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Development of an Emergency Department Case Management Case-Finding Tool.
Gallagher, David; Bentley, Barbara; Barry, Ashley; Fraccola, Amy; Santos, Rosimeire; Glenn, Adam; Howard, James; Kamath, Aparna; Flanagan, Katie.
Afiliação
  • Gallagher D; David Gallagher, MD, SFHM, is the Chief Medical Officer for Duke University Hospital and previously was Chief of Hospital Medicine programs. He is Associate Professor of Medicine at Duke University and has published in a variety of hospital-based quality improvement areas. He also works clinically a
  • Bentley B; Barbara Bentley, MBA, MSN, RN, CCM, is the Assistant Director of Case Management at Duke University Hospital. She has numerous roles within case management including leadership over Duke Hospital Emergency Department Case Management. She has 20+ years of experience in case management in a variety of
  • Barry A; Ashley Barry, MSN, MMCi, RN, is Application Analyst at Duke University Health Technology Solutions. She is a registered nurse with advanced training in medical informatics. She has much experience in clinical project management, quality improvement, and patient safety.
  • Fraccola A; Amy Fraccola, MSN, RN, ACM, is the Director of Case Management at Duke Raleigh Hospital. She has many years of case management leadership experience and before joining Duke she worked at Penn Highlands Healthcare.
  • Santos R; Rosimeire Santos, MS, is Data Analytics Engineer with Duke Health and has significant experience in data analysis involving Epic and Cerner Information Systems as well as project management experience at multiple academic medical centers.
  • Glenn A; Adam Glenn, BSIE, LSSBB, is an Improvement Engineer with Duke University Health System. Adam has expertise in project management, quality improvement, LEAN and Six Sigma methodologies, and change management. He serves as a leader for strategic health system priorities focused on improving quality of
  • Howard J; James Howard, MD, is the Duke Hospital Medicine Nocturnist Associate Medical Director and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Duke School of Medicine. He works clinically as a hospitalist. He has expertise in clinical quality and safety, patient experience, and physician leadership.
  • Kamath A; Aparna Kamath, MD, is Duke Raleigh Hospital's Medical Director for Quality and works extensively in quality initiatives including mortality, length of stay, and readmissions reduction projects. She is Associate Professor of Medicine at Duke University and has a master's degree in Clinical Investigat
  • Flanagan K; Katie Flanagan, MSW, LCSW, ACM-SW, is the Assistant Vice President for Care Coordination for Duke University Health System. She has significant training and experience in case management and leadership. She is the current President of the North Carolina Chapter of the American Case Management Associ
Prof Case Manag ; 29(3): 102-110, 2024.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37982739
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE OF STUDY Identifying emergency department (ED) patients who are at high risk for return visits is an important goal for case management to improve patient care. This quality improvement study describes the development and evaluation of the Emergency Department Case Management Priority Score (EDCMPS), an electronic medical record (EMR)-based "case-finding" system, and its ability to identify these high-risk patients. In addition, the authors present data about its acceptability among emergency department case managers (ED CMs). PRIMARY PRACTICE SETTINGS Emergency departments with case management availability and staffing. METHODOLOGY AND SAMPLE A retrospective analysis at Duke University Hospital ED compared patient data pre- and postimplementation of the EDCMPS. The tool was developed using the LEAN and Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) quality improvement methodologies, with ED CM participation. ED return and hospitalization rates within 7 and 30 days between both methods were compared, and a survey evaluated CM satisfaction with the EDCMPS.

RESULTS:

The 2-month preintervention period (July 1, 2022, to August 31, 2022) included 8,677 patients discharged from the ED, with 897 patients (10.3%) identified as at high risk for return based on the previous manual methodology. In the 3-month postintervention period (September 1, 2022, to November 30, 2022), there were 13,566 patients discharged, with 692 patients (5.1%) identified as at high risk for return using the EDCMPS. The EDCMPS outperformed the manual method, yielding a significantly higher odds ratio (OR) for 7- and 30-day ED return or hospitalization (e.g., 30-day any return OR = 4.21 vs. 1.69). The survey showed broad ED CM agreement on the tool's superior performance, especially in organizing outpatient resources and referring to support programs. However, challenges in securing primary care follow-up, housing, and health insurance applications were identified. The tool's collaborative development approach ensured its fit to ED CM needs, contributing to its success. IMPLICATIONS FOR CASE MANAGEMENT PRACTICE The EDCMPS showcases promise in enhancing ED CM efficiency, with strong frontline staff endorsement. It pinpoints areas needing focus for patient support and has the potential to reduce ED revisits and therefore health care utilization. Its methodology offers insights for similar future implementations in health care institutions.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Readmissão do Paciente / Administração de Caso Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Prof Case Manag Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Readmissão do Paciente / Administração de Caso Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: Prof Case Manag Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article