Expansion of an oncology care coordination nurse model to reduce hospitalizations and emergency department utilization

Autor: Georgina T. Rodgers, Michelle Brusio, Ronald Young, Craig Savage, Joseph Hooley, Jacob Lindberg
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Clinical Oncology. 37:82-82
ISSN: 1527-7755
0732-183X
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2019.37.27_suppl.82
Popis: 82 Background: Comprehensive, coordinated care is a key driver of care transformation within the Oncology Care Model. Care coordination provides deliberate, organized, patient centered care initiatives aimed to improve care transitions, patient education, patient engagement and quality of care throughout the care continuum. Methods: Specialty care coordinator nurses were a part of our heath system’s model of care but over the course of our participation in the OCM we have implemented care coordination in our regional locations across 15 additional sites of care. Standardized templates for initial and follow up education were created for oral and parenteral therapies with an emphasis on symptom management education. A patient education tool was developed through a partnership with nursing, pharmacy and physicians across disease groups to outline when a patient should contact their physician or RN care coordinator with symptom issues. Targeted outreach calls and associated documentation templates were created for symptom assessment and adequate follow up. Templates include a pre-chemo orientation call, post treatment follow up phone call within seven days, and post hospital discharge/ED treat and release follow up calls. A team based huddle guideline was developed to provide a means for interdisciplinary communication to assess patients for high risk based upon medical, functional, social, cognitive and behavioral factors that might lead to a hospitalization. Results: Our teams worked closely with EMR specialists and internal data analysts to build appropriate templates and subsequent reports to monitor compliance with documentation, evaluate the number of outreach touch points and effectiveness of interventions on a reduction of hospitalizations and ED utilization. We have noted an a modest decrease in hospitalizations and ED utilization through OCM feedback reports and reconciliation reports. Conclusions: We continue to monitor our monthly hospital admissions and ED utilization across the health system and drill down into the data to determine if there are any opportunities where care coordination outreach and incoming telephone triage could have prevented the admission.
Databáze: OpenAIRE