Imagine a
quality improvement meeting at General Motors and the participants never even
mention the cars? How about a Chef and her Sous Chef trying to improve the
quality of the restaurant’s food, but they never talk about what the cooks are
making? Absurd, right? Yet way too often, when we talk about improving quality
and outcomes in Home Health, we avoid talking about the most important factor –
the specific methods and care the clinicians actually provide in the visits.
Home Health
leaders and Quality Assurance groups usually rely on a standardized set of steps
- data is analyzed, charts are reviewed and assignments are handed out.
Every organization has its own take on the process, but most of the steps are
similar. Improvement plans – usually highly focused on documentation improvements
and reports - are developed, training is conducted and we agree to check in at
a later date. The closest we get to practice is usually shadow visits, but they
usually focus on generalized principles (clean bag techniques, customer
service, and maybe wound care). Don’t get me wrong, these tried and true steps
are the distilled wisdom of years of practice and work. They work. Recent
research has validated the importance structured and standardized care (for
example, Atul Gawande’s Checklist Manifesto is a great read on this topic). But
in home health quality assurance, they are rarely transformative, rarely
challenge our practices and often allow us to avoid the elephant in the room.
Case
conference is the closest most of us get to actually critically examining the
actual care provided to the client. But time restraints, professional courtesy
and event focused discussions (e.g. discharge planning, recert decisions, etc.)
keep us from doing a deep dive into the place where the rubber really meets the
road: the specific treatments, approaches, techniques and interactions between
our clinicians and our clients.
Good documentation
is absolutely critical. Process measures actually do measure things that make a
difference to our clients’ recovery. But how our clinicians spend those
precious few minutes we’re given in each visit has to be inspired, thoughtful, based
on best practice and critically analyzed if we’re truly going achieve
transformative care. And even the most skilled documenter can’t hide pedestrian
or ineffective sessions.
So why are
we so hesitant to jump right in the area we instinctively know is the most
critical factor? A deeper study of current research and some focused questions
for study are needed. But I’d like to share a few observations and theories:
· “Our clinicians are the best and they know what they’re doing.” Maybe they are the best, and I hope
your hiring and mentoring programs weed out at least the sub-standard. But the
best of the best in any field not only constantly evaluate their own performance
down to the micro level, but they also have coaches and mentors helping them
break down their work, consider alternatives, critically think and suggest new
ideas and approaches. It’s not only Pollyannaish to expect our clinicians to do
this completely on their own, but it’s a huge burden to place on their already
over-worked shoulders. They need us for more than documentation training. And ultimately,
and unfortunately, you might have to make changes. There’s simply no room in home health anymore for
the thin-skinned or the complacent. You might have some people on your team
that just aren’t up to the challenges of the current environment.
· " Medicare (or insert another all-powerful entity like “corporate” or “insurance”)
makes us do so much we don’t have time for quality.” There’s no doubt that the requirements
continue to increase, and the time allotted stays the same or decreases. These
are truths, but they’re not insurmountable. These are the conditions of the
playing field for all, not excuses for mediocrity. The best of the best overcome these
obstacles. We need to help our clinicians figure this out. They need specific,
practical training on the skills needed in his environment: point of service
documentation, assessment tools, time management, inter-personal skills, etc.).
They need to be skilled in these “soft skills” to free them to treat
effectively. It’s also important to
remind them that these required measures often are effective in guiding care,
not just administrative irritants. For example, full vital sign checks help ensure we
don’t miss subtle changes in condition, and unusual findings should focus our
approach – potentially saving time. Mandatory triggers to notify a physician or
collaborate with others on the team certainly require extra time. But they also
serve as a critical time out to reassess at a potentially critical time in the
clients’ recovery – or lack thereof. It costs time today, but makes the rest of
the episode run more efficiently.
· Clinicians as journalists. Nothing frustrates me more than an assessment that is
actually just a summary of what the client or caregivers told us. Like a news
report. Heck, if that’s all we had to do, we could have an administrative assistant
call the client or send them a questionnaire. We are billing our payors for
actual skilled, expert observations and assessments of ADL performance and medical condition
observation and analysis. You didn’t do a head to toe assessment if you can’t
tell me the color of your client’s underwear. You have no business turning in
an assessment of toileting and bathing if you didn’t go in the bathroom. Unfortunately,
and unbelievably, these practices are all too common. If you’re in a leadership
position, you have to know these short-cuts are common in the field and you’d
better be darned sure it’s not happening under your watch. I don’t care how
many stars your agency has, if this happens in your agency your clients and
payor sources are getting ripped off.
· “I’m a nurse (or OT, or non-clinical, or whatever). I can’t question the
skills of an OT (or PT, or nurse or whatever).” This common attitude requires a
delicate response. How’s this: Male bovine feces! If you’re in a leadership position,
you are expected to study up on best practices of all the elements of the services
you provide in any industry. Health care is no different. Luckily there is a plethora
of resources for you. The ANA, AOTA, APTA and ASHA are the best places to
start. They all have websites that are treasure troves, but you can also pick
up the phone and call them. You should have a posse of expert collaborators
from all the disciplines you can turn to for advice. We have to read the
professional journals. Call a professor at your local University that
credentials the disciplines you oversee. Now when it comes time for counseling
and coaching the clinicians to improve what they are doing in the visits you
must use tact, excellent coaching skills and respect. Sometimes it helps to deliver
the message with someone from the same discipline, but you must feel comfortable
having these conversations solo as well. Make sure you’re role modeling best
practice in leadership, strategic planning, agency improvement and other areas
where your job requires you to be an expert.
· Can’t
see the trees though the forest. Often while we’re following our tried and
true processes, and making sure we do all the things we’re supposed to do we
become overly focused on our known and presumed solutions and we kill creativity
and innovation. As healthcare quality and innovation expert Roy Rosin reminds
us, “Fall in love with the problem, not the solution.” Don’t skip the tried and
true, but don’t rely on it exclusively either. Meditate on the problem – break it
down, look at it from different angles and brainstorm it before you pull out
your checklists.
What have you seen? Please contact me or leave a comment about your thoughts and obeservations.
What have you seen? Please contact me or leave a comment about your thoughts and obeservations.
I’m lucky
enough – and old enough - to have worked in leadership positions in many organizations from coast to coast. Here’s an almost universal truth I’ve
discovered. You can’t truly improve quality unless you look at your episodes
that demonstrate outcomes improvement, stabilization and decline, then drill
down to the actual care provided. The majority of the time – not always, but
usually – we record a stabilization or a decline, the area was either not fully
assessed, not treated, treated through simulations or handouts, treated obliquely or haphazardly or the approach was
never changed during the episode despite lack of progress. The physician is
rarely brought in to discuss lack of progress in these poor outcome cases. I
realize this is heresy in some circles – but I think this accounts for more poor
outcomes than misunderstanding of OASIS scoring and intent or documentation.
Therapeutic
exercises are valuable support to recovery, but to improve bed transferring,
the clinicians have to spend a lot of time working with the clients on
bed transferring – in bed! Skilled wound care is an art and a science –
but what happens beyond the dressing is just as important. Therapy-only cases
need just as much focus on the medical, medication and overall health issues as
the most medically unstable episodes heavy on nursing visits. I promise you –
look at what the clinicians are doing with their clients and the answers will
unfold like a revelation.
Nothing in Home Health is more important than what happens in the home. We must look there for the answers.
Leadership requires courage. We must rise to this challenge.
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