke d
K ot
tk e
ra nd
om ly
s el
ec te
d pa
ti en
ts fo
ll ow
-u p
of p
at ie
nt s
w ho
th ei
r sm
ok in
g st
at us
. 47
% et
al .,
19 97
≥ 20
y ea
rs o
ld w
ho h
ad vi
si te
d on
e of
4 4
cl in
ic s
of s
m ok
er s
w er
e ad
vi se
d to
vi si
te d
a cl
in ic
d ur
in g
th e
fr om
A ug
us t
1, t
o qu
it .
st ud
y pe
ri od
, 6,
83 0
(8 5%
) S
ep te
m be
r 9,
1 99
4, i
n th
e c o
m pl
e t e d
s ur
ve ys
. M
in ne
a p ol
is -S
t. P
a u l
m e t
ro po
li ta
n a r
e a w
it h
c o nt
ra c t
s w
it h
on e
of t
w o
m an
ag ed
c a r
e c o
m pa
ni e s
.
S am
e a s
a bo
ve .
A n
a t io
na ll
y re
pr e s
e n ta
ti ve
N a t
io na
l A
m bu
la to
ry P
hy si
c i a n
s kn
ew t
he T
ho rn
di ke
sa m
pl e
of 3
,2 54
p hy
si c i
a n s
M ed
ic a l
C a r
e S
ur ve
y pa
ti e n
t’ s
sm ok
in g
st a t
us a
t e t
a l .,
19 98
re pr
e s e n
ti ng
1 45
,7 16
a du
lt (N
A M
C S
), 1
99 1–
19 95
. 66
% o
f a l
l pa
ti e n
t vi
si ts
. pa
ti e n
t am
bu la
to ry
c a r
e (T
he p
e r c e
nt a g
e fo
r vi
si ts
. pr
im a r
y c a
re p
hy si
c i a n
s ra
ng ed
f ro
m a
bo ut
6 1%
t o
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
255 67
% ,
de pe
nd in
g on
t he
ye ar
.) S
m ok
in g
co un
se li
ng w
as p
ro vi
de d
at 2
2% o
f vi
si ts
o f
kn ow
n sm
ok er
s. (T
he p
er ce
nt ag
e fo
r pr
im ar
y ca
re p
hy si
ci an
s ra
ng ed
f ro
m 2
0% t
o 38
% .)
B lo
od C
ho le
st er
ol S
cr ee
ni ng
In 1
98 8,
t he
N at
io na
l H
ea rt
, L
un g,
a nd
3, 70
0 ad
ul ts
≥ 1
8 ye
ar s
ol d
T el
ep ho
ne s
ur ve
y by
t he
65 %
o f
ad ul
ts h
ad e
ve r
ha d
S ch
uc ke
r B
lo od
I ns
ti tu
te r
ec om
m en
de d
ro ut
in e
fr om
a r
ep re
se nt
at iv
e N
at io
na l
H ea
rt ,
L un
g, a
nd a
bl oo
d ch
ol es
te ro
l te
st ;
et al
., 19
91 ch
ol es
te ro
l sc
re en
in g
at l
ea st
e ve
ry 5
y ea
rs sa
m pl
e of
t he
n on
-A fr
ic an
B lo
od I
ns ti
tu te
, 19
90 .
51 %
h ad
t he
t es
t in
t he
st ar
ti ng
a t
20 y
ea rs
o ld
. In
1 98
9, t
he A
m er
ic an
U .S
. po
pu la
ti on
. pr
io r
ye ar
; an
d an
U S
P S
T F
r ec
om m
en de
d pe
ri od
ic s
cr ee
ni ng
ad di
ti on
al 1
4% h
ad i
t pr
io r
fo r
m id
dl e-
ag ed
m en
( U
S P
S T
F ,
19 89
), a
nd to
t ha
t. 3
5% h
ad n
ev er
h ad
in 1
99 6,
i t
re co
m m
en de
d pe
ri od
ic a
bl oo
d ch
ol es
te ro
l te
st .
sc re
en in
g fo
r m
en 3
5– 65
y ea
rs o
ld a
nd w
om en
4 5–
65 y
ea rs
o ld
. T
re at
m en
t in
cl ud
es d
ie ta
ry t
he ra
py ,
ph ys
ic al
a ct
iv it
y, or
l ip
id -l
ow er
in g
m ed
ic at
io ns
d ep
en di
ng on
t he
p a t
ie nt
( N
a t io
na l
C ho
le st
e r ol
E du
c a ti
on P
ro gr
am [
N C
E P
], 1
99 3)
.
