| Literature DB >> 26568556 |
Claire E Barber1, Jatin N Patel2, Linda Woodhouse3, Christopher Smith4, Stephen Weiss5, Joanne Homik6,7, Sharon LeClercq8, Dianne Mosher9,10, Tanya Christiansen11, Jane Squire Howden12,13, Tracy Wasylak14, James Greenwood-Lee15, Andrea Emrick16, Esther Suter17, Barb Kathol18, Dmitry Khodyakov19, Sean Grant20, Denise Campbell-Scherer21, Leah Phillips22, Jennifer Hendricks23, Deborah A Marshall24.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Centralized intake is integral to healthcare systems to support timely access to appropriate health services. The aim of this study was to develop key performance indicators (KPIs) to evaluate centralized intake systems for patients with osteoarthritis (OA) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26568556 PMCID: PMC4644283 DOI: 10.1186/s13075-015-0843-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Fig. 1Key performance indicator (KPI) development process. OA osteoarthritis, RA rheumatoid arthritis
Fig. 2Example of a patient flow diagram for patients with osteoarthritis (OA) and patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who are referred to centralized intake. Musculoskeletal (MSK) referral screening: clerical review of incoming referrals to quickly identify if referrals are complete, and which patients should be referred for a patient assessment to formally evaluate their MSK care needs. MSK referral triaging: review of screened referrals to establish urgency and prioritize patients for patient assessment based on disease and severity of symptoms. MSK Specialty Care: secondary care providers with MSK expertise, including specialists such as orthopaedic surgeons, rheumatologists, physiotherapists and nurses. MSK Specialist Care: subset of specialty care providers (i.e., specialized physicians, orthopaedic surgeons and rheumatologists). DMARD biologic and nonbiologic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug
Key performance indicators for musculoskeletal centralized intake
| Key performance indicator | Dimension of quality of care | Derived from existing measure | Included or removed after round 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Time from osteoarthritis referral receipt to referral completion for initially incomplete referrals | Accessibility, efficiency | New KPI | Included |
| 2. Time from rheumatoid arthritis referral receipt to referral completion for initially incomplete referrals | Accessibility, efficiency | New KPI | Included |
| 3. Percentage of osteoarthritis referrals received with complete information | Efficiency | Hip and Knee Replacement Measurement Frameworka,b | Included |
| 4. Percentage of rheumatoid arthritis referrals received with complete information | Efficiency | New KPI | Included |
| 5. Time from receipt of complete osteoarthritis referral to musculoskeletal appointment | Accessibility | Hip and Knee Replacement Measurement Frameworka,b | Included |
| 6. Waiting times for rheumatologist consultation for patients with new-onset rheumatoid arthritis | Accessibility | AAC Performance measures for IAc | Included |
| 7. Time to disease-modifying antirheumatic drug therapy for patients with new-onset rheumatoid arthritis | Accessibility, effectiveness | AAC Performance measures for IAc | Included |
| 8. Percentage of patients with new-onset rheumatoid arthritis with at least one visit to a rheumatologist in the first year of diagnosis | Accessibility | AAC Performance measures for IAc | Included |
| 9. Orthopaedic surgeons per 100,000 population | Accessibility | COAd,e, AAOSf, ACREUe,g | Removed |
| 10. Rheumatologists per 100,000 population | Accessibility | AAC Performance measures for IAc | Included |
| 11. Percentage of patients that receive information regarding resources and tools available for management while waiting for first musculoskeletal specialty contact | Appropriateness | Hip and Knee Replacement Measurement Frameworka,b | Included |
| 12. Percentage of osteoarthritis referrals scored using Western Canada Waiting List priority referral criteriah | Appropriateness | New KPI | Included |
