Jennifer Biggs1, Nnamdi Njoku2, Kaitlyn Kurtz1,3, Ayan Omar1,4. 1. St. Catherine University, St. Paul, MN, USA. 2. The People's Center Clinics and Services, Minneapolis, MN, USA. 3. M Health Fairview, Minneapolis, MN, USA. 4. Ramsey County Public Health Department, St. Paul, MN, USA.
Abstract
Introduction: Missed appointments are a problem for health care systems, causing lost revenue and concern for poor health outcomes. This is particularly true at Community Health Centers (CHCs), where clients may already face substantial barriers to optimal care and outcomes. Identified solutions to this problem are limited, and often focus on reminder calls and messages to clients. Methods: This project utilized a unique academic/CHC collaboration to investigate and initiate solutions to their high missed appointment rates. Client phone calls to determine clinic specific needs, monthly team meetings to brainstorm and choose initiatives, engaging stake holders, and phased implementation were the tools used to address the high missed appointment rates within the limitations of the clinic resources available. Results: Within one quarter, missed appointment rates at the clinic dropped by 6%-17% for different appointment types. Conclusion: While the project was interrupted due to the pandemic, early outcomes were promising and the model may be helpful to other CHCs with similar concerns.
Introduction: Missed appointments are a problem for health care systems, causing lost revenue and concern for poor health outcomes. This is particularly true at Community Health Centers (CHCs), where clients may already face substantial barriers to optimal care and outcomes. Identified solutions to this problem are limited, and often focus on reminder calls and messages to clients. Methods: This project utilized a unique academic/CHC collaboration to investigate and initiate solutions to their high missed appointment rates. Client phone calls to determine clinic specific needs, monthly team meetings to brainstorm and choose initiatives, engaging stake holders, and phased implementation were the tools used to address the high missed appointment rates within the limitations of the clinic resources available. Results: Within one quarter, missed appointment rates at the clinic dropped by 6%-17% for different appointment types. Conclusion: While the project was interrupted due to the pandemic, early outcomes were promising and the model may be helpful to other CHCs with similar concerns.
Entities:
Keywords:
access to health care; college/community partnership; community based participatory research; community organization
Community Health Centers (CHCs) serve as the primary medical home for more than 20 million
people, many low-income and under-insured, across both rural and urban communities in the US.
Missed appointments are a problem that plague CHCs across the country, resulting in
suboptimal utilization of valuable client appointments, lost revenue for the clinic, and
risk for poorer health outcomes.Concern regarding missed appointments is not a new phenomenon and the reasons for missed
appointments are recognized as complex and multifactorial. The literature indicates that
reasons for missing an appointment are frequently related to forgetting, family commitments,
or transportation issues.
However, individual sociodemographic factors such as age, low socioeconomic status,
health status, and type of health insurance appear to be risk factors for consistently
missing appointments, while aspects related to client/clinic interaction are also
important.[2,4]While efforts to address the issue of missed appointments are extensive, solutions have
been identified with only limited success. Ride shares or other forms of free transportation
options to clinic appointments have not consistently demonstrated improvement in missed
appointment rates.[5,6] Appointment reminders such
as text messages and/or phone call reminders appear to be the most common initiatives and
can improve adherence to scheduled appointments.
While appointment reminders can have wide reach and positive impact, they do not
account for the other contextual factors that can impact appointment adherence such as
health status, age, need for child care, and interaction/relationship with clinic staff.This report will highlight the process, initial outcomes, and challenges of a quality
improvement project designed to reduce missed appointments.
Methods
The CHC is situated in an urban location where it serves a large population of East African
immigrants. There are nine primary health providers, three behavioral health providers, and
four dental providers. In 2020, there were 11 620 clients served at the clinic with 75% of
those being adults between the ages of 18 and 64. Seventy percent of clients are identified
as racial or ethnic minorities. Many clients have low-income, with 43% at or below 100% of
federal poverty guideline and 75% at or below 200% of federal poverty guideline.
Twenty-eight percent of the population served in 2020 was uninsured. The clinic offers a
sliding fee scale for its services, which include medical, mental health and dental care, as
well as enabling services such as case management, health risk reduction, and outreach.
Noting a high missed appointment rate despite some implementation of reminder calls and text
messaging, the CHC determined a need for a comprehensive approach to address the problem.
This project was initiated by an outgoing board member of the CHC with support of clinic
administration and medical staff. Additionally, a local university, with a long history of
partnership with the clinic, supported the work with a grant-funded faculty and student
team. IRB exemption was granted through St. Catherine University as a quality improvement
project.
Phase I: Review of Clinic Logistics and Client Needs
In order to best understand the particular needs of the CHC, clients who missed
appointments were called and interviewed and logistical information from their charts was
reviewed.Two students were trained to call clinic clients who had missed an appointment the day
prior and ask why they missed their appointment. One caller was fluent in Somali and was
able to speak to clients in their primary language as needed. 362 calls were made, with
144 contacts made. Non-contacts included disconnected numbers or unanswered phone calls.