S am
e a s
a bo
ve .
A du
lt s
≥ 20
y e a
rs o
ld f
ro m
C D
C ’s
B e h
a v io
ra l
R is
k T
he s
ta te
-s pe
c i fi
c ra
te s
of C
D C
, 19
93 c
a sa
m pl
e of
p e o
pl e
F a c
to r
S ur
ve il
la nc
e S
ys te
m ,
a d ul
ts w
ho h
ad c
ho le
st e r
ol re
pr e s
e n ta
ti ve
o f
th e
U .S
. 19
91 .
sc re
e n in
g in
t he
p ri
or 5
po pu
la ti
on (
e x c l
ud in
g ye
a r s
ra ng
ed f
ro m
5 7%
t o
W yo
m in
g, K
a n sa
s, a
nd 70
% .
c o nt
in ue
s
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
256 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
N ev
ad a,
a nd
i nc
lu di
ng t
he D
is tr
ic t
of C
ol um
bi a)
(s am
pl e
si ze
s fo
r in
di vi
du al
st at
es r
an ge
f ro
m 6
70 t
o 3,
19 0
pe op
le ).
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ro
m a
s am
pl e
of 7
,9 97
M ai
le d
su rv
ey s
w it
h ph
on e
68 %
h ad
h ad
t he
ir K
ot tk
e ra
nd om
ly s
el ec
te d
pa ti
en ts
fo ll
ow -u
p of
p at
ie nt
s w
ho ch
ol es
te ro
l m
ea su
re d
du ri
ng et
al .,
19 97
≥ 20
y ea
rs o
ld w
ho h
ad vi
si te
d on
e of
4 4
cl in
ic s
th e
pr io
r 5
ye ar
s. vi
si te
d a
cl in
ic d
ur in
g th
e fr
om A
ug us
t 1,
t o
st ud
y pe
ri od
, 6,
83 0
(8 5%
) S
ep te
m be
r 9,
1 99
4, i
n th
e co
m pl
et ed
s ur
ve ys
. M
in ne
ap ol
is -S
t. P
au l
m et
ro po
li ta
n ar
ea w
it h
co nt
ra ct
s w
it h
on e
of t
w o
m an
ag ed
c ar
e co
m pa
ni es
. B
lo od
C ho
le st
er ol
S cr
ee ni
ng a
nd T
re at
m en
t S
am e
a s a
bo ve
. 1,
00 4
pe op
le 4
0– 64
y e a
rs M
ed ic
a l r
e c or
ds f
ro m
t hr
e e 84
% w
e r e
sc re
e n e d
f or
D a v
is e
t a l
., ol
d fr
om a
s am
pl e
th a t
h a d
si te
s of
a m
an ag
ed c
a r e
e l e v
a t e d
c ho
le st
e r ol
l e v
e l s
19 98
be e n
e nr
ol le
d c o
nt in
uo us
ly pl
a n (
S ou
th F
lo ri
da ;
a t l
e a st
o nc
e du
ri ng
t he
fo r
a t l
e a st
5 y
e a rs
a nd
h ad
Ja c k
so nv
il le
, F
lo ri
da ;
a n d
6- ye
a r p
e r io
d. 8
6% w
it h
a a t
l e a
st o
ne o
ut pa
ti e n
t vi
si t
A tl
a n ta
, G
e o rg
ia ),
J a n
ua ry
di a g
no si
s of
du ri
ng t
he s
tu dy
p e r
io d.
1, 1
98 8,
t o
D e c
em be
r 31
, hy
pe rc
ho le
st e r
ol em
ia w
e r e
19 93
. tr
e a te
d w
it h
di e t
t he
ra py
, c h
ol e s
te ro
l- lo
w e r
in g
dr ug
s, or
b ot
h.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
257
co nt
in ue
s
B lo
od P
re ss
ur e
Sc re
en in
g In
1 98
9, t
he U
S P
S T
F r
ec om
m en
de d
bl oo
d F
ro m
a s
am pl
e of
7 ,9
97 M
ai le
d su
rv ey
s w
it h
ph on
e 88
% h
ad b
lo od
p re
ss ur
e K
ot tk
e pr
es su
re m
ea su
re m
en ts
f or
n or
m ot
en si
ve ra
nd om
ly s
el ec
te d
pa ti
en ts
fo ll
ow -u
p of
p at
ie nt
s w
ho m
ea su
re d
at t
he m
os t
et al
., 19
97 pa
ti en
ts ≥
2 1
ye ar
s ol
d ev
er y
2 ye
ar s
if ≥
20 y
ea rs
o ld
w ho
h ad
vi si
te d
on e
of 4
4 cl
in ic
s re
ce nt
v is
it .
