Reform Of Primary Care Could Reduce Costly Diagnostic Errors
Main Category: Primary Care / General PracticeAlso Included In: Litigation / Medical Malpractice
Article Date: 29 Jul 2010 - 1:00 PDT
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Errors in diagnosis place a heavy financial burden on an already costly health care system and can be devastating for affected patients. Strengthening certain aspects of a new and evolving model of comprehensive and coordinated primary care could potentially address this highly relevant, but underemphasized safety concern, say Mark Graber, M.D., of Stony Brook University Medical Center, and Hardeep Singh, M.D., M.P.H., of Baylor College of Medicine, in a commentary published in the July 28 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
In the commentary, Drs. Graber and Singh point out that diagnostic errors are the single largest contributor to malpractice claims (about 40 percent) and cost approximately $300,000 per claim. They discuss a unique model of primary care, called the patient-centered medical home, and outline five principles that the model needs to incorporate in order to reduce the incidence of diagnostic errors. The principles of the patient-centered medical home were developed and endorsed by the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American Academy of Pediatrics, American College of Physicians, and the American Osteopathic Association.
The model facilitates partnerships between individual patients, their personal physicians and, when appropriate, the patient's family. Care is assisted by physician 'extenders,' nurse empowerment, information technology and other means to assure that patient get care when and where they need and want it in a culturally and linguistically appropriate manner.
"The great majority of diagnostic errors have root causes that derive from the properties of the healthcare setting, organization and practice," says Dr. Graber, Associate Chair of Medicine at SBUMC and Chief of Medical Service at the Northport Veteran Affairs Medical Center. "By working together, cognitive scientists, informaticians, clinicians, and human factors engineers have a unique opportunity to decrease the likelihood of diagnostic error to the extent that the five principles we outline in JAMA can be incorporated into every new medical home."
In the commentary, Drs. Graber and Singh define the five principles as Right Teamwork, Right Information Management, Right Measurement and Monitoring, Right Patient Management, and Right Safety Culture.
Right Teamwork
The medical home model places emphasis on team-based care, and primary care teams could include not only physicians but also nurses, allied health professionals and personnel, the authors explain.
"Task delegation with the 'team' has to be done correctly to avoid errors related to patient follow-up, a common breakdown in the process," says Dr. Singh, Assistant Professor of Medicine and Health Services Research at the Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Center of Excellence and Baylor College of Medicine. "The physician could take a leadership role, while the entire group collectively takes care of the patient."
For example, monitoring test results, referrals and appointments to ensure appropriate follow-up could be performed by other team members under physician supervision.
Through innovative team-training programs, care should be undertaken to ensure that the new model of care does not introduce ambiguous responsibility between team members. Individual accountability and ownerships of patients should continue to be emphasized, the researchers wrote.
Right Information Management
Breakdowns in information management, such as communication and coordination of care, are the root of many diagnostic errors, Drs. Singh and Graber wrote.
"Electronic health records can help facilitate information transfer but this information then needs a required follow-up action for the task to be considered completed," they note. "The information loop needs to be closed."
Major issues affecting safe information management are the unclear responsibility for patient follow-up between the primary care physician and subspecialist or team member, as well as the overwhelming volume of alerts, reminders and other diagnostic information in electronic health records.
If information management problems (technological and non-technological) are not addressed now, they are likely to worsen when medical homes are fully implemented, the authors wrote. "Comparative effectiveness studies should be conducted to evaluate which features and functions of electronic records are more effective in reducing diagnostic errors in medical homes."
Right Measurement and Monitoring
Improving the current performance monitoring strategies of providers' competence are also necessary, the researchers wrote, including better measurement processes and outcomes related to compliance with preventive measures and key indicators of diagnostic performance (i.e. appropriate management of diagnostic test results).
"Newer methods that include electronic surveillance and monitoring techniques could be used to detect diagnostic errors proactively. These approaches could be accompanied by feedback to clinicians about specific prevention strategies," they wrote.
Right Patient Empowerment
Drs. Singh and Graber point out that patients are key partners in the medical home team. "Encouraging 'activating' questions should become part of the patient centered medical home commitment to reduce errors."
Activating questions may include: "How do I make sure I hear about all my test results?" "Do I need another opinion?" and "Howe and when should I get back to you if I'm not better?"
Right Safety Culture
The current conversation about the patient-centered medical home is focused on reimbursement and chronic disease care, Drs. Singh and Graber note. "But patient safety must be a central, organizing principle and not just an afterthought," they said. "From a practical standpoint, this necessitates an appropriate infrastructure and skill set to ensure effective implementation of the four rights described above."
Mark Graber, M.D., is Professor and Associate Chair of the Department of Medicine at Stony Brook University Medical Center and Chief of Medical Service at the Northport VA Medical Center. His research focuses on patient safety and diagnostic errors. Dr. Graber convened and chaired the first two international conferences on "Diagnostic Error in Medicine" in 2008 and 2009.
Source: Stony Brook University Medical Center
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nurse practitioners are not "physician extenders"
posted by Sarah Rabin-Lobron on 29 Jul 2010 at 12:12 pmThe term "physician extender" used in this article most likely is meant to refer to NP's and PA's. Nurse practitioners are independent practitioners and are well-prepared with training and education to support this role.
All major research on the topic has shown that NP's are highly effective primary care providers with higher rates of patient satisfaction and lower rates of malpractice decisions than their physician counterparts.
Using a the term "physician extender" denotes an inferior position and deprives the public of the full understanding of the NP's scope of practice.
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