200x Filetype PPTX File size 0.43 MB Source: txcouncil.com
Presentation Objectives and Content Learning Objectives Upon completion of this event, participants should be able to: • Distinguish Performance/Quality Improvement as a Separate Function from Compliance. • Develop and Implement a Performance Improvement Plan. Learning Content • Defining Performance Improvement/Quality Improvement • Performance Improvement/Quality Improvement models and tools (e.g., PDSA Cycles, Scorecards, etc.) • The Importance of Stakeholder (i.e., consumers, staff, community stakeholders) Involvement in Creating “Culture of Quality” 2 What is Quality Improvement • According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA; 2011a) quality improvement “consists of systematic and continuous actions that lead to measurable improvement in health care services and the health status of targeted patient [or consumer] groups” (p. 1). • This definition is clearly inclusive of mental health and IDD services. • The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI; 2016) defines the science of improvement as “an applied science that emphasizes innovation, rapid-cycle testing in the field, and spread in order to generate learning about what changes, in which contexts, produce improvements. It is characterized by the combination of expert subject knowledge with improvement methods and tools. It is multidisciplinary – drawing on clinical science, systems theory, psychology, statistics, and other fields” (para. 2). 3 What is Performance Improvement As taken directly from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA; 2011b): • Performance measures are designed to measure systems of care and are derived from clinical or practice guidelines. Data that is defined into specific measurable elements provides an organization with a meter to measure the quality of its care. Performance Improvement is the act of improving an organization’s performance on various performance measures (Carr, 2019). • Performance measurement is a process by which an organization monitors important aspects of its programs, systems, and processes. In this context, performance measurement includes the operational processes used to collect data necessary for the performance measures. • Performance management is a forward-looking process used to set goals and regularly check progress toward achieving those goals. In practice, an organization sets goals, looks at the actual data for its performance measures, and acts on results to improve the performance toward its goals. 4 Quality and Performance Improvement • Often the terms “Quality Improvement” (QI) and “Performance Improvement” (PI) are use interchangeably. We will use QI and PI interchangeability as well. • PI is: • Evaluation Focused • Client, Staff, and Community (i.e., stakeholder) Oriented • Organizationally Diagnostic • Focuses on Process and Outcome Improvement • Systemic in Nature • Data Driven/Utilizes Measurement 5 Quality and Performance Improvement • PI is NOT: • Compliance - the ongoing process of meeting or exceeding the legal, ethical, and professional standards and regulations applicable to a particular healthcare organization or provider (U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, OIG, 2018). • Utilization Review - a critical evaluation of health-care services provided to patients that is made especially for the purpose of controlling costs and monitoring quality of care (Merriam-Webster, 2019). • Utilization Management - The planning, organizing, directing, and controlling of the healthcare product/service that balances cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and quality to meet the overall goals of the LMHA. Use of systematic data-driven processes to influence individual care and decision making to ensure an optimal level of service is provided consistent with individual diagnosis and level of functioning within the financial constraints of funding. Includes but is not limited to service authorization, prospective, concurrent and retrospective reviews, discharge planning, and Utilization Care Management (HHSC, 2014). • Quality Management – This term is frequently used in Texas Behavioral Health Centers and often refers to a compliance department or program compliance. 6
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