1 / 28

Verification and Improvement of the Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS)

Verification and Improvement of the Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS) . LCDR Wayne F. Homan Faculty Advisor: Dr. Jamie Pomeranz Preceptor: Dr. Illy Dominitz 11 April 2014. Financial Disclosure.

qamar
Download Presentation

Verification and Improvement of the Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Verification and Improvement of the Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS) LCDR Wayne F. Homan Faculty Advisor: Dr. Jamie Pomeranz Preceptor: Dr. IllyDominitz 11 April2014

  2. Financial Disclosure • Wayne Homan has no affiliation or financial interest/relationships with any corporate organizations that may be mentioned in this presentation

  3. Commercial Support Acknowledgment/Disclosure • Commercial support was not used for this presentation Wayne Homan has acknowledged and verbally disclosed to the participants that commercial support was not used for this presentation • Unlabeled/investigational products and/or services will not be mentioned in this presentation

  4. Caveats • I speak in acronyms quite a bit. If I do this too much please remember to ask me in the Q&A • Any opinions I might express are mine alone and do not necessarily represent those of the United States Government, Department of Defense, or the Department of the Navy

  5. Competencies • CPHC=Core Public Health Competency • PHPC=Public Health Practice Competency • CPHC 1: Monitoring health status to identify and solve community health problems • CPHC 5: Developing policies and plans that support individual and community health efforts • CPHC 6: Using laws and regulations that protect health and ensure safety • PHPC 5: Demonstrate the principles of problem solving and crisis management • PHPC 11: Identify, retrieve, summarize, manage and communicate public health information • PHPC 13: Monitor and evaluate programs for their effectiveness and quality

  6. Objectives • Background • Methods • Results • Discussion • Implications

  7. Background-Organization • Marine Infantry Division Organization • Battalion (~1000) • Regiment (~5 Bns) • Division (~22000) • Equivalent • Surgery Dept • Directorate of Surgical Services • Hospital

  8. Background-Nomenclature • Marine Division/Battalion Organization • G1/S1 Administration • G2/S2 Intelligence • G3/S3 Operations • G4/S4 Logistics • G5 Strategy and Plans • G6/S6 Communications

  9. Background-Nomenclature • Marine Division/Battalion Organization • G1/S1 Administration • G2/S2 Intelligence • G3/S3 Operations • G4/S4 Logistics • G5 Strategy and Plans • G6/S6 Communications

  10. Background-Military Public Health • Military members from the five services have basic public health requirements * • There are a battery of immunizations, training, and health parameters that are common to all members -Examples: tetanus, diphtheria, hearing conservation, tuberculosis status * CPHC 6: Using laws and regulations that protect health and ensure safety

  11. Background-Marine Public Health • Some occupations have unique public health requirements * • Examples: ionizing radiation workers, food handlers, special warfare * CPHC 6: Using laws and regulations that protect health and ensure safety

  12. Background-Marine Public Health • Finally, some members have unique public health requirements based on their location/deployments * • Each area of deployment usually has one or more special requirements • Examples: deployers to CENTCOM-anthrax, deployers to PACOM-JEV * CPHC 6: Using laws and regulations that protect health and ensure safety

  13. Background-Marine Public Health • Tracking all of these requirements is arduous and manpower intensive • In the early 2000’s the military contracted to create a database system that would track the medical status of everyone automatically • The electronic system developed and rolled out in 2006 was the Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS) * * CPHC 1: Monitoring health status to identify and solve community health problems

  14. Background-Questions Arise • Is MRRS actually giving us a clear picture on the readiness of the Division? • Much anecdotal information that MRRS could not be trusted • This led to Battalions reworking the data by hand each week • Very manpower intensive • If true, what can be done to fix the problem? • Bottom line: are the numbers we tell the General every week correct or not?

  15. Description of Methods • A Lean Six Sigma (LSS) project was initiated by the Division Surgeon under the direction of Wayne Homan * • Most likely to last for years with multiple sub-projects • Eight core participants (four officers, three enlisted, one civilian) • Tasked with validating and improving MRRS to more accurately provide information to the commanders ** • Progress reported biweekly to MGen Nicholson *** * PHPC 13: Monitor and evaluate programs for their effectiveness and quality ** PHPC 5: Demonstrate the principles of problem solving and crisis management *** PHPC 11: Identify, retrieve, summarize, manage and communicate public health information

  16. Description of Methods • Step #1 Stake holder determination Individual Battalion Surgeons (22) Individual Battalion Commanders (22) Division Surgeon Division Commander Marine Corps?

  17. Description of Methods • Step #2 Apply LSS methodology (DMAIC) • Define • Measure • Analyze • Improve • Control

  18. Description of Methods-Define • Define

  19. Description of Methods-Define • Define

  20. Description of Methods-Define • Medical Readiness and Reporting System (MRRS) • Definitive database for medical readiness • Reports from G4/S4; medical unit where Marine is physically located is usually responsible for maintaining • Marine Corps Total Force System (MCTFS) • Definitive database for personnel assignment • Reports from G1/S1; base is responsible for maintaining • Marine Online (MOL) • Definitive database for daily accountability • Reports obtained from Bn 1stSgts; G1/S1 responsible for maintaining

  21. Description of Methods-Measure • Measure • The most important MRRS input (initially): MCTFS • Over several successive weeks data was collected from MRRS, MCTFs, and MOL • Each database was then compare to the others for errors using Access • Personnel were matched by first name, last name, and unit

  22. Description of Methods-Measure/Analyze • Measure • MCTFS vs. MRRS consistently showed an error rate of ~20% • After several weeks the validity of MCTFS started to look suspicious • Therefore names in MCTFS and MOL were added together then compared to MRRS • This should provide us with the best possible readiness number • Each database is further complicated by Marines/Sailors that are deployed, on temporary assignment, deceased, in the brig, etc.

  23. Results-Analyze

  24. Results-Analyze

  25. Discussion • As part of the initial meetings an error rate of 95% was deemed acceptable • Analysis shows that MRRS has a significant error rate • The error rate is at best ~17% and is most likely ~20% • One additional finding as we progressed was that the Corpsmen maintaining the MRRS database need to be trained. No two Corpsmen manipulate the database in the same way -> leads to errors * * CPHC 5: Developing policies and plans that support individual and community health efforts

  26. Implication • MRRS shows significant error rates when compared to actual Marines/Sailors in the units • MRRS is one of the data points used by commanders to determine which units respond to military emergencies • Could lead a commander to deploy the wrong unit • Wastes money by making Marines/Sailors receive unnecessary care • Further study has been initiated to determine which database is introducing the most error (microanalysis) • Database to be fixed first

  27. Implication • Significant errors may exist in other databases that are considered “definitive” by the Marine Corps • Possible Headquarters Marine Corps interest • Big bucks? • Are there lessons to be learned as the United States struggles to shift to a preventive healthcare model?

  28. Questions ?

More Related