Serious Illness Conversations: A Case Management Quality Improvement Project.

Prof Case Manag

Mary Elizabeth Billie, DNP, RN-BC, CCM, is the Regional Executive Director of Population Health at Loyola Physician Partners, an Accountable Care Organization, where she is responsible for directing the Case Management and Quality Programs.

Published: March 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The project aimed to create and assess an educational program and protocol for case managers to identify and communicate with seriously ill patients about their care preferences.
  • Seventeen nurses and three social workers from an Accountable Care Organization in Chicago participated in a four-hour training session focused on best practices in serious illness communication.
  • Post-training, 95% of participants felt the program objectives were met, with all reporting effectiveness in delivery and relevance to their clinical roles.

Article Abstract

Purpose/objectives: The purpose of this project was to develop, implement, and evaluate an educational program and a serious illness (SI) protocol for a case management team of nurses and social workers to achieve the following: (1) utilize an SI protocol to identify patients with SI; (2) utilize a Serious Illness Structured Communication Guide to elicit these patients' goals and preferences for SI care; and (3) document in the electronic medical record the patients' elicited values and goals using a structured SI documentation template.

Primary Practice Setting And Sample: Seventeen nurse and 3 social work case managers in an Accountable Care Organization (ACO) in a large health system in a western suburb of Chicago participated in this project. The practice setting was the primary care clinics associated with the health system. Patients eligible for the project met the SI criteria and were part of the organization's ACO or Bundle Payment for Care Improvement program.

Methodology: Twenty members of the case management staff participated in a 4-hr face-to-face educational program, based in part on review of best practices related to SI care and communication. Participants completed a pre- and posttest survey of knowledge; self-rated their confidence in conducting SI conversations; and evaluated the educational program. Participants then engaged in the established protocol inclusive of the following: (1) identify patients appropriate for an SI conversation; (2) initiate the SI conversation; and (3) document components of the SI in the electronic medical record.

Findings/conclusions: Educational Program: Ninety-five percent of the RN and SW case managers reported that that the educational module objectives were met to a moderate or great extent. One hundred percent of the participants reported that the format to deliver the program was effective, the content of the program was directly relevant to their clinical practice, and they would change their practice because of learning/understanding the content in the program. Educational program pretest scores ranged from 46.2% to 84.6%, with posttest scores ranging from 69.2% to 100%. A paired-samples t test demonstrated a statistically significant increase in posttest scores. Baseline confidence scores ranged from 1 to 4, with postproject confidence scores ranging from 2 to 4. A paired-samples t test demonstrated a statistically significant increase in confidence.Serious Illness Protocol: The case managers correctly identified 92% of patients who met the established SI identification criteria for this project. In 91.8% of cases, the case managers conducted an SI conversation in adherence to the protocol. In 76% of the cases, documentation about the SI conversation was completed in accordance with the protocol.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NCM.0000000000000402DOI Listing

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