th ei
r la
st d
ia st
ol ic
a nd
s ys
to li
c bl
oo d
vi si
te d
a cl
in ic
d ur
in g
th e
fr om
A ug
us t
1, t
o pr
es su
re s
w er
e be
lo w
8 5
m m
H g
an d
14 0
st ud
y pe
ri od
, 6,
83 0
(8 5%
) S
ep te
m be
r 9,
1 99
4, i
n th
e m
m H
g, r
es pe
ct iv
el y,
a nd
a nn
ua ll
y if
t he
ir co
m pl
et ed
s ur
ve ys
. M
in ne
ap ol
is -S
t. P
au l
la st
d ia
st ol
ic w
as 8
5– 89
m m
H g
(U S
P S
T F
, m
et ro
po li
ta n
ar ea
w it
h 19
89 ).
I n
19 96
, th
es e
re co
m m
en da
ti on
s co
nt ra
ct s
w it
h on
e of
t w
o w
er e
m od
if ie
d to
s pe
ci fy
a pp
ar en
tl y
m an
ag ed
c ar
e co
m pa
ni es
. no
rm ot
en si
ve p
at ie
nt s
(U S
P S
T F
, 19
96 ).
G en
er al
P re
ve n
ti ve
C ar
e W
el l-
C hi
ld C
ar e
T he
A A
P r
ec om
m en
ds r
ou ti
ne h
is to
ry ,
A ll
c hi
ld re
n w
ho h
ad t
he ir
M ed
ic al
r ec
or ds
f ro
m F
or e
ac h
ty pe
o f
cl in
ic al
S ta
rf ie
ld ph
ys ic
al e
xa m
in at
io n,
s cr
ee ni
ng t
es ts
, an
d se
co nd
b ir
th da
y du
ri ng
t he
ph ys
ic ia
ns ’
of fi
ce s,
se tt
in g,
t he
s tu
dy r
ep or
ts et
al .,
19 94
an ti
ci pa
to ry
g ui
da nc
e th
ro ug
ho ut
fi rs
t ha
lf o
f th
e st
ud y
ye ar
, co
m m
un it
y he
al th
c en
te rs
, th
e av
er ag
e pe
rc en
ta ge
o f
ch il
dh oo
d (A
A P
, 19
88 ).
an d
al l
2- ye
ar -o
ld s
w it
h an
d ho
sp it
al o
ut pa
ti en
t te
ch ni
ca l
qu al
it y
in di
ca to
rs ot
it is
m ed
ia o
r as
th m
a, f
ro m
fa ci
li ti
es s
am pl
ed f
ro m
fo r
w el
l- ch
il d
ca re
t ha
t a
sa m
pl e
of 2
,0 24
p at
ie nt
s M
ar yl
an d
M ed
ic ai
d cl
ai m
s w
er e
no t
m et
. E
ac h
av er
ag e
of 1
35 p
ro vi
de rs
. da
ta ,
19 88
. fe
ll i
n th
e 35
% –6
5% r
a n ge
.
W e l
l- A
du lt
C ar
e P
a t ie
nt s
sh ou
ld h
av e
pr e v
e n ti
ve h
e a lt
h A
ll a
du lt
s w
it h
a s th
m a ,
S am
e a s
a bo
ve .
F or
e a c
h ty
pe o
f c l
in ic
a l S
ta rf
ie ld
vi si
ts e
ve ry
1 –3
y e a
rs w
he n
19 –6
4 ye
a r s
hy pe
rt e n
si on
, a n
d di
a b e t
e s se
tt in
g, t
he s
tu dy
r e p
or ts
e t a l
., 19
94 ol
d a n
d e v
e r y
ye a r
w he
n ≥
65 y
e a rs
o ld
fr om
a s
am pl
e of
2 ,0
24 th
e a v
e r a g
e pe
rc e n
ta ge
o f
(U S
P S
T F
, 19
89 ).
pa ti
e n ts
o f
13 5
pr ov
id e r
s. te
c h ni
c a l
qu a l
it y
in di
c a to
rs fo
r w
e l l-
a d ul
t c a
re t
ha t
w e r
e no
t m
e t .