The most common reasons given for missing an appointment were: forgetting, no reminder
call/message, no insurance, or the interpreter told them they weren’t available. Few
people noted transportation or childcare issues.Schedule review of missed appointments revealed that ancillary (ie, mammography, physical
therapy) or routine appointments (ie, follow-up or well-visits) were more likely to be
missed than appointments for a specific or acute illness concern. Early morning and early
afternoon appointments were also more likely to be missed. Most clients missed less than
25% of their appointments. But clients who missed appointments consistently often missed
75% of their appointments. Chart reviews corroborated that those who had recently lost
insurance coverage and those with miscommunication through interpreters frequently didn’t
come to scheduled appointments.
Phase II: Possible Solutions
Collaborative meetings with the project initiator, clinic medical director, clinic staff,
and faculty/student teams occurred monthly from October 2019 to March 2020.In December of 2019, clinic interpreters were invited to a lunch session to share their
ideas on how to reduce missed appointments for their clients. Their suggestions focused on
increasing their access to patients prior to the scheduled appointments. Specifically,
they requested patient contact information be sent to interpreters with notification of
appointment and the ability to modify client appointments after communication. This would
allow them clear and direct communication with the client and the insight to know if an
appointment time would work well for them. Finally, they encouraged medical providers to
develop deeper relationships with time for clients to share their stories. They
exemplified one provider at the clinic who had strong relationships with non-English
speaking clients who rarely had missed appointments on her schedule.In addition to suggestions from the interpreters, the group brainstormed possible
solutions based on the client phone calls, as well as from a literature review of best
practices conducted by the students. Changes to clinic processes were suggested and agreed
upon by the group. Changes that were initiated immediately included: sending client
information to interpreters to allow communication prior to visit, allowing interpreters
to modify appointments with patient consent, and scheduling follow up appointments
in-visit by Medical Assistants with providers present for specific patient diagnostic
groups (hypertension and diabetes) to emphasize the importance of chronic disease
management.Changes that were planned for the future with improved staffing included re-instating
same day reminder calls, use of a reminder call script to target clients with high rates
of missed appointments, and creating a process to proactively assist clients with noted
insurance coverage lapse.
Results
Although many initiatives were only in the early stages at the end of 2019, initial
outcomes were positive. From the beginning of 2019 to the end of the year, the no-show rate
for appointments dropped from 23% to 17% (medical appointments), 26% to 19% (dental
appointments), and 35% to 20% (behavioral health appointments).While some initiatives were adopted immediately, most were planned for staged
implementation due to feasibility with staffing. A second round of client calls to
investigate missed appointments was planned for March 2020 to determine if implemented
changes had made an impact. These calls and further implementation were halted with the
onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Discussion and Conclusions
Improvements were noted in missed appointments during the final quarter of 2019 with only
modest process changes. The literature indicates that the missed appointment rate may drop
moderately with targeted interventions.
This is consistent with the early results of this project. Unfortunately, the
pandemic interrupted the final phases of this work.As evidenced by client phone calls and interpreter input, missed appointments at this
clinic frequently centered around miscommunication with clients, particularly those who
required interpreter services. Additionally, clients were more likely to miss follow-up
appointments rather than those for an acute medical need, perhaps further demonstrating a
miscommunication and misunderstanding on the importance of follow-up for chronic disease
management. This is substantiated by the literature which suggests lower health literacy is
associated with clients being less likely to present for care, especially early in the
illness, as well as other poorer health outcomes.There is limited literature that focuses on the client perspective regarding why they miss
appointments. One study from an urban family practice clinic in Nebraska demonstrated that
clients felt fear and anxiety about appointments, did not feel respected by providers and
didn’t understand the scheduling system.
These issues are alluded in this project to by the session with clinic interpreters
who advised increased time and energy be spent with clients for them to feel heard and to
develop meaningful relationships with providers. These outcomes suggest a need to
restructure the approach to health care visits to improve both client/provider relationships
and health literacy in order address the issue of missed appointments in a more durable and
sustainable manner. Future studies could focus on such a systems-change approach with
examination of both the short and long term impact on missed appointments.There are a number of limitations of this project. Because the project was ended
prematurely, follow up phone calls to clients were not implemented. This would have provided
the necessary client perspective on the impact of the initiatives. Additionally, long term
outcomes of the initiatives could not be collected, due to resources being shifted to
COVID-19 responses and staffing changes. As many clinics experience and address the issue of
missed appointments, the strength of this project was not so much about the interventions
chosen, but the approach taken to determine the ideal initiatives to address missed
appointments for the clients at this clinic.This project was approached by a unique combination of community, academic, and clinic
partners, all with the goal to improve the client experience and outcomes at the CHC. The
contribution of many perspectives led to rich discussion and generated creative ideas for
the clinic to adopt. This approach, as much as the interventions, can be used as a playbook
for other CHCs to use in addressing the complex issue of missed appointments or similar
challenges.
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