| 13. Distribution of osteoarthritis referrals in each urgency category (as scored using the Western Canada Waiting List referral tool) | Appropriateness | New KPI | Included |
| 14. Percentage of osteoarthritis referrals triaged as highest urgency based on high Western Canada Waiting List priority criteria scores seen within Wait Time Alliance benchmarks | Appropriateness | New KPI | Included |
| 15. Percentage of rheumatoid arthritis referrals assessed using a priority tool | Appropriateness | New KPI | Removed |
| 16. Percentage of rheumatoid arthritis referrals categorized as early rheumatoid arthritis | Appropriateness | New KPI | Removed |
| 17. Waiting times for patients with established rheumatoid arthritis | Accessibility | New KPI | Included |
| 18. Percentage of rheumatoid arthritis patients treated with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug during the measurement year | Effectiveness, accessibility | AAC Performance measures for IAc | Included |
| 19. Percentage of referrals rejected or redirected when received at centralized intake | Appropriateness | New KPI | Included |
| 20. Percentage of musculoskeletal appointments completed as scheduled | Efficiency | Hip and Knee Replacement Measurement Frameworka,b | Included |
| 21. Percentage of specialist providers participating in centralized intake | Efficiency | New KPI | Included |
| 22. Number of referrals received through centralized intake | Efficiency | New KPI | Included |
| 23. Patient experience with centralized intake | Acceptability | AHRQi, NHSj, and Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (Ontario)k | Included |
| 24. Referring clinician experience with centralized intake | Acceptability | The Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (Ontario)k | Included |
| 25. Musculoskeletal specialty care provider experience with centralized intake | Acceptability | The Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (Ontario)k | Included |
| 26. Ratio of patient flow to estimated clinic capacity of osteoarthritis teams participating in centralized intake | Efficiency, accessibility | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| 27. Operating room time for arthroplasty surgeons in Alberta | Accessibility | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| 28. Ratio of patient flow to clinic capacity of rheumatoid arthritis teams participating in centralized intake | Efficiency, accessibility | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| 29. Administrative staff and allied health professional experience with centralized intake | Acceptability | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| 30. Agreement of centralized intake suspected diagnosis of severe osteoarthritis cases (e.g., patients who are candidates for hip or knee joint replacements) versus confirmed diagnosis of severe osteoarthritis | Appropriateness, effectiveness | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| 31. Agreement of centralized intake suspected diagnosis versus confirmed diagnosis for rheumatoid arthritis | Appropriateness, effectiveness | Developed during round 2 | N/A |
| Total number of candidate KPIs before round 2: 25 | Total number of candidate KPIs after round 2: 28 |
AAC Arthritis Alliance of Canada, IA Inflammatory Arthritis, AAOS American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, ACREU Arthritis Community Research and Evaluation Unit, AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, COA, Canadian Orthopaedic Association, NHS, National Health Service
aFrank et al. [27]
bMarshall et al. [39]
cBarber et al. [26]
dRumble and Kreder [40]
eBadley et al. [17]
fNatividad [41]
gCanizares et al. [42]
hThe Western Canada Waiting List (WCWL) Project has developed and validated a hip and knee replacement priority criteria tool to assess clinical urgency for hip and knee joint replacements in a standardized and reliable manner [43]. The hip and knee replacement priority criteria tool is a clinician-scored tool consisting of seven items: (1) pain on motion, (2) pain at rest, (3) ability to walk, (4) other functional limitations, (5) abnormal findings, (6) potential for progression of disease and (7) ability to work, give care to dependents and live independently. The urgency is determined through a point count scoring system and could be used to structure and manage waiting lists for hip and knee joint replacements [44]