E a c
h a v
e r a g
e fe
ll i
n th
e 45
% –5
5% r
a n ge
.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
258 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
A C
U T
E C
A R
E P
n eu
m on
ia P
ne um
on ia
: H
os pi
ta l
C ar
e In
cl ud
es d
oc um
en ta
ti on
o f
to ba
cc o
us e/
1, 40
8 pa
ti en
ts h
os pi
ta li
ze d
M ed
ic al
r ec
or ds
f or
52 %
–9 0%
o f
pa ti
en ts
w it
h K
ah n
et a
l. ,
no nu
se a
nd l
ow er
-e xt
re m
it y
ed em
a; b
lo od
w it
h pn
eu m
on ia
f ro
m a
M ed
ic ar
e pa
ti en
ts f
ro m
2 97
pn eu
m on
ia r
ec ei
ve d
19 90
pr es
su re
r ea
di ng
s; o
xy ge
n th
er ap
y or
na ti
on al
ly r
ep re
se nt
at iv
e ho
sp it
al s
in f
iv e
st at
es ap
pr op
ri at
e co
m po
ne nt
s of
in tu
ba ti
on f
or h
yp ox
ic p
at ie
nt s.
sa m
pl e
of 7
,1 56
p at
ie nt
s (C
al if
or ni
a, F
lo ri
da ,
ca re
. ho
sp it
al iz
ed w
it h
an y
of In
di an
a, P
en ns
yl va
ni a,
fi ve
c on
di ti
on s
(c on
ge st
iv e
T ex
as ),
J ul
y 1,
1 98
5, t
o he
ar t
fa il
ur e,
a cu
te Ju
ne 3
0, 1
98 6.
m yo
ca rd
ia l
in fa
rc ti
on ,
pn eu
m on
ia ,
st ro
ke ,
hi p
fr ac
tu re
) (D
ra pe
r et
a l.
, 19
90 ).
In cl
ud es
v ar
io us
c om
po ne
nt s
of 1,
34 3
pa ti
en ts
≥ 6
5 ye
ar s
N at
io na
l M
ed ic
ar e
cl ai
m s
89 %
h ad
o xy
ge na
ti on
M ee
ha n
pn eu
m on
ia c
a r e
c o ns
is te
nt w
it h
pr e v
a i li
ng ol
d ho
sp it
a l iz
e d w
it h
da ta
a nd
m ed
ic a l
r e c
or ds
, a s
se ss
m en
t w
it hi
n 24
h ou
rs e t
a l .,
19 97
st a n
da rd
s of
c a r
e . pn
eu m
on ia
. O
c t ob
e r 1
, 19
94 ,
to of
h os
pi ta
l a r
ri va
l, 7
6% S
ep te
m be
r 30
, 19
95 re
c e iv
e d a
nt ib
io ti
c s w
it hi
n 8
ho ur
s of
a rr
iv a l
, 69
% h
ad bl
oo d
c u lt
ur e s
w it
hi n
24 ho
ur s
of a
rr iv
a l ,
a n d
57 %
ha d
bl oo
d c u
lt ur
e s c
ol le
c t e d
be fo
re i
ni ti
a l a
nt ib
io ti
c a d
m in
is tr
a t io
n.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
259
co nt
in ue
s
O ti
ti s
M ed
ia O
ti ti
s M
ed ia
: T
re at
m en
t In
cl ud
es v
ar io
us c
om po
ne nt
s of
o ti
ti s
46 4
ch il
dr en
≥ 3
y ea
rs o
ld M
ed ic
al r
ec or
ds f
ro m
F or
e ac
h ty
pe o
f cl
in ic
al S
ta rf
ie ld
m ed
ia c
ar e
co ns
is te
nt w
it h
pr ev
ai li
ng di
ag no
se d
w it
h ot
it is
m ed
ia ph
ys ic
ia ns
’ of
fi ce
s, se
tt in
g, t
he s
tu dy
r ep
or ts
et al
., 19
94 st
an da
rd s
of c
ar e.
fr om
a s
am pl
e of
2 ,0
24 co
m m
un it
y he
al th
c en
te rs
, th
e av
er ag
e pe
rc en
ta ge
o f
pa ti
en ts
o f
13 5
pr ov
id er
s. an
d ho
sp it
al o
ut pa
ti en
t te
ch ni
ca l
qu al
it y
in di
ca to
rs fa
ci li
ti es
s am
pl ed
f ro
m fo
r ot
it is
m ed
ia t
ha t
w er
e M
ar yl
an d
M ed
ic ai
d cl
ai m
s no
t m
et .
