Research shows that despite an increase in the number of improvements in clinical, cost, and operational outcomes, there is a lack of sustained improvements. Some of the key challenges can be access to the data and analytics, and adherence to data-driven clinical standards, things the Allina Health Spine Clinical Service Line (CSL) clinical leadership team experienced.
By providing widespread access to the data and analytics, the Spine CSL at Allina Health has been able to continue its reduction in LOS and further improve its reduction in complications, all while increasing cost savings and achieving pay-for-performance incentives.
Results:
• $1 million in pay-for-performance incentives received.
• More than $2 million in supply chain savings, a result of data-driven clinical standardization.
• 31 percent of expected complications avoided.
• 22 percent relative reduction in surgical site infections.
Healthcare quality management remains a major challenge for healthcare organizations, specifically when it comes to sustaining quality improvement initiatives. Doing so requires adherence to standard work, ongoing measurement, and continued vigilance, well after improvement goals have been achieved.1
Following quality planning and improvement efforts, healthcare organizations must employ quality control and focus on monitoring the system for stability, continually examining processes via direct observation of performance, data and analytics, and statistical methods.2
The Allina Health Spine Clinical Service Line is dedicated to the comprehensive management of spinal diseases and disorders. This includes continual quality and performance improvement initiatives designed to create the best care at the right time.
Several years ago, hospital leadership at Allina Health became aware of lower-than-expected grades in publicly reported data for spine surgery performance. Clinical champions began to drive quality improvement including regular review of key metrics. Soon after, Allina Health created a Spine Clinical Service Line (CSL), focused on integrating system wide efforts to improve the patient experience, including care quality and patient satisfaction, and improve the overall health of patient populations while containing the per-capita cost of care.
The Spine CSL successfully improved outcomes related to post-operative complications, while reducing length of stay and cost. To sustain these gains, Allina Health needed to secure widespread access to data and adopt the analytics required to maintain ongoing quality control and quality improvement.
To ensure ongoing quality control and sustainable quality improvements, Allina Health used the Health Catalyst® Analytics Platform, including the Late-Binding™ Data Warehouse and broad suite of analytics applications, to build an analytics application with spine-related data. The data was then made broadly available to stakeholders through the user-friendly analytics application—effectively unleashing the data through increased user access. The resulting transparency and accessibility of the spinerelated data supported the Spine CSL in its ongoing performance monitoring and quality improvement efforts.
The analytics platform integrates disparate data, including financial, supply chain, and clinical data from across the organization into a single source of truth. Using the analytics platform and its multidisciplinary, patient-centric approach to improvement, the Spine CSL is able to:
The Allina Health Spine CSL Program Development Committee has administrative oversight and provides clinical guidance for the spine program, data, analytics, and improvement efforts. This ensures continued widespread access to, and adoption of, data and analytics to drive and sustain improvements.
The committee works to engage clinical leadership and set expectations for the use of self-service analytics, simplifying applications and accessibility of the applications, which enables improvement teams sustain quality control and identify new improvement opportunities. The committee also works with stakeholders to establish the reliability of the data and any reporting mechanism.
The Spine CSL at Allina Health has been able to sustain their initial accomplishments and further improve the reduction in complications, all while increasing cost savings. Specific results include:
“Expanding access to our analytics tools established the reliability of data and gave us ready access to a consistent reporting mechanism. It gave us a single source of truth and eliminated the unproductive ‘the data is wrong’ discussions, allowing us to sustain and further increase our improvement gains.”
– Kate Radmer, MS, MBA
Manager, Operations & Clinical Programs
Allina Health
Based on their success with sustaining and building on their initial improvements with the spine program, Allina Health is taking a similar approach of unleashing data for other programs, recognizing that increasing access and encouraging self-service analytics paves the way for clinicians to see opportunities and change their practices to improve patient outcomes.