Are common performance measures a pipe dream?
Are common performance measures a pipe dream?
Differences present biggest challenge
The Joint Commission has them. The National Committee on Quality Assurance has them. The Leapfrog Group has them. The National Quality Forum has them. It seems that everywhere you turn, some organization has issued its own version of the "gold standard" of quality performance measures. Recently, the American Hospital Association (AHA) entered the fray, renewing its call for hospitals to participate in a national voluntary initiative "devoted to developing a common framework for measuring hospital care quality" it launched last December.
Is a common framework for quality possible, given the wide variety of facilities and systems that exist? Is such a framework a worthy goal? And, if the answer to the first two questions is "yes," how is a quality manager to balance that commonality with the needs of patients and their own unique set of priorities?
Even the Chicago-based AHA concedes the concept is not without its flaws. "I think the con may be that as you standardize in a national effort like this, you clearly look at things that apply across a broad spectrum of hospitals, and specialty hospitals are not likely, for example, to get into the kinds of cases cared for in a tertiary facility," notes Nancy Foster, senior associate director for policy at the AHA. "You do limit yourself in where you are going with measurement. However, I see the pros as far outweighing that."
"It is possible to have a framework for measuring some quality indicators in hospitals, but health care is locally defined and locally delivered," notes Debora Simmons, RN, MSN, CCRN, CCNS, senior clinical quality improvement analyst at the Institute for Healthcare Excellence at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston.
"I definitely agree," adds Jason Etchegaray, PhD, systems improvement specialist at M.D. Anderson.
"I think it’s possible if all the different groups who have different aims can get together and agree on that framework," says Patrice L. Spath, of Brown Spath & Associates, Forest Grove, OR. "There are lots of purposes for measuring hospital quality. For example, what consumer groups would be interested in might be different from what insurers are interested in, i.e., costs and patient satisfaction. Payers interested in rewarding hospitals for better quality base that on measures."
What appears to be happening now, she adds, "is that each of those different groups is trying to convince the others that they are right. And you have to throw into the mix the fact that there are a lot of state initiatives going on."
Despite the roadblocks, however, some see efforts like the AHA’s as positive steps. "I think it’s about time," says Kay Beauregard, RN, MSA, director of Hospital Accreditation and Nursing Quality at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, MI. "Hospitals are asked to consider measurements from all different sources — AHRQ, AHA, CMS, JCAHO, Leapfrog and other professional organizations — so it would be helpful if the measures are coordinated.
"The AHA’s attempt to unify all these different organizations into common measures is of value," she says. "You have to realize that collecting measures is very labor-intensive: You have to write programs, integrate things, and so on. A small change in measures affects how we collect them. But we have to define what are the most critical-to-quality measures, and we’re getting closer to that."
"This is an effort to provide information to the public, and therefore a common set of information for people to use that would enable them to evaluate the hospitals in their area," notes Foster. "Many purchasers look for a resource that gives them a way to get common information about the hospitals in all the areas in which they have employees or other beneficiaries. This achieves that goal."
One of the goals in the AHA initiative, she says, "is to try to encourage more and more organizations to adopt this common set of measures, this approach to measuring." Most of the AHA initiative’s initial measures mirror some established by the Joint Commission. "The Joint Commission is a great partner in this, so it makes sense to start off with what work they’ve done," she says.
"But as we look at more conditions [the initial three are acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, and pneumonia], we want to shrink the number of organizations that are asking our hospitals to provide data," Foster explains. "This is labor-intensive work. If we can encourage people to join with us and not ask independently for disparate sets of data, we enable hospitals to marshal their resources and get this robust data."
Even if a common set of measures is one day adopted (and this is far from a sure thing), hospital quality managers will still need to take into account the unique aspects of their own organizations, note the experts.
"Every hospital or system should choose what they want to measure relative to their performance based on what the priorities are in their organization," says Spath. "This should flow directly from mission, vision, and strategic objectives. As part
of that process, as strategic objectives are defined, they will want to consider what are the national priorities for quality of health care. Then they should determine whether their organization is going to select those national or state areas of interest. It’s up to the individual facility to decide if the common framework makes sense for them given patient population, strategic objectives, and so on."