E ac
h av
er ag
e fe
ll da
ta ,
19 88
. in
t he
1 0%
–4 0%
r an
ge .
H ip
F ra
ct u
re s
H ip
F ra
ct ur
e: H
os pi
ta l
C ar
e In
cl ud
es d
oc um
en ta
ti on
o f
m en
ta l
st at
us 1,
40 4
pa ti
en ts
h os
pi ta
li ze
d M
ed ic
al r
ec or
ds f
or 67
% –9
4% o
f pa
ti en
ts w
it h
K ah
n et
a l.
, an
d pe
da l
or l
eg p
ul se
, se
ru m
p ot
as si
um w
it h
hi p
fr ac
tu re
f ro
m a
M ed
ic ar
e pa
ti en
ts f
ro m
2 97
hi p
fr ac
tu re
r ec
ei ve
d 19
90 le
ve l,
e le
ct ro
ca rd
io gr
am .
na ti
on al
ly r
ep re
se nt
at iv
e ho
sp it
al s
in f
iv e
st at
es ap
pr op
ri at
e co
m po
ne nt
s of
sa m
pl e
of 7
,1 56
p at
ie nt
s (C
al if
or ni
a, F
lo ri
da ,
ca re
. ho
sp it
al iz
ed w
it h
an y
of In
di an
a, P
en ns
yl va
ni a,
fi ve
c on
di ti
on s
(c on
ge st
iv e
T ex
as ),
J ul
y 1,
1 98
5, t
o he
ar t
fa il
ur e,
a cu
te Ju
ne 3
0, 1
98 6.
m yo
ca rd
ia l
in fa
rc ti
on ,
pn eu
m on
ia ,
st ro
ke ,
hi p
fr a c
tu re
) (D
ra pe
r e t
a l.
, 19
90 ).
U r i
n ar
y T
ra c t
I n
fe c t
io n
s U
ri na
ry T
ra c t
I nf
e c ti
on s:
D ia
gn os
is T
he p
ro vi
si on
o f
a ur
in e
c u lt
ur e
in 53
5 e p
is od
e s o
f U
T I
fr om
M ed
ic a i
d c l
a i m
s fr
om 52
% r
e c e i
ve d
a ur
in e
B ro
ns te
in di
a g no
si ng
a u
ri na
ry t
ra c t
i nf
e c ti
on (
U T
I) 46
5 c h
il dr
e n w
ho r
e c e i
ve d
A la
ba m
a , J
ul y
1, 1
98 9,
t o
c u lt
ur e .
e t a l
., 19
97 is
c on
si st
e n t
w it
h pr
e v a i
li ng
s ta
nd a r
ds o
f am
bu la
to ry
c a r
e fo
r U
T Is
Ju ne
3 0,
1 99
3. c a
re .
ou t
of a
s am
pl e
of 1
47 ,3
56 ch
il dr
e n <
8 y
e a rs
o ld
w it
h
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
260 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
co nt
in uo
us M
ed ic
ai d
co ve
ra ge
( ex
cl us
iv e
of ch
il dr
en w
it h
M ed
ic ai
d be
ca us
e of
S up
pl em
en ta
l S
ec ur
it y
In co
m e)
f or
a ll
1 2
m on
th s
of 1
99 2.
P re
gn an
cy a
n d
D el
iv er
y P
re na
ta l
C ar
e: M
ed ic
al H
is to
ry ,
P hy
si ca
l E
xa m
in at
io n,
a nd
L ab
or at
or y
T es
ts In
cl ud
es v
ar io
us c
om po
ne nt
s of
p re
na ta
l 9,
92 4
w om
en w
ho h
ad l
iv e
N at
io na
l M
at er
na l
an d
80 %
w er
e as
ke d
ab ou
t K
og an
e t
al .,
ca re
c on
si st
en t
w it
h pr
ev ai
li ng
s ta
nd ar
ds bi
rt hs
i n
19 88
f ro
m a
In fa
nt H
ea lt
h S
ur ve
y he
al th
h is
to ry
d ur
in g
th e
19 94
of c
ar e.
na ti
on al
ly r
ep re
se nt
at iv
e (N
M IH
S ),
1 98
8. fi
rs t
or s
ec on
d vi
si t.
