Entries in patient ehealth engagement (13)
Geisinger Takes Mobile Patient Engagement to the Next Level
Geisinger has been investing in mobile technologies to engage patients and their families in their care since 2011. In my blog post last year, I shared Geisinger’s texting programs, mobile data capture and experiences with their first mobile app to support Cardiac Rehab.
Geisinger continues to explore new technologies to involve patients and to improve the patient and physician interaction. “Mobile apps are just another way to drive patient engagement. We think we will have better adoption by patients if we use technology that they have already adopted in their lives”, explains Chanin Wendling, Director, eHealth, Geisinger Health System. “Our goals are to improve patient outcomes and reduce costs. We pursue patient engagement because of studies from folks like Hibbard & Greene 2013 and Veroff & Wennberg 2013 that show that engaged patients have better outcomes at lower costs. We want to provide patients with tools that help them understand their condition and follow their care plans so they can stay as healthy as possible.”
Piloting Mobile App Supporting Bariatric Surgery
Geisinger began piloting their second mobile app Get~2~Goal in September, 2012 to help manage patients’ surgical weight loss expectation and provide a journal for tracking weight loss after the surgery. The Get~2~Goal app presents the patient with personalized weight management goals using her own entered data (e.g. age, weight, height). She can monitor her weight loss towards that goal and see how she is doing compared with other patients like her.
The app was developed by Geisinger’s Obesity Institute in collaboration with Bucknell University’s computer science staff and students.
Patients have shared positive comments including:
“Great App! Surgery on Tuesday, so this will be a great motivator”
“I like it. It's very helpful and lets you know whether you're on the right track or not weight wise. So far I'm doing above average. Woo hoo to us!”
The clinical sponsor for the Get~2~Goal project was Dr. Christopher Still, Director of Geisinger Obesity Institute and Medical Director for the Center for Nutrition & Weight Management. He uses the app when discussing bariatric surgery with his patients and, recommends that they download it to their mobile devices. Dr. Still has observed an improved patient/physician interaction when a patient sets realistic weight loss expectations with the guidance of the clinician. “This app allows patients and their physicians to discuss patient specific outcomes regarding gastric bypass surgery. It is important for both the patient and their physician to have real expectations and assess the risk/ benefit of the procedure.”
Building Mobile Apps Ourselves
In addition to experimenting with Cardiac Rehab and Get~2~Goal apps, Geisinger wants to expand into apps for different chronic conditions and set out to research the market. “We were disappointed with what we found. Most vendors had apps focused only on one chronic condition. Although vendors had plans to expand into other chronic conditions, we had a hard time picking a reasonable partner based on their stated direction”, Wendling explains.
Wendling feels the mobile health app market is still in the early stages. She explains that vendors are approaching her organization with a business model that just doesn’t scale. “If a vendor charges us a rate of $10+ per member per month, how do we make that work for patients with multiple conditions? We have over 75,000 patients with hypertension and 30,000+ with asthma. Although the app will not be appropriate for all of these patients, the costs add up rather quickly.”
After evaluating many mobile apps, Wendling points out that the patient experience is not thought through. She has asked vendors about how patients can personalize their app. “I may be a patient who works night hours so why shouldn’t I be able to set the time of the reminders to fit my schedule? Also, why can’t I select the method of receiving the reminders, through email or text messages”, adds Wendling.
The final reason that Geisinger has decided to build mobile apps internally is because integration is important. “We’ve found that many solutions do not integrate with our EMR which is essential since we need to incorporate the patient information into our clinical workflow” Wendling explains. “Although it is not unusual that the early innovated apps do not integrate with the EMR, vendors do recognize that they need to get there. So any app we purchase, we would most likely have to do the integration ourselves anyway. We haven’t made any decisions that we will always develop our own apps. If we see something out in the marketplace that works and we have the budget, we will go for it. We just may need to wait a little longer until the marketplace matures.”
