oncology

Poster: Smart Scheduling Reduces Medication Costs

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/30/2014 - 15:30
Tool Type
Format
Topics
bb2014_same-day_scheduling_reduces_medication_costs

This poster, which appears in the November/December 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights an Oncology Pharmacy team that reduced waste by scheduling patients who use the same intravenous medications on the same days.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Same-day scheduling reduces medication costs

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Share this story of a UBT that cut waste by scheduling same-medication patients on the same days with your team to spark waste-reduction discussions and suggestions.

 

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Northern California
bulletin board packet
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Poster: Simple Conversation Improves Follow-up Care

Submitted by Beverly White on Thu, 10/30/2014 - 15:20
Tool Type
Format
bb2014_simple_converstion_improves_follow-up_care

This poster, which appears in the November/December 2014 Bulletin Board Packet, highlights unit assistants who worked to reduce costly and stressful patient readmissions, by increasing the percentage of follow-up appointments within seven days of discharge.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Poster: Simple Conversation Improves Follow-up Care

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5” x 11”

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
This poster highlights unit assistants who worked to reduce costly and stressful patient readmissions by increasing the percentage of follow-up appointments within seven days of discharge. Post on bulletin boards, in break rooms and other staff areas.

 

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Northern California
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Learning by Listening: Patient Advisory Councils

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Fri, 10/03/2014 - 18:27
Region
Topics
Hank
Request Number
hank41_NW_latino advisory council_jg_tf
Long Teaser

How patient advisory councils are helping improve service and quality by giving a members a forum for sharing their experiences and contributing their ideas. From the Fall 2014 Hank.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Notes (as needed)
Tyra/Laureen- we don't have a teaser on this. Hi Jennifer, I wrote a teaser for this on Oct. 3. Thanks, Laureen
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
A patient advisory council in Southern California meets to discuss service and quality issues.
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Story content (editors)
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Learning by Listening: Patient Advisory Councils
Story body part 1

Kaiser Permanente is inviting patients and families into the boardroom to talk turkey. There’s no sugar-coating a bad experience or making excuses for less-than-stellar service. Listening to our patients has become a core value, and patient advisory councils are one of the ways KP is bringing the patient into the conversation to improve care.

“There are over 35 advisory councils and over 400 patient advisors throughout the organization,” says Hannah King, the director of service quality for unit-based teams.

In the Northwest, as in other regions, the work being done by the councils is affecting outcomes. Within six months of the formation of the Oncology Patient Advisory Council, for example, oncology patient satisfaction scores climbed 6.5 percent. One change prompted by patient feedback was a fresh look at a procedure that sometimes is used in the course of a surgical breast biopsy. After hearing from patients about the pain they were experiencing, physicians standardized the wire localization procedure to reduce pain.

One of the newest councils in the Northwest was created to help serve the region’s growing Hispanic population. Patients on the council have been involved in a video project that will be ready to share with staff by year-end. In the video, Latino patients talk directly to KP care teams about their culture, providing insights into how to build trust and develop good provider-patient relationships.

Patients who serve on the councils are not paid to participate. “These are people who are invested in helping us succeed,” says Jonathan Bullock, program manager for Patient and Family Centered Care Programs in the Northwest.

Given the complexity of an organization as big as Kaiser Permanente, there’s been a learning curve for patients as well. At a recent council meeting in the Northwest, patients expressed frustration that a suggestion to improve signage hadn’t happened. As it turned out, their idea had been incorporated into the master plan—but there’s a schedule for updating signage, and the clinic they were familiar with wasn’t due yet for a refresh.

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Change in Tubing Saves $25,000

Submitted by Jennifer Gladwell on Tue, 03/04/2014 - 15:14
Region
Keywords
Topics
Request Number
sty_nw_oncology infusion_jg_tyra
Long Teaser

Oncology unit-based team pays attention when it uses which tubing--and saves $25,000 a year.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Savings added up quickly when this Oncology team in the Northwest paid close attention to which tubing it used for IVs; shown is Randi Norton, an RN and member of OFNHP.
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Story content (editors)
Deck
Oncology UBT cuts costs with different IV set-up
Story body part 1

It started with a question from Oncology RN Tom Fought, a member of the Oregon Federation of Nurses and Health Professionals (OFNHP), at the Interstate Medical Office in the Northwest.

Why, he wondered, was primary tubing used for low-reaction drugs instead of the less-expensive short or secondary tubing?

That prompted the department’s unit-based team to start an improvement project that wound up saving $25,000 a year.

When patients come in for chemotherapy or other infusion medications, the drugs are administered via an IV: The bag holding the medication is hung on a pole, with a line that goes into the patient’s vein. When primary tubing is used, the valve to stop the flow of medication is very close to the patient’s body.

If the drugs being used have a high potential for an adverse reaction, it’s essential to use primary tubing, so that if there is an emergency and the line has to be shut, only a very little additional medication reaches the patient.