9 8%
sa m
pl e
of t
he U
.S .
ha d
th ei
r w
ei gh
t an
d he
ig ht
po pu
la ti
on (
ex cl
ud in
g S
ou th
m ea
su re
d, 9
6% h
ad b
lo od
D ak
ot a
an d
M on
ta na
, an
d pr
es su
re m
ea su
re d,
a nd
in cl
ud in
g th
e D
is tr
ic t
of 86
% r
ec ei
ve d
a ph
ys ic
al o
r C
ol um
bi a )
. pe
lv ic
e xa
m in
a t io
n du
ri ng
th e
fi rs
t or
s e c
on d
vi si
t. 79
% r
e c e i
ve d
bl oo
d te
st s
a n d
93 %
r e c
e i ve
d ur
in a l
ys is
d ur
in g
th e
fi rs
t or
s e c
on d
vi si
t. 5
6% re
c e iv
e d a
ll o
f th
e e v
a l ua
ti on
s li
st e d
a bo
ve du
ri ng
t he
f ir
st o
r se
c o nd
vi si
t.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
261
co nt
in ue
s
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
C ou
ns el
in g
A bo
ut N
ut ri
ti on
, W
ei gh
t G
ai n,
S ub
st an
ce U
se ,
an d
B re
as tf
ee di
ng In
cl ud
es v
ar io
us c
om po
ne nt
s of
p re
na ta
l S
am e
as a
bo ve
. S
am e
as a
bo ve
. 97
% w
er e
co un
se le
d ab
ou t
K og
an e
t al
., ca
re c
on si
st en
t w
it h
pr ev
ai li
ng s
ta nd
ar ds
vi ta
m in
s, 9
3% w
er e
19 94
of c
ar e.
co un
se le
d ab
ou t
di et
, an
d 72
% w
er e
co un
se le
d ab
ou t
pr op
er w
ei gh
t ga
in d
ur in
g pr
eg na
nc y
du ri
ng a
t le
as t
on e
pr en
at al
v is
it .
68 %
w er
e co
un se
le d
to r
ed uc
e or
e li
m in
at e
al co
ho l
co ns
um pt
io n,
6 9%
t o
re du
ce o
r el
im in
at e
sm ok
in g,
a nd
6 5%
t o
st op
us e
of i
ll eg
al d
ru gs
d ur
in g
at l
ea st
o ne
p re
na ta
l vi
si t.
53 %
w er
e co
un se
le d
ab ou
t br
ea st
fe ed
in g
du ri
ng a
t le
as t
on e
pr en
at al
v is
it .
32 %
r ec
ei ve
d al
l of
t he
co un
se li
ng l
is te
d ab
ov e
du ri
ng a
t le
a s t
on e
pr e n
a t a l
vi si
t. P
re na
ta l
C ar
e : S
c r e e
ni ng
T e s
ts In
c l ud
e s t
e s ts
t o
sc re
e n f
or a
ne m
ia ,
R a n
do m
s am
pl e
of 5
86 M
ed ic
a l r
e c or
ds f
or A
m on
g si
x H
M O
s, w
om en
M ur
a t a
a s ym
pt om
a t ic
b a c
te ri
ur ia
, sy
ph il
is ,
w om
en w
ho h
ad a
l iv
e bi
rt h
pa ti
e n ts
f ro
m s
ix H
M O
s in
re c e
iv e d
6 4%
–9 5%
e t a l
., 19
94 go
no rr
he a ,
h e p
a t it
is B
, ru
be ll
a im
m un
it y,
fr om
2 4,
17 0
bi rt
hs t
ha t
si x
st a t
e s (
A ri
z o na
, (a
ve ra
ge 8
2% )
of s
e v e n
a n d
R h
fa c t
or a
nd a
nt ib
od y.
oc c u
rr e d
d ur
in g
th e
st ud
y C
a l if
or ni
a , C
ol or
a d o,
re c o
m m
en de
d ro
ut in
e pe
ri od
. M
a s sa
c h us
e t ts
, M
in ne
so ta
, pr
e n a t
a l s
c r e e
ni ng
t e s
ts .
