STEP 6

Work on maintenance and continuous improvement

Case study from the program RECAP (Rehabilitation, Education for COPD and Added value to the medical practice)

 

BACKGROUND

The Montreal Chest Institute has been leading important clinical and evaluative research in COPD over the last decades. Some of these applied clinical research projects have been carried out at a provincial level with the goal of developing and evaluating the impact of a self-management program...

Accountability

We decided that we had to be accountable for this project. The best way to do so would be to have an external agency evaluate our work. Hence, the six indicators discussed during the evaluation phase were adopted by the Hospital Quality Department and would be evaluated every year, and also incorporated into the objectives for the improvement of our Canadian Hospital Accreditation.

 

Sustainability/Maintenance

We have to evaluate after the initial implementation of our program whether we succeed in maintaining the same level of patient care in subsequent years. We have thus appended a table here showing the results for a number of indicators regarding the MUHC's performance:

 

Quality of Care Indicator

Target
(defined success)

2007-2008

2008-2009

Progress evaluation

1. D/C planning tool completed

Above 80%

General Hosp
<25%
Resp. Hosp
73%

General Hosp
<25%
Resp. Hosp
72%

Need to be reassessed and for the General hospitals to repeat CDM Quality Care Steps 3 to 6 (second cycle)

2. Referrals to respiratory home services

Above 80%

97%

93%

Reached the objective

3. Evaluations of the pulmonary rehabilitation program

Above 60%

82%

94%

Reached the objective

4. Education for inhalation techniques

Above 80%

87%

86%

Reached the objective

5. Use of spirometry tests

Above 80%

81%

81%

Reached the objective

6. Stop smoking interventions

Above 60%

65%

71%

Reached the objective

7. 30-day re-admission rates

Below 10%

13%

13%

More time will be needed to reach the objective

 

The RECAP-MUHC Committee still meets to keep track and follow-up on the various implementation phases, and to discuss the new results recorded in terms of the quality of care indicators. This committee also decides whether new interventions are needed to keep this project alive, such as, new resources, tool adaptations, etc.

 

Closing the Loop

As described in the evaluation phase, one of our results was that the D/C planning tool in the General Hospitals was only completed for less than 25% of the COPD admissions, compared to the Respiratory Hospital, where the tool was completed in more than 70% of the cases. This new problem leads us to a second cycle of improvements, where the objective is to evaluate why the D/C planning tool was successfully used in some environments (Respiratory hospital), but not in others (General hospitals), and to ensure its deployment everywhere.

 

Another problem that could also be addressed in a second cycle of improvements is the COPD clientele with multiple readmissions. This clientele needs to be part of a new cycle (CDM Quality Care Steps 1 to 6) and likely to require more targeted care that is better adapted to their needs.

It is important to follow-up on the implementation of the improvement process in a sustainable way. However, accountability is essential, and a continuous evaluation of the team's performance and quality indicators is mandatory.