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Abstract Number: 2604

Ask a Doc – Rheumatologic Care Delivered Just in Time

Eric D. Newman1, Chelsea Cedeno2, Thomas M. Harrington3, Thomas P. Olenginski3, Alfred E. Denio3, Androniki Bili4, Brian DelVecchio5, Carolyn Houk6 and Paul F. Simonelli7, 1Department of Rheumatology, Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA, 2Division of Medicine, Geisinger Medical Center, Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA, 3Dept of Rheumatology, Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA, 4Rheumatology, Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, PA, 5Rheumatology, Geisinger Health System, Wilkes-Barre, PA, 6Family Practice - Frackville, Geisinger Health System, Frackville, PA, 7Thoracic Medicine, Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, PA

Meeting: 2012 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: Access to care and quality of care

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Session Information

Title: Quality Measures and Innovations in Practice Management and Care Delivery

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: Specialty care is traditionally delivered as face to face consults.  These encounters range from consult not needed to consult needed quickly.  Our care systems are not designed to distinguish these different needs, creating excess visits that delay access. This delay results in overutilization and unnecessary expense (consult not needed), underutilization of needed care and worsening disease (consult needed quickly), and potential harm and patient anxiety (both). To provide specialty care just when it is needed, we developed Ask-a-Doc, a web-based tool accessed from within the electronic health record (EPIC).

Methods:   Ask-a-Doc was developed using process redesign methodology.  Ask-a-Doc allows the Primary Care Physician (PCP) to ask a question and the specialist to answer it through electronic chart review, phone call, or video call.  Ask-a-Doc consists of 3 steps: Step 1 – ask a question (PCP).  Step 2 – connect to the specialist (Scheduler).  Step 3 – answer the question and complete the documentation (Specialist).  23 PCPs, 7 schedulers, and 11 specialists (6 rheumatologists, 5 pulmonologists) were trained to use Ask-a-Doc.  Redesign measures included service excellence, work effort, process reliability, and clinical outcome.

Results:    Step 1 – The PCP selected a specialty or specialist, turnaround time (now, today, within 3 days), preferred mode of communication (electronic messaging, phone call, instant video), and asked a question.  The question could be patient-specific or not patient-specific.  The request was submitted electronically to the Ask-a-Doc scheduler.  Step 2 – The scheduler identified the correct specialist and sent the form to that specialist’s Ask-a-Doc inbasket folder.  If the request was to communicate by phone or video, the scheduler connected the specialist back to the PCP.  Step 3 – the specialist reviewed the EPIC record, answered the question, and provided structured electronic documentation.  Analysis of the first 74 Ask-a-Doc questions showed the following (Table 1):  Service excellence – Primary care satisfaction of 4.5 (range 0-5), mean turnaround time of 3 hours, met or exceeded requested timeframe 100%.  Work effort – 12 minutes average per message.  Process – 100% response rate.  Outcome – 57 consults saved (77%).

Conclusion:   Using process redesign methodology, we developed Ask-a-Doc to improve care delivery between PCPs and specialists.  The results demonstrate excellence in service, a highly reliable process, and significant reduction in waste.  Ask-a-Doc provides specialty care “just-in-time”, so patients that don’t need to be seen are not, and those that do can be seen promptly – by design, not by accident.  As reimbursement for care delivery moves towards bundled payments, Ask-a-Doc is a value-added service that rheumatologists can provide.

 

Category

Measure

Definition

Result

Service Excellence

Primary Care Satisfaction

Satisfaction survey results from PCP perspective (Scale 0-5;  0 = “Impossible”, 5 = “Very Easy”)

4.5

Time to Completion

Timeframe from message initiation to response sent

Mean Specialty turn-around time = 3 hours; Mean PCP requested time =  21 hours

Request Met

% Requested Response Timeframe met or exceeded

100%

Work Effort

Volume

Number of Ask a Doc messages created/started

74

Time Spent

Average amount of time spent by Specialist to complete (min/message)

12

Process

Response Rate

% of messages responded to

100%

Response Accuracy

% of patient specific messages converted to encounters for proper documentation

95%

Outcome

Consults Saved

Number of consults saved by using Ask a Doc

57 (77%)

 


Disclosure:

E. D. Newman,
None;

C. Cedeno,
None;

T. M. Harrington,
None;

T. P. Olenginski,
None;

A. E. Denio,
None;

A. Bili,
None;

B. DelVecchio,
None;

C. Houk,
None;

P. F. Simonelli,
None.

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