改善在单一提供者军事治疗设施中获得护理的机会

A. M. Carlson, Richard Allen Leonidas, C. Perkins
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摘要

背景:军队卫生系统(MHS)受益人历来比平民更不满意获得医疗服务的机会。在韩国乌山空军基地,拥有1200名患者的儿科诊所只有一名儿科医生,这使得改善获得医疗服务的机会对司令部增加基地指挥部资助儿童数量的兴趣提出了挑战。我们的目标是在不减少每周相对价值单位(rvu)的平均数量的情况下,将第三次可选的未来预约时间缩短至40天,缩短至15天。我们进行了计划-研究-行动(PDSA)循环,旨在增加未来和急性就诊的护理机会,通过对2019年8月至9月的医疗记录进行图表审查,获得基线干预前数据。我们基于仙童儿科公司(Fairchild ABPediatrics)开发的RESET儿科初步临床干预措施,包括取消交叉预约和洗诊预约,随后的干预措施包括将急性期改为下午,提供虚拟就诊,我们在四个PDSA周期中实施了这些干预措施,并在2019年10月至2020年2月期间跟踪了诊所的第三个次可用日期。为了分析改善可及性的好处,我们记录了患者满意度的变化,并跟踪了每周获得的rvu。基线次次预约平均为未来的10 7天,急性预约为29天。在整个干预期后,次次预约减少到未来的40天,急性预约减少到11天,每次干预都以循序渐进的方式减少,直到一月份,当提供者离开诊所两周。干预前和干预后每周rvu的平均数量无显著差异,分别为19.45±3.95和19.01±0.91,患者对预约便利性的满意度从干预前的68.9%上升至干预后的87.6%。结论:干预措施改善了我们单一提供者诊所的可及性,并在2019年12月和2020年2月实现了第三次可及的未来和急性预约的目标。这两项指标在一月份都有显著的增长,当时医疗服务提供者外出了两周,但在二月份迅速继续下降。尽管在诊所大大开放了准入,并将许多预约改为虚拟预约,但每周的rvu数量仍保持不变。在研究期间,患者满意度显著提高。此外,由于3月份的COVID-19爆发,干预后的数据仅收集到2月份。这一数据表明,在不减少报销的情况下,单一提供者诊所可以显着改善获得医疗服务的机会
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Improving Access to Care in a Single-Provider Military Treatment Facility
BACKGROUND: Military Health System (MHS) beneciaries have historically reported greater dissatisfaction with access to care than their civilian counterparts At Osan Air Base in South Korea, the pediatric clinic of1,200 patients is staffed by a single pediatrician, making improvements in access challenging Commandinterest in increasing the number of command-sponsored children on base made improving access to carecrucial OBJECTIVE: Our objective was to improve third-next-available future appointment booking time to 4 0days and acute to 1 5 days without decreasing the average number of relative value units (RVUs) per week METHODS: We conducted plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles aimed at increasing access to care for future andacute visits Baseline pre-intervention data was obtained via chart reviews of medical records from August toSeptember 2019 We based initial clinical interventions on RESET for Pediatrics developed by Fairchild ABPediatrics, including turning off cross-booking and scrubbing appointments Subsequent interventionsincluded switching acutes to the afternoon, offering virtual visits, and changing the future/acute appointment ratio to 70/30 from 60/40 We implemented these interventions in four PDSA cycles and followed third-next-available dates in clinic from October 2019 to February 2020 To analyze the benet of improved access, wenoted changes in patient satisfaction and tracked RVUs earned per week RESULTS: The baseline third-next-available appointment was an average of 10 7 days for future and 2 9 days for acute appointments After thefull intervention period, the third-next-available future appointment had decreased to 4 0 days for future and1 1 for acute visits Third-next-available decreased in a step-wise fashion with each intervention until January,when the provider was out of clinic for two weeks, but continued to decline in February Average number ofRVUs per week pre- and post-intervention were not signicantly different, at 19 45±3 95 and 19 01±0 91,respectively Patient satisfaction with ease of making an appointment increased from 68 9% pre-interventionto 87 6% post-intervention CONCLUSIONS The interventions improved access in our single-provider clinic andthe goal for third-next-available future and acute appointments was met in December 2019 and February2020, respectively Both measures increased signicantly in January, when the provider was out for two weeks,but quickly continued to decline in February The number of RVUs per week was maintained despite openingup access signicantly in clinic and switching many appointments to virtuals Patient satisfaction increasedsignicantly during the study period Limitations on this data include that 132 patients were redistributed tofamily medicine in October;however, the proportional decrease in empaneled patients was small comparedto the signicant decreases in third-next-available appointment times Additionally, the post-intervention data was only collected until February due to the COVID-19 outbreak in March This data indicates that in access tocare can be improved signicantly in single-provider clinic without decreasing reimbursement
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