Appropriate times for less expensive options

When the short tubing or secondary tubing is used, the valve to stop the flow of medication is farther from the patient. In this situation, if the valve is closed, more medication is in the line and will flow into the patient until the tube is empty. These types of tubing are appropriate when the medication has a low potential for a negative reaction.

Primary tubing is $4.10 per unit, short tubing is $3.65 and secondary tubing is 65 cents. The costs add up if primary tubing is used when it’s not necessary.

“I had no idea that we would be saving the unit that much money by conforming the tubing,” Fought says.

This team alone was able to save $25,000 a year. If every Kaiser Permanente oncology infusion department adopted this practice, the savings would be dramatic.

“This was such an easy tweak—we just needed to think outside of the box,” says Lacey Anderson, RN, the Infusion Team Lead and a member of OFNHP, who was involved in the project. “The team realized this was such a great idea and wondered, ‘Why haven’t we been doing this all along?’”

Greater camaraderie

Heidi Rolf, the department manager and the UBT’s management co-lead, is proud of the work the team has accomplished. She attributes the success to the leadership of the team and notes that since the team has advanced to a Level 4 on the Path to Performance, team members have more camaraderie and are more engaged.

“At first it was a little difficult to change the habits of the nursing staff,” Fought says. “Within a few weeks, we had everyone on board and our tubing project took off.”

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Reducing Duplicate Meds Is Good Patient Care

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Wed, 11/21/2012 - 12:51
Headline (for informational purposes only)
Reducing Duplicate Meds Is Good Patient Care
Deck
Team looks to avoid errors and costly hospital stays

An accurate list of a patient’s prescriptions is critical to maintaining continuity of care.

It also helps to decrease medication errors, and one of the Joint Commission’s national patient safety goals requires medication reconciliation at hospitals and clinics.

So, in order to protect patient safety, it's crucial caregivers compare the medications a patient is taking (and should be taking) with newly ordered medications.

The Infectious Disease/Oncology team at Cumberland Medical Office Building in Atlanta had a high percentage of patient records in KP HealthConnect that listed duplicate medications.

To improve medication reconciliation, the team did a manual cleanup of patient charts over a period of several weeks. Then it instituted a new process for checking medication. They had the licensed practical nurses (LPNs) and medical assistants (MAs) call patients and ask them to bring their bottles of medication to their office visit.

During the initial workup, the MAs and LPNs reviewed patient medications, and checked off in the members’ charts which medications the patients were and were not taking.

The providers then confirmed medications once again with the member and removed all possible duplicate oncology meds from the patient’s record.

In collaboration with the clinical pharmacist, the MAs printed out a snapshot of the patient’s medications and gave it to the nurse practitioner for review and removal of any expired medication.

As they found success, the team included more medications in the process.

For instance, the team members reviewed patient records for infusion medications and one-time-only meds a patient might need to take before a procedure. Infectious disease pharmacists also began removing duplicate medications for their overlapping oncology patients.

Team members reviewed statistics for duplicate medications from KP’s National Reporting Portal, analyzed the data at huddles and posted it in the department.

They also monitored whether providers increased the number of times they had to reorder medications (which would indicate they were too aggressive in deleting prescriptions). As it turned out, the reorder rate was unaffected by the project.

The percentage of duplicate medications fell to 15 percent, far exceeding the team’s goal. And by avoiding hospital admissions due to inadequate medication reconciliation, the team saved $90,000 in three months.

It also created better communication with patients.

“Knowledge is power,” says Gwendolyn Brown, the team’s management co-lead. “It helped patients and their families ask more questions.”

And a full team effort helped the project succeed, as they moved from Level 2 to 4 in Path to Performance.

“It is tiring and frustrating when you are the only person doing the work,” says Brown. “Here, everyone is involved.”

For more about this team's work to share with your team and spark performance improvement ideas, download a poster or powerpoint.

 

Request Number
pdsa_medreconciliation_GA
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Long Teaser

A Georgia oncology team steps up its efforts at medication reconciliation to prevent errors and costly, preventable hospitalizations. This ambitious improvement project catapulted the team up two levels on the Path to Performance.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Learn more (reporters)
Management co-lead(s)

Gwendolyn Brown, Gwendolyn.P.Brown@kp.org

Union co-lead(s)

Latasha Dixon, Latasha.Dixon@kp.org

Collaborate (reporters)
Collaborate
Patient safety
Status
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Date of publication
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Redwood City UBT Improves Phone Service

Submitted by Shawn Masten on Tue, 09/13/2011 - 11:29
Tool Type
Format
Topics
ppts_improving_phone_scores_RWC

One-page slide showing how a Redwood City Oncology team improved low phone scores.

Non-LMP
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT boosts phone scores.

Format:
PowerPoint slide

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline teams, managers, sponsors, physicians

Best used:

This one-page slide shows how the Oncology unit-based team in Redwood City boosted its low phone scores. Save on to your computer to include in meetings or presentations as an example of UBT performance around telephone service.

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