iCamacho et al. [45]
jClinical Indicators Team [46]
kDeloitte & Touche LLP and affiliated entities [47]
Final round 3 voting on ten rheumatoid arthritis–specific key performance indicators for centralized intake
| Median (range) and percentage of participants voting ≥7 on 1–9 scale for each domain (n = 23 unless otherwise specified) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific validity | Face validity | Feasibility: information availability | Importance | Likelihood of use | |
| KPI 2: Time from RA referral receipt to referral completion for initially incomplete referrals | 7 (5–8), 61 % | 7 (6–8), 74 % | 8 (6–8), n = 22 (64 %) | 8 (7–8), 78 % | 7 (6–8), 65 % |
| KPI 4: Percentage of RA referrals received with complete information | 7 (7–8), 78 % | 8 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (59 %) | 8 (7–8), n = 22 (82 %) | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (68 %) |
| KPI 6: Waiting times for rheumatologist consultation for patients with new-onset rheumatoid arthritis | N/Aa | N/Aa | 8 (8–9), n = 21 (95 %) | 9 (8–9), n = 22 (100 %) | 9 (9–9), n = 22 (100 %) |
| KPI 7: Time to disease-modifying antirheumatic drug therapy for patients with new-onset RA | N/Aa | N/Aa | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (68 %) | 9 (8–9), 91 % | 9 (8–9), n = 22 (100 %) |
| KPI 8: Percentage of patients with new-onset RA with at least one visit to a rheumatologist in the first year of diagnosis | N/Aa | N/Aa | 7 (6–8), n = 21 (57 %) | 8 (7–9), 78 % | 8 (7–8), 83 % |
| KPI 10: Rheumatologists per 100,000 population | N/Aa | N/Aa | 7 (6–8), n = 21 (62 %) | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (59 %) | 7 (5–7), n = 21 (52 %) |
| KPI 17: Waiting times for patients with established RA | 8 (8–9), 96 % | 9 (8–9), 96 % | 8 (7–8), n = 22 (77 %) | 8 (8–9), 91 % | 8 (8–9), 96 % |
| KPI 18: Percentage of rheumatoid arthritis patients treated with a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug during the measurement year | N/Aa | N/Aa | 8 (6–9), 70 % | 8 (8–9), 83 % | 9 (8–9), 83 % |
| KPI 28: Ratio of patient flow to clinic capacity of RA teams participating in centralized intake | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (73 %) | 8 (7–8), n = 22 (82 %) | 7 (5–8), n = 22 (55 %) | 7 (7–8), 83 % | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (86 %) |
| KPI 31: Agreement of centralized intake suspected diagnosis versus confirmed diagnosis of RA | 8 (6–8), n = 21 (71 %) | 8 (6–8), 74 % | 7 (5–8), n = 22 (55 %) | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (86 %) | 8 (7–9), n = 21 (76 %) |
RA rheumatoid arthritis
aKey performance indicators (KPIs) 6, 7, 8, 10 and 18 were harmonized with the Arthritis Alliance of Canada performance measure set for inflammatory arthritis which used a similar process for development and scientific validity and face validity were not examined again in the present study
Final round 3 voting on nine osteoarthritis-specific key performance indicators for centralized intake
| Median (range) and percentage of participants voting ≥7 on 1–9 scale for each domain (n = 23 unless otherwise specified) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific validity | Face validity | Feasibility: information availability | Importance | Likelihood of use | |
| KPI 1: Time from OA referral receipt to referral completion for initially incomplete referrals | 7 (5–8), 65 % | 7 (6–8), 74 % | 8 (6–8), n = 22 (68 %) | 8 (7–8), 78 % | 7 (6–8), 74 % |
| KPI 3: Percentage of OA referrals received with complete information | 7 (6–8), 65 % | 8 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (73 %) | 7 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (64 %) |
| KPI 5: Time from receipt of complete OA referral to musculoskeletal appointment | 8 (8–9), 96 % | 9 (8–9), 100 % | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (86 %) | 9 (8–9), n = 22 (100 %) | 9 (8–9), n = 22 (95 %) |