O re
go n)
, A
ug us
t 1,
1 98
9, to
J ul
y 31
, 19
90 .
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
262 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
O th
er R
ou ti
ne P
re na
ta l
C ar
e In
cl ud
es f
ir st
p re
na ta
l vi
si t
du ri
ng f
ir st
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
A m
on g
si x
H M
O s,
w om
en M
ur at
a tr
im es
te r,
a cc
ur at
e de
te rm
in at
io n
of re
ce iv
ed 7
8% –8
7% et
al .,
19 94
ge st
at io
na l
ag e,
s cr
ee ni
ng f
or i
nh er
it ed
(a ve
ra ge
8 4%
) of
f iv
e di
so rd
er s,
m ea
su re
m en
t of
s ym
ph ys
is –
pr oc
es se
s of
r ou
ti ne
fu nd
al h
ei gh
t, a
nd b
lo od
p re
ss ur
e pr
en at
al c
ar e.
m ea
su re
m en
t.
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
P re
gn an
cy C
om pl
ic at
io ns
In cl
ud es
d ia
gn os
ti c
an d
tr ea
tm en
t S
am e
as a
bo ve
. S
am e
as a
bo ve
. A
m on
g si
x H
M O
s, w
om en
M ur
at a
in te
rv en
ti on
s af
te r
ab no
rm al
s cr
ee ni
ng t
es t
re ce
iv ed
5 4%
–7 7%
et al
., 19
94 re
su lt
s, a
nd c
ar e
to m
it ig
at e
ef fe
ct s
of of
c ar
e fo
r co
m pl
ic at
io ns
pr eg
na nc
y- in
du ce
d hy
pe rt
en si
on a
nd of
p re
gn an
cy .
ge st
at io
na l
di ab
et es
.
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
P ro
te in
ur ia
U ri
ne i
s c h
e c ke
d fo
r pr
ot e i
n to
e va
lu a t
e In
pa ti
e n t
re c o
rd s
fo r
2, 33
6 M
ed ic
a l r
e c or
ds f
or T
e s ti
ng w
a s p
ro vi
de d
a t C
a r e y
e t
a l .,
fo r
th e
pr e s
e n c e
o f
pr e e
c l am
ps ia
, a
se ri
ou s
w om
en f
ro m
a s
am pl
e of
pa ti
e n ts
s am
pl e d
f ro
m 75
% –8
3% o
f vi
si ts
. 19
91 co
m pl
ic a t
io n
of p
re gn
an cy
. 2,
87 8
bi rt
hs i
n 19
85 ;
M ed
ic a i
d c l
a i m
s fi
le s
fo r
F ol
lo w
-u p
w a s
p e r
fo rm
ed pr
e n a t
a l c
a r e
re c o
rd s
fo r
w om
en a
nd c
hi ld
re n
fo r
41 %
–6 5%
o f
pa ti
e n ts
82 3
of t
he se
w om
en .
e n ro
ll e d
i n
A id
t o
F am
il ie
s w
it h
pr ot
e i nu
ri a .
w it
h D
e p e n
de nt
C hi
ld re
n (A
F D
C )
in t
w o
co m
m un
it ie
s in
C a l
if or
ni a
a n d
tw o
c o m
m un
it ie
s in
M is
so ur
i, 1
98 5.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
263
co nt
in ue
s
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
R ec
or di
ng o
f G
es ta
ti on
al A
ge In
cl ud
es a
c om
po ne
nt o
f pr
en at
al c
ar e
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
G es
ta ti
on al
a ge
w as
C ar
ey e
t al
., co
ns is
te nt
w it
h pr
ev ai
li ng
s ta
nd ar
ds o
f re
co rd
ed a
t 78
% –9
5% o
f 19
91 ca
re .
vi si
ts .
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
A ss
es sm
en t
of F
et al
H ea
rt T
on es
a ft
er 1
8 W
ee ks
o f
G es
ta ti
on In
cl ud
es a
c om
po ne
nt o
f pr
en at
al c
ar e
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F et
al h
ea rt
t on
es w
er e
C ar
ey e
t al
., co
ns is
te nt
w it
h pr
ev ai
li ng
s ta
nd ar
ds o
f as
se ss
ed a
t 81
% –9
3% o
f 19
91 ca
re .
vi si
ts .
