In an effort to extend its medication refill processing services to a broader group of physicians in multiple regions and specialties, St. Joseph Heritage Healthcare utilized Health Catalyst Embedded Refills, freeing up physicians to spend more time with patients and enabling technicians to take a more proactive role in closing care gaps associated with medication refills.
One of the goals of the St. Joseph Heritage Healthcare (Heritage) Contact Center is to offload tasks from the clinics so that staff can operate at the top of their license and focus on the patients in front of them. Leadership at Heritage asked the Heritage Contact Center to extend its medication refill processing services to a broader group of physicians in multiple regions and specialties. Additionally, the team was tasked with providing more detailed reporting and analytics to quantify the Center’s activities. The end goal was to centralize the refill service and to delegate routine, repeatable tasks to non-clinical technicians. However, the Heritage team did not have additional funds to hire new FTEs. To accomplish the goal, the team sought a technology solution that would enable existing staff to be more efficient and increase capacity.
The Heritage team routinely processes 37,000 medication refill requests per month in Allscripts TouchWorks® EHR. Heritage chose to utilize the Health Catalyst Embedded Refills application for its ease of integration with TouchWorks. The implementation was completed in just 12 weeks, ultimately supporting 200 primary care physicians.
In addition to the technical implementation, the rollout included organizational process and staffing changes. According to Renee Voll, Executive Director of Patient Experience and Contact Center at Heritage, “To fully operationalize a centralized refill service, it was imperative that we adopt a standardized set of refill protocols for all primary care physicians to follow. Through a consensus process with clinical leadership, our medical director ultimately signed off on the set of protocols now followed across the organization.” To support this process, the Health Catalyst customer success team provided guidance and identified opportunities for approving an even greater number of refills on behalf of the medical staff.
With standardized protocols for office visits and labs in place, Heritage began delegating routine refill tasks to non-clinical technicians. Requests originating from Surescripts, FollowMyHealth, and incoming faxes appear as Rx Renewal tasks in physicians’ task buckets that technicians continuously monitor. The Embedded Refills application presents relevant information in the tasks such as last appointment with the managing provider, appropriate refill amount, last time the medication was ordered, and associated labs required for the medication. Embedded Refills also flags out-of-range values, when the next office visit and labs are due, and the status of the medication. Previously, these items were all manually reviewed. With Embedded Refills, the staff no longer needs to scour patient charts, effectively automating the chart review process.
Each request is categorized as In Protocol, Duplicate, Out of Protocol, or Controlled. Based on the pre-populated information, technicians can easily act on In Protocol requests and delete Duplicates. Providers are only involved with Out of Protocol or Controlled requests.
“Today, over 65 percent of all refill requests are processed by non-clinical refill technicians, up from 50 percent before using Embedded Refills. Technicians have increased their efficiency threefold, now processing upwards of 200 refills per eight-hour shift. This greatly reduces the burden on our providers at the end of the day and evening hours,” states Voll. An additional benefit has been the increase in patient satisfaction. Previously, turnaround time for refill requests could have taken upwards of 72 hours. Now, requests can be completed in as quickly as 12 hours.
Embedded Refills also enables technicians to take a more proactive role in closing care gaps associated with medication refills. When a refill request is being processed, staff members holistically review each patient’s full medication list, identifying labs, visits and procedures that need to be completed in the next 90 days. Outstanding items are then scheduled with the patient. With care gaps addressed, upcoming refill requests to be categorized as In Protocol and processed immediately.
Physician satisfaction has also increased on multiple fronts. Because the Embedded Refills application helps staff identify missing visits, physicians are now seeing patients more frequently as opposed to simply autorenewing prescriptions, as had been done in the past. Additionally, incoming refill tasks received over the weekend no longer loom for physicians to process during off hours.
Those requests are picked up and moved out of the physicians’ buckets for the Heritage team to process on Monday mornings.
After hearing about the success using the Embedded Refills application, several additional groups across Heritage are now seeking support from the Contact Center. According to Voll, “We are in discussions with our Northern California primary care leadership team and St. Jude endocrinology physicians, all of which can be supported by Embedded Refills protocols, without adding additional FTEs.”