Bringing medicine, patients, and community-based services together 1.

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Bringing medicine, patients, and community-based services together 1

Transcript of Bringing medicine, patients, and community-based services together 1.

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Bringing medicine, patients, and community-based services together

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Partners in Care FoundationSandy Atkins, VP, Institute for Change

HSAG University of Best PracticesNovember 21, 2014

High Tech in Support of High Touch Care at Home

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Partners in Care FoundationWho We Are

• Partners in Care serves as a catalyst for shaping a new vision of healthcare by partnering with organizations, families and community leaders in the work of changing healthcare systems, changing communities and changing lives—focusing on home and community care

• We evolved from the VNA of Los Angeles to be a nimble force for change.

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The Problem

Medication Errors are:Serious: Over 700,000 people go to ED each year for

adverse drug eventsCostly: Drug-related morbidity/mortality $170

billion – in Y2K dollars!ER, hospital/readmissions, SNF etc.

Common: Up to 48% of community-dwelling elders have medication-related problems

Preventable: At least 25% of all harmful adverse drug events are preventable

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Home visits uncover many “secrets” that providers may not know

• OTCs – Over-the-counter medications

• Prescriptions from other other providers

• Adverse effects such as falls, dizziness, confusion

• Adherence issues

• Out of system meds: Drugs from other countries,

borrowed, Wal-Mart $4

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HomeMedsSM Improves Med Safety

• Home visit by social worker, CHW, etc.– Collect comprehensive medication information– Assess for possible adverse effects & discrepancies– Screen through software to find potential problems

• Pharmacists review & resolve problems, educate• Original Model: Find a home visit—add HomeMeds • Emerging Models

– Targeted home visits for high-risk patients– Add to care transitions, CDSMP, caregiver support, etc.– Part of comprehensive fall prevention initiative

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HomeMeds: What it Is & How it Works

“Any symptom in an elderly patient should be considered a drug side effect until proved otherwise.” (Gurwitz et al. 1995)

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Core Components

Collect comprehensive medication listNote how each drug is being takenRecord BP/pulse, falls, uncharacteristic confusion,

symptoms, and indicators of adverse effectsUse evidence-based protocols to screen for

risks Computerized risk assessment and alert

processConsultant pharmacist addresses problems

with prescribers, seniors, families & staff.

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Risk-Screening Protocols

HomeMeds is a TARGETED intervention addressing a limited group of medication related problems identified by national expert consensus panel ¹• Targets problems that can be identified and resolved in the home.• Chosen to produce positive response by prescribers• Minimize “alert overload”: based on signs/symptoms.

Limited to only these medication-related problems

1. Unnecessary therapeutic duplication2. Use of psychotropic drugs in patients with a reported recent fall

and/or confusion3. Use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) in

patients at risk of peptic ulcer/gastrointestinal bleeding4. Cardiovascular medication problems -High BP, low pulse,

orthostasis and low systolic BP

¹A model for improving medication use in home health care patients . Brown, N. J., Griffin, M. R., Ray, W. A., Meredith, S., Beers, M. H., Marren, J., Robles, M., Stergachis, A., Wood, A. J., & Avorn, J. (1998). Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association, 38 (6), 696-702.

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The first and most important step…

• Treasure hunt – find “hidden” meds• Transcribe accurate information from the bottle/box• Adherence Inquiry – For each medication ask client:

– What they take it for– How and when they take it, – How much they take– What happens when they take it (Is it effective? Side effects?

• Assess for common side effects– Falls– Confusion– Dizziness, shakiness, feeling light headed– BP/pulse

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Roles of the Pharmacist

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• Screen alerts to confirm problems

• Communicate with prescribers

• Consult with care manager • Identify problems beyond

protocols• Assist with complex cases

– simplify med regimen• Educate staff

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Typical Problems

In Community-Dwelling Elders:• Patient w/ mild cognitive impairment taking all

medications – including sleeper & 3 doses of BP meds – in a.m.

• Patient with dizziness taking 2 beta blockers • Patient >80 taking 3 medications that increased risk

of GI Bleed• Patient who fell w/ 5 meds that increased risk of falls • Patient taking 4 narcotic pain killers• Avg. 11 meds – many with 28+!

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HomeMeds-Plus

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HomeMeds-Plus: What is it?Home Evaluation and Needs Assessment• 2 hour home visit

– HomeMeds comprehensive medication risk assessment– Home Safety and Fall Risk evaluation– Functional and Psychosocial assessment

• PHQ 2/9• Mini mental• ADL/IADL

– Advance Directive education and assistance

• Pharmacist follow-through on medication problems• Develop community service plan with member• Coordination of community resources• Collaboration with plan/medical group case managers

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HomeMeds-Plus: Who Benefits?Who is it for?• Adults with 2+ chronic conditions and other risks:

– Recent history of ED visits or unplanned hospitalizations &/or– 5-9 prescribed meds &/or– Some functional impairment &/or– Mild to moderate cognitive impairment &/or– Possible caregiver needs or social challenges &/or– Live Alone &/or– Self-management issues (significantly off goal for chronic

diseases)

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Value Proposition 1 - ROI

• Compared to patients who met referral criteria but did not receive the intervention– 12.8% lower rate of ED use– 22% lower readmission rate (9.1% readmitted vs. 11.6%

readmitted)– 50% ROI

• Compared to overall readmissions for the medical group at the same hospital– 40% lower readmission rate– $224,000 cost avoidance on $88,000 investment

• 90% Uptake on qualified referrals

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Value Proposition 2 - Quality

• Addresses HEDIS measures– Fall risk management– Medication reconciliation post-discharge

• Required by NCQA for Health Plans

– Potentially harmful drug-disease interactions

– Blood pressure control– Antidepressant medication management– Health Plan all-cause readmissions

"No risk factor for falls is as

potentially preventable or reversible as

medication use. (Leipzig, 1999)

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Star Ratings – Medicare Advantage

• Yearly review of all medications/supplements

– % 65+ who fell or had problems with balance or walking in past 12 mo. who received fall risk intervention

• Controlling blood pressure – Medication adherence for hypertension: Taking meds as directed

• Plan members 65+ on high-risk drugs, when there may be safer drug choices

• Reducing risk of falling

• Readmission to a hospital within 30 days of discharge

• Yearly pain screening or pain management planBonuses for 4 & 5 Star Plans – growing!!

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Costly Mistakes

Inpatient: Fx Hip & Thigh Bone$53,247 (7 days)

Shoulder, Wrist, Hand (JPS)$31,148 (2 days)

Total Cost = $70,434

Rehabilitation: (HealthSouth)$17,187 (10 days)

Fall Prevention = Savings

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HomeMeds: Software, Startup

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Web-based: Use with PC or Tablet

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HomeMeds Software: Dashboard

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HomeMeds Software: Risk Assessment

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HomeMeds Software: Medications

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Sample Medications List

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Conclusion

HomeMeds is a proven tool for improved medication safety, health and well-being for older adults.

It is an affordable, evidence-based program that is a perfect bridge for partnerships between community agencies and healthcare.

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Contact Information

• Sandy Atkins, VP: [email protected]• Phone: 818.837.3775• Partners in Care Website: www.picf.org