Achieving breakthrough levels of improvement for people with chronic conditions requires that an organization make changes to improve six fundamental areas in parallel:
- Self-Management: Effective self-management is very different from telling patients what to do. Patients have a central role in determining their care, one that fosters a sense of responsibility for their own health.
- Decision Support: Treatment decisions need to be based on explicit, proven guidelines supported by at least one defining study.
- Clinical Information System: A registry — an information system that can track individual patients as well as populations of patients — is a necessity when managing chronic illness or preventive care.
- Delivery System Design: The delivery of patient care requires not only determining what care is needed, but clarifying roles and tasks to ensure the patient gets the care; making sure that all the clinicians who take care of a patient have centralized, up-to-date information about the patient’s status; and making follow-up a part of standard procedure.
- Organization of Health Care: The effort to improve care should be woven into the fabric of the organization and aligned with a quality improvement system.
- Community: Community programs and organizations that can support or expand a health system’s care for chronically ill patients and prevention strategies are often overlooked.
Many health care organizations in several countries have used the Model for Improvement* very successfully to improve chronic illness care. Using the key elements of the model, especially testing changes on a small scale with Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles,** has helped organizations improve care for their patients with chronic conditions.
Improvement efforts should be led by a multidisciplinary core team. Forming the Team
Sources:
Langley GL, Nolan KM, Nolan TW, Norman CL, Provost LP. The Improvement Guide: A Practical Approach to Enhancing Organizational Performance.
**The Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle was developed by W. Edwards Deming (Deming WE. The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education.).