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
F ol
lo w
-u p
fo r
L ow
H em
at oc
ri t
L ow
h em
at oc
ri t
in di
ca te
s an
em ia
. S
am e
as a
bo ve
. S
am e
as a
bo ve
. F
ol lo
w -u
p w
as p
er fo
rm ed
C ar
ey e
t al
., fo
r 32
% –5
1% o
f pa
ti en
ts 19
91 w
it h
lo w
h em
at oc
ri t.
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
F ol
lo w
-u p
fo r
H ig
h B
lo od
P re
ss ur
e In
cl ud
es a
c om
po ne
nt o
f pr
en at
al c
ar e
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
F ol
lo w
-u p
w as
p er
fo rm
ed C
ar ey
e t
al .,
co ns
is te
nt w
it h
pr ev
ai li
ng s
ta nd
ar ds
o f
fo r
31 %
–5 3%
o f
pa ti
en ts
19 91
ca re
. w
it h
hi gh
b lo
od p
re ss
ur e.
P re
na ta
l C
ar e :
P hy
si c a
l E
x a m
in at
io n
In c l
ud e s
v a r
io us
c om
po ne
nt s
of p
re na
ta l
26 7
w om
en r
e c e i
vi ng
M ed
ic a l
r e c
or ds
f ro
m s
e v e n
99 %
h ad
b lo
od p
re ss
ur e
K li
nk m
an c a
re c
on si
st e n
t w
it h
pr e v
a i li
ng s
ta nd
a r ds
ro ut
in e ,
l ow
-r is
k pr
e n a t
a l pr
iv a t
e a n
d ho
sp it
a l -b
a s e d
a s se
ss e d
a t
e a c h
v is
it .
93 %
e t a l
., 19
97 of
c a r
e . c a
re w
e r e
ra nd
om ly
pr e n
a t a l
c a r
e si
te s
in ha
d fu
nd a l
h e i
gh t
a s se
ss e d
se le
c t e d
, w
it h
st ra
ti fi
c a ti
on W
a s ht
e n a w
C ou
nt y,
a t e
a c h
vi si
t a f
te r
20 w
e e ks
by i
ns ur
a n c e
t yp
e M
ic hi
ga n,
f or
w om
en ge
st a t
io n.
(M ed
ic a i
d, h
e a lt
h re
c e iv
in g
c a re
b e t
w e e
n m
a i nt
e n a n
c e o
rg a n
iz a t
io n,
Ja nu
a r y
1, 1
99 1,
a nd
fe e –
fo r-
se rv
ic e )
. D
e c em
be r
31 ,
19 92
.
Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century
Copyright National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
264 T
A B
L E
A -1
C on
ti nu
ed
H ea
lt h
C ar
e S
er vi
ce a
S am
pl e
D es
cr ip
ti on
D at
a S
ou rc
e Q
ua li
ty o
f C
ar e
R ef
er en
ce b
P re
na ta
l C
ar e:
L ab
or at
or y
Sc re
en in
g T
es ts
In cl
ud es
v ar
io us
c om
po ne
nt s
of p
re na
ta l
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
S am
e as
a bo
ve .
P at
ie nt
s re
ce iv
ed a
n K
li nk
m an
ca re
c on
si st
en t
w it
h pr
ev ai
li ng
s ta
nd ar
ds av
er ag
e of
8 1%
–8 3%
et al
., 19
97 of
c ar
e. (d
ep en
di ng
o n
in su
ra nc
e ty
pe )
of r
ec om
m en
de d
la bo
ra to
ry s
cr ee
ni ng
t es
ts .
D el
iv er
y: N
eo na
ta l
G ro
up B
S tr
ep to
co cc
al (
G B
S) D
is ea
se T
he A
m er
ic an
C ol
le ge
o f
O bs
te tr
ic ia
ns a
nd 81
w om
en w
it h
R O
M ≥
1 8
M ed
ic al
r ec
or ds
f ro
m t
w o
88 %
r ec
ei ve
d an
a nt
ib io
ti c
L ie
u et
a l.
, G
yn ec
ol og
is ts
r ec
om m
en ds
i nt
ra pa
rt um
ho ur
s fr
om a
m on
g al
l H
M O
h os
pi ta
ls (
in w
hi ch
ef fe
ct iv
e ag
ai ns
t G
B S
, 37
% 19
98 an
ti bi
ot ic
s fo
r w
om en
w