"Often the clinical topic or issue might seem to be the same [diagnosis]," adds Beauregard, "but the individual indicator could be different. For example, the AHRQ published a whole list of measures with evidence and literature behind them, but even as we delved into those we had some differences of opinion.
"Don’t get me wrong; [developing common measures] is a good idea," she continues. "But all of these are trigger points. Everyone has to step back and say, Let’s validate that these are meaningful and reliable, and then decide as an organization if this is of value to our patient population.’ What we did here was we took core measures to the medical committee and hospital committee and asked them to select which were most meaningful, and we prioritized them within our organization — what would be the most meaningful to us and still meet the requirements."
Even with an apparently rigid set of measures like those created by the Joint Commission, there is choice involved, she notes. "You can’t change the measure, but you can change what you submit," she explains. "You can choose congestive heart failure over acute myocardial infarction, for example."
"Different institutions that come from different philosophies and guidelines will infuse the standards with their own approach," adds Simmons. "The Leapfrog Group, for example, was certainly influenced by the organizations that make it up. There is not a shortcut for sitting down and having some thoughtful reflection on your institution and culture and front-line providers."
Etchegaray agrees. "You have to look at how that quality metric fits in with your culture," he says. "For example, every program is at a different level in terms of their safety culture. Some are not as advanced as others; they still are in the culture of blame. So you can’t really have common metrics; you have to merge or align the metrics with the location on the continuum of culture of these organizations."
"Part of the problem is that up until this time, the delivery of health care has been driven by individual practitioners and clinical judgment at the point of care," Simmons says. "Now what we have are evidence-based guidelines. When you look at how that is translated to the ability of a hospital to meet those guidelines, you have to look at a wide variety of hospitals. Certainly someone who is part of a small rural hospital and has no resources is not going to be able to collect data that easily, and may not have the expertise or the resources to look at that data objectively."
Given the diverse needs of institutions, will we move closer to a common set of performance measures in the future? "My expectation is that at least in terms of the initial core set, many quality managers already use these to improve performance," says Foster. "What we are doing is finding a way for hospitals to begin to have a conversation with their community about quality and be actively engaged in efforts to improve quality and share some of that with the public. We may get to a point where individual consumers have conversations with doctors about what the findings might mean in terms of the choice of a health care facility."
"Everyone wants to be the one that has the answer," Spath says. "I think the AHA is trying to take a leadership role so that individual hospitals can define their logical priorities for themselves."
"The AHA and JCAHO have common core measures, which is of great value to an organization — not being asked to collect something different," says Beauregard. "So I would hope we move to
a common set." Still, she says, "that would not be the be-all and end-all. If you walked into a hospital and all they measured were the core measures, that would be suspect. Performance improvement measurements should be larger than that."
"There certainly would be less confusion, but the reality is we don’t have one set for all institutions," says Simmons.
For her part, Spath remains skeptical. "I don’t think one set of measures can fulfill every purpose for measuring performance," she asserts. "As the users of the data, we will always ask new questions, so it’s quite likely we will continue
to have measures that evolve. I still find it difficult to believe that practitioners will use these to make decisions about quality. As more research
is done, as evidence changes, those measures will change, so we never will have a standard set of measures, or one owner of the measure."
- Jason Etchegaray, PhD, Systems Improvement Specialist; Debora Simmons, RN, MSN, CCRN, CCNS, Senior Clinical Quality Improvement Analyst, Institute for Healthcare Excellence at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, 1515 Holcombe Blvd., Unit 141, Houston, TX 77030. Telephone: (713) 745-1357. E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected].
- Patrice L. Spath, Brown Spath & Associates, P.O. Box 721, Forest Grove, OR 97116. Telephone: (503) 357-9185. E-mail: [email protected].
- Kay Beauregard, RN, MSA, Director of Hospital Accreditation & Nursing Quality, William Beaumont Hospital, 3601 W. 13 Mile Road, Royal Oak, MI 48073. Telephone: (248) 551-0941.
E-mail: [email protected]. - Nancy Foster, Senior Associate Director for Policy, American Hospital Association, 325 Seventh St. N.W., Washington, DC 20004. Telephone: (202) 638-1100.
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