Achievement of age‐friendly health systems committed to care excellence designation in a convenient care health care system
Anne Pohnert, Nicholas K. Schiltz, Lilia Pino, Sarah Ball, Evelyn Duffy, Mary McCormack, Brant J. Oliver, Angela Patterson, Leslie Pelton, Mary A. Dolansky
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the implementation of the age-friendly health systems (AFHS) 4Ms Framework, an evidence-based framework to assess and act on "What Matters, Medication, Mentation and Mobility to deliver Age-Friendly health care for patients 65 and older", to achieve the Institute for Health care Improvement (IHI) Committed to Care Excellence recognition in a convenient care health system and test two novel implementation strategies. SETTING: The study was conducted in over 1100 convenient care clinics in 35 states and DC. MinuteClinics are located in community-based retail pharmacies in rural, suburban, and urban areas and staffed with approximately 3300 nurse practitioners and physician associates. DESIGN: In Year 1, the project used a quality improvement design, and in Year 2, a quasi-experimental implementation research design to pilot two strategies at the provider level (Virtual Clinic and Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA)). Statistical process control charts were used to assess changes in 4Ms documentation over time. Mixed-effects Poisson regression was used to assess the effectiveness of the pilot studies. DATA COLLECTION: The electronic health record (EHR) was enhanced to capture documentation of the AFHS 4Ms assessments and actions. A learning platform was created to teach and evaluate provider 4Ms competency, and the two data sources were merged into a registry. A formative evaluation was conducted using Tableau and reporting dashboards. FINDINGS: After 18 months and the implementation of 20 strategies to improve the uptake of the 4Ms, MinuteClinic achieved the IHI Committed to Care Excellence recognition. A significant increase over time in the reliable delivery of all 4Ms and each M component individually was found. For the research, there were significant improvements in the mean number of Ms delivered per visit (M-Score) in the Virtual Clinic (Incident Rate Ratio [IRR]: 2.47, p = 0.001) and PDSA (IRR: 3.08, p = 0.002) strategy intervention groups when compared to controls. CONCLUSIONS: Application of quality improvement and implementation methodologies contributed to the success of implementing age-friendly 4Ms evidence-based practice.