Physicians Work Together to Drive Down Inappropriate Utilization

November 14, 2018

William "Tom" Thompson, a family medicine physician in southwestern Indiana, doesn't want his patients to visit the emergency department for conditions that he could easily treat in his practice—say, a urinary tract infection, acute stomach pain or even complications of congestive heart failure.

“I can see a patient five days in a row and it would be cheaper than one day in an emergency room,” Thompson says.

Yet until last year, Thompson—like many primary care providers—had few resources to track his patients’ utilization of services outside of his office, such as inappropriate ED visits. Nor did he have the time or tools to address unnecessary high cost utilization with his patients.

Dr. William "Tom" ThompsonToday, as a participating physician in Deaconess Care Integration, a Next Generation Accountable Care Organization (ACO) covering 36,000 lives, Thompson and hundreds of other providers can now leverage patient information and improvement resources offered by the ACO. Owned by Deaconess Health System of Evansville, Ind., an Evolent Health partner, the ACO’s physician leadership team worked with their network physicians to implement tactics that dramatically reduced inappropriate ED visits. Leveraging the same physician-led model, the ACO is engaging their physicians in change across a broad range of improvement areas.

The Challenge

Physician engagement is difficult in any setting. At Deaconess, strategies and solutions for engagement must be adaptable across a wide range of settings, from large clinics in downtown Evansville to small rural practices. The ACO’s 250 primary care physicians are spread across three states—Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois—and six health systems and use a variety of electronic medical record systems.

Deaconess turned its gaze towards ED utilization because "the trend was very high and moving in the wrong direction compared to other ACOs and to other health systems in our region," says Dr. Fred Wallisch, the ACO's medical director.

The problem came down to two issues: patient education and access. Patients often didn't know which ailments called for primary care, urgent care or the ED. In addition, if they sought an appointment with their family physician, a slot might not be available soon enough.

The Solution

Deaconess' physician-centered approach sought to combine providers' wisdom with the infrastructure—tools, incentives and analytics—needed to translate that knowledge into everyday practice.

Let Physicians Drive the Change, Then Let Others Help Shoulder the Work

To get physician buy-in, the ACO needed primary care providers to champion the change, but not to get bogged down in the details of implementation. It partnered with its Physician Advisory Council to identify seven changes to practice operations for improving ED utilization. Some were simple and straightforward, such as revising the after-hours voice mail greeting to help patients determine the best care setting. Others required more substantial change, such as identifying ways to accommodate same-day appointments, or adding appointment slots in the early morning, evening or weekend. The changes required the coordination of entire physician practices, particularly practice managers.

"One of the big drivers was not putting all of the burden on the physicians," Wallisch says. "Alternate office hours and same-day appointments do involve physician scheduling, but they also involve the whole office."

The primary care practices could decide how many of the seven interventions they wanted to adopt.

Provide Tools and Incentives for Implementation

For each of the seven changes, Evolent created a toolkit to guide practices through the steps of implementing the change. The toolkits are highly detailed—for instance, providing a suggested script for the after-hours voice mail message. But they're flexible enough for practices to adapt them to their own settings and circumstances.

Toolkits in hand, a population health manager would visit the practices to discuss the initiative, educate staff and help work through barriers.

"Our approach has been to try to understand what is going on in that office to begin with," Wallisch says. "What are the workflows? What are the pain points? We spend a lot of time trying to get to know the offices. Every office is different."

When Evolent began rolling information out to practices in April 2017, some physicians were leery of the changes and feared major burdens if they adopted them to their operations, says Amy Kennedy, population health manager.

"But as they made changes physicians found it wasn’t a burden," she says. "Changing the schedule or adding additional hours contributed to better organization of care and better continuity of care."

Key to many of the changes was training and empowering staff—for instance, to know which cases could be seen in the primary care practice and which should be referred to the ED or urgent care. The ACO helped the practices create detailed protocols to guide staff members to triage patients based on the preferences of their practice's physicians. "They didn't have to say, I think this is what the provider wants," Kennedy says. "It was laid out in black and white."

Use Actionable Data and Appeal to Professionalism

Throughout the project—and continuing to this day—physicians get performance reports that include data about their patients’ utilization of health care services, including the ED. It's data that Thompson had never seen before.  

"At our quarterly meetings they're able to provide me with a detailed list of how sick our patients are, how many times they've been in the emergency room, how much money I'm spending in this practice," he says. Equipped with this data for the first time, he has been able to have more discussions with patients about topics such as the best times to use the emergency department.

The Results

Participation in the project far exceeded the ACO's goals. About 85 percent of the ACO's primary care providers joined the program. And the majority of those who participated adopted five or more changes. "We were hoping for 200 to 300 different changes within the offices," Wallisch says. "We ended up with 650."

As adoption went up, ED utilization went down, by 13 percent among ACO members and 30 percent in the commercial patient population.

"Every quarter we have seen a reduction in utilization of the emergency department by our ACO patients," Wallisch says.

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