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Advanced Access & Office Efficiency Learning Session 2

Advanced Access & Office Efficiency Learning Session 2. Draft August 16, 2010. Welcome back!. Agenda Advanced access key concepts Share progress & measures from action period #1 Revelations in some practices Examine delays within the practice

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Advanced Access & Office Efficiency Learning Session 2

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  1. Advanced Access & Office EfficiencyLearning Session 2 Draft August 16, 2010

  2. Welcome back! • Agenda • Advanced access key concepts • Share progress & measures from action period #1 • Revelations in some practices • Examine delays within the practice • Introduce and discuss ways to recapture lost capacity within your practice

  3. Collaborative Aim • The care of patients will be redesigned to improve access, capacity and efficiency. • How will the aim be accomplished? Advanced Access, and Office Efficiency change packages will be used to decrease the wait time of patients for, and at, appointments in Primary Care • How will we know this has been accomplished? Change will be evidenced by improved 3rd next available appointment, and improved appointment cycle time.

  4. Review of Learning Session 1 • Advanced access is “doing today’s work today” • Understand, measure and balance your supply and demand • Reduce your scheduling complexity • Work down your backlog • Develop contingency plans

  5. Action period report-out • Tests of change • Successes • Challenges • Measurement Supply

  6. Introduction to Office Efficiency “All systems are perfectly designed to get the results they get” - W. Edwards Deming “I had to think about this for awhile before I jumped in. I realized everything in medicine has changed steadily. We are constantly looking for better ways to diagnose and treat patients. But, office flow has stayed the same for 50 year. It is about time we pay attention to it.” - Dr. Patrick Macken, Nephrologist

  7. Aim • To reduce delays at an appointment

  8. Benefits of Improved Office Efficiency • Appointments start and end on time • Work days start and end on time • Office visit is optimized; patient-provider time protected • Rework and duplication of work is decreased, thereby increasing capacity • Experience of patient, staff and provider is improved • Costs/visit are decreased • Income is increased

  9. Measure of Office Efficiency • Cycle Time • From time of “check-in”, until time of “check-out” • Gain insight into possible bottlenecks in practice processes • Assess your practice, from patient’s perspective

  10. Patient flow through the office Patient enters Wait Registration Pre-Red Zone Wait Exam Room Cycle time Wait Provider-Patient Interaction Red Zone Wait Completion of procedures/orders Post-Red Zone Wait Checkout Non-appointment time = 12

  11. Patient flow through the office Patient enters Registration Pre-Red Zone Exam Room Cycle time Provider-Patient Interaction Red Zone Completion of procedures/orders Post-Red Zone Checkout Non-appointment time = 13

  12. Measuring cycle time

  13. Key Concepts of Office Efficiency • Predict and anticipate care needs • Streamline work and standardize where possible • Optimize the care team

  14. 1. Predict and Anticipate Needs Know the work: • Knowing what you do (know your processes) • Knowing how it happens (flow mapping) • Knowing how often it happens (measures)

  15. “Know Your Processes” Activity • Each person completes the form • Discuss results with your team • Identify 1-3 areas for improvement • Identify potential strategies • Debrief as a large group You have 20 minutes for this activity

  16. Break

  17. Process Mapping • What is a “process”? • A series of connected steps or actions with an identifiable start and end point • Leads to a specific outcome • Why map a process? • It illustrates “how things work in our practice” • Includes several perspectives • Starting point for improvement

  18. Process Mapping • Oval - the start and end of the process • Box - the tasks or activities of the process • Diamond - a question is asked; a decision is required • Arrow - the direction or flow of the process

  19. Example Steps: • Patient enters room for appt. (start) • Provider enters room • Provider discusses Pt’s needs • Provider examines Patient • Provider IDs need for urine specimen • Patient given specimen cup • Provider completes paperwork • Follow-up instructions given to Patient • Patient leaves (end)

  20. Patient enters room for appt Patient leaves Provider discusses patient’s needs Provider enters room Provider examines patient Provider IDs need for urine specimen Patient given specimen cup Provider completes paperwork Follow-up instructions given to patient

  21. Process Mapping Activity Please pick one process in your office and map it You have 20 minutes for this activity

  22. Table Discussion • Where are the hand-offs in the process? • Is it clear who does what? • Where are the delays? • Is there duplication or rework? • Are there identifiable areas where a small change could make an improvement?

  23. 2. Optimize the Practice Care Team • Who does what? • Who could do what? • Who should do what?

  24. Activity • Review the measurement tools • Review your schedule • Assess backlog

  25. The Practice team … • Is pro-active instead of reactive • Knows, trusts, supports and values each other • Communicates with each other, does not feel isolated • Is accountable to each other and to the patient • Uses measures for feedback and to guide improvement

  26. Daily Huddles • A brief (5-10 mins) meeting to: • review schedule • deal with issues left over from previous day • anticipate needs for current day

  27. Other Ideas, Strategies and/or Tools • Reason for visit card • Scripts – greeting, booking, reason for visit • Standardization – checklists, policies, exam room stocks • Interruptions log • Patient experience survey • Track start/end times

  28. The Model For Improvement • What are we trying to accomplish? • How do we know change is an improvement? • What changes can we make that will result in an improvement?

  29. Model for Improvement What are we trying to accomplish? How will we know that a change is an improvement? What changes can we make that will result in improvement? Act Plan Study Do

  30. Where do I start? • What are you going to do next Tuesday? • What is your aim? • Determine how you will measure/track improvement

  31. Action Period #2 • Implement small tests of change • Measure and track • RST support • Continue to work toward your access aim

  32. Good Luck!

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