Decreases in emergency department and hospitalization visits over 5 years of the Oncology Care Model.

Authors

null

Terry Lynn Jensen

Texas Oncology, Dallas, TX

Terry Lynn Jensen, Sabrina Q. Mikan, Holly Books, Susan Escudier, Lisa Pearson

Organizations

Texas Oncology, Dallas, TX, Texas Oncology, Austin, TX, Texas Oncology, Houston, TX

Research Funding

No funding received
None.

Background: In the last five years of the Oncology Care Model (OCM) our community oncology practice developed standardized processes throughout the practice to impact hospital and emergency department (ED) utilization. OCM feedback reports were evaluated and compared to practice baseline data to assess the effectiveness of these interventions in improving patient care. Within the practice continuous tracking allowed for timely reviews and process improvement. Methods: A multimodal triage approach was created, including development of individual patient treatment plans and weekly clinical team huddles where new treatment patients or high-risk patients were discussed. The “Call Us First” campaign was initiated through wallet cards. These cards were provided to patients outlining regimen details and indications for patients seeking urgent or emergent medical care. An improved triage program with Navigating Cancer (NC) reduced call back times to patients regarding patient symptoms and care needs, increased faster symptom management and decreased ED visits. Additionally, nursing check in calls were made to patients after initial chemotherapy treatments and hospital admissions. These statewide programs were rolled out through a systematic process over the first year of the OCM. Results: Admissions for the practice’s OCM patients were 22% in 2015 and decreased to 17% in 2021. For the practice’s OCM population in 2015, the baseline ED visits were 16% and decreased to 14% in late Fall 2021. Home health utilization increased from 17.9% at baseline to 22.3% after five years. Long term care days decreased from 10.7 days to 4.5 days. Skilled nursing facility days decreased from 67.6 days in 2015 to 36.80 days in 2021. By comparison, overall national OCM practices had similar declines in ED visits and hospital admissions. Conclusions: Through OCM participation there were systematic changes reducing ED visits and hospital admissions over five years. We believe that early intervention projects enable patients to avoid ED/hospital visits. Home health care visits may have contributed to less admissions. Patient outcomes were favorably impacted by the practice wide processes guided by the feedback reports. Future iterations of value-based care are undecided, and practices will build on these enhancements.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2022 ASCO Quality Care Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session A

Track

Cost, Value, and Policy,Health Care Access, Equity, and Disparities,Patient Experience

Sub Track

Team-Based Approaches to Care Delivery

Citation

J Clin Oncol 40, 2022 (suppl 28; abstr 64)

DOI

10.1200/JCO.2022.40.28_suppl.064

Abstract #

64

Poster Bd #

C4

Abstract Disclosures

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