| KPI 12: Percentage of OA referrals scored using Western Canada Waiting List priority referral criteria | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (73 %) | 6 (6–8), n = 22 (45 %) | 6 (5–7), n = 22 (45 %) | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (64 %) | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (59 %) |
| KPI 13: Distribution of OA referrals in each urgency category (as scored using the Western Canada Waiting List referral tool) | 7 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (6–8), 65 % | 6 (6–7), n = 22 (50 %) | 7 (6–8), 74 % | 7 (6–8), 61 % |
| KPI 14: Percentage of OA referrals triaged as highest urgency based on high Western Canada Waiting List priority criteria scores seen within Wait Time Alliance benchmarks | 8 (7–8), 96 % | 8 (7–8), 91 % | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (59 %) | 7 (7–8), n = 21 (95 %) | 8 (7–8), 87 % |
| KPI 26: Ratio of patient flow to estimated clinic capacity of OA teams participating in centralized intake | 7 (6–7), n = 22 (64 %) | 8 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (5–7), n = 22 (55 %) | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (82 %) | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (82 %) |
| KPI 27: Operating room time for arthroplasty surgeons in Alberta | 7 (6–8), n = 20 (55 %) | 7 (7–8), n = 22 (77 %) | 7 (7–8), n = 20 (75 %) | 7 (6–8), n = 21 (67 %) | 7 (5–8), n = 21 (67 %) |
| KPI 30: Agreement of centralized intake suspected diagnosis of severe OA cases (e.g., patients who are candidates for hip or knee joint replacements) versus confirmed diagnosis of severe OA | 8 (7–8), n = 21 (81 %) | 8 (7–8), n = 21 (90 %) | 7 (6–8), n = 19 (63 %) | 8 (8–9), n = 21 (95 %) | 8 (8–9), n = 19 (89 %) |
KPI key performance indicator, OA osteoarthritis
Final round 3 voting on nine key performance indicators for centralized intake applicable to rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis
| Median (range) and % of participants voting ≥7 on a 1–9 scale for each domain (n = 23 unless otherwise specified) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific validity | Face validity | Feasibility: information availability | Importance | Likelihood of use | |
| KPI 11: Percentage of patients who receive information regarding resources and tools available for management while waiting for first musculoskeletal specialty contact | 7 (7–8), 78 % | 7 (7–8), 91 % | 6 (4–6), n = 21 (24 %) | 7 (7–8), n = 22 (86 %) | 8 (7–8), n = 22 (77 %) |
| KPI 19: Percentage of referrals rejected or redirected when received at centralized intake | 7 (6–8), 74 % | 7 (6–8), 70 % | 7 (6–8), n = 21 (67 %) | 7 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (7–8), n = 22 (77 %) |
| KPI 20: Percentage of musculoskeletal appointments completed as scheduled | 7 (6–8), 65 % | 8 (7–8), 87 % | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (64 %) | 9 (8–9), n = 21 (81 %) | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (77 %) |
| KPI 21: Percentage of specialist providers participating in centralized intake | 7 (6–7), 70 % | 7 (7–8), 78 % | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (73 %) | 8 (7–8), 83 % | 7 (7–8), 83 % |
| KPI 22: Number of referrals received through centralized intake | 7 (7–8), 78 % | 8 (7–8), 87 % | 9 (7–9), n = 21 (81 %) | 9 (8–9), 100 % | 8 (7–9), n = 22 (95 %) |
| KPI 23: Patient experience with centralized intake | 7 (7–8), 87 % | 8 (8–9), 87 % | 7 (5–8), 65 % | 9 (8–9), n = 22 (95 %) | 9 (8–9), 87 % |
| KPI 24: Referring clinician’s experience with centralized intake | 7 (7–8), 78 % | 8 (7–8), 96 % | 5 (5–7), 32 % | 9 (8–9), 96 % | 9 (7–9), 96 % |
| KPI 25: Musculoskeletal specialty care provider experience with centralized intake | 7 (6–8), 70 % | 7 (7–8), 91 % | 6 (5–7), n = 22 (45 %) | 8 (7–9), 91 % | 8 (7–9), 96 % |
| KPI 29: Administrative staff and allied health professional experience with centralized intake | 7 (6–8), n = 22 (73 %) | 8 (7–8), 87 % | 7 (5–7), n = 22 (59 %) | 8 (7–9), 83 % | 8 (7–9), n = 21 (76 %) |
KPI key performance indicator