Mobile App Development Journey
As their first venture into internal mobile app development, Geisinger selected a simple procedure and defined key capabilities which are replicable across more complex procedures. With the new Colonoscopy mobile app scheduled to be launched next month, patients can prepare for their procedure through:
- Education: explains what will happen during the procedure
- Shopping: lists can be created and transferred as a note to the mobile phone
- Reminders: for days before the procedure directing the patients to steps that need to be done
- Pictures: visual guides of their bowel movement during the preparation process
“Geisinger’s colonoscopy mobile app is unique among health care related apps in that it provides a personalized experience for the patient. From prep instructions based on scheduled appointment time, interactive ’am I ready for my procedure’ section to the ability to easily set reminders/alerts; this app takes advantage of a lot that mobile technology has to offer. As a gastroenterologist, my hope is that this app will allow patients to feel more empowered and in control of their bowel preparation; typically the most difficult part of the colonoscopy experience. We know that with improved prep comes better outcomes and thereby, over time, lives saved. I feel that modern health care needs to embrace mobile technology as a rapidly growing and exciting tool to improve patient care”, explains Dr. Amitpal S Johal, Director of Endoscopy, Geisinger Medical Center.
“We are looking into other surgical procedures which can use this same set of capabilities. One area that we are considering is Vascular surgeries since we work closely with our Vascular department at Geisinger”, shares Wendling.
Future Mobile Health Roadmap
As they look to the future, Geisinger is working on enhancing current mobile apps and is exploring the use of mobile to support patient care before, during and after a hospital visit.
The next version of the Get~2~Goal app is under development. Geisinger is improving the patient experience through a better user navigation, the capability for patients to enter their own weight loss goals, and the addition of recently developed calculations for other bariatric surgery outcomes (i.e. likelihood for remission of diabetes).
Geisinger is also looking into ways that mobile devices and apps can help patients pre, during and post hospital stay. They are starting with their Janet Weis Children’s Hospital which treats kids with complex conditions such as cancer, heart or neurological issues. Geisinger understands that being in the hospital is scary for the child and their family. “With mobile apps, children and their parents will be able to prepare for the surgery, use an iPad during their hospital visit to capture pain levels and then track their recovery at home”, describes Wendling.
In the future, Geisinger is planning for a personalized patient experience. “Our dream is to be tailored in our patient care. Given the patient’s profile, s/he will have technology options and tools to gather preferences and schedules to guide the care plan. We want to use this information to also match the appropriate intervention”, Wendling concludes.
University Hospitals’ Rainbow Care Connection Engages Pediatric Patients & Family Caregivers
In January 2013, University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital launched the Rainbow Care Connection, a pediatric accountable care organization (ACO) with a $12.7 million CMS innovation grant to support children in Northeast Ohio, a third are enrolled in Medicaid. This innovative ACO has developed several successful mobile health initiatives to drive care collaboration with patients as part of their Physician Extension Team. This blog focuses on two key mobile health initiatives; iPads Minis for children with complex chronic conditions and HealthSpotSM, a community- based telemedicine kiosk.
iPad Mini For Care Collaboration
“We wanted to help children with chronic medical conditions, especially those who have difficulty speaking or getting around. For children that cannot walk, it is challenging to get them to the office. By giving them an iPad Mini, these children are able to communicate with their care team including physicians, nurses, social workers and dieticians”, explains Dr. Richard Grossberg, Medical Director of University Hospitals Center for Comprehensive Care. “Our goal with this project is to reduce office and ER visits with this video connectivity.”
In partnership with UH’s Rainbow Care Connection, the Center for Comprehensive Care strives to pioneer innovative ways to support children with complex chronic conditions, which can often seem overwhelming from a family’s perspective. As medical care continues to grow more complex, healthcare professionals acknowledge that families may need support beyond the clinic and hospital walls in order to be successful.
Children with complex chronic conditions make up about 5% of children who access health care services but account for up to 50% of Medicaid dollars spent. “We were looking for an additional layer to outpatient care; providing families with an opportunity to manage less acute issues in the comfort of their own home”, Dr. Grossberg shares. “Launched in December 2013, we felt that video calls would be the most innovative and cost effective solution to accomplish this and have currently distributed 10 iPad mini devices to families.”
How do video calls work? A family uses their iPad mini to conduct a “video call” with the office. During their telemedicine visit, a Comprehensive Care nurse helps the family triage what is happening and can resolve or escalate care to a physician/nurse practitioner or acute care setting when needed. Additional applications of the video call are being trialed including conducting nutritional counseling and education by UH’s Comprehensive Care dietitians and therapeutic counseling completed by their Comprehensive Care social workers.
After the video call, the visit summary is documented and sent to the patient’s PCP. If a video call is escalated to include an ED or hospitalization, the UH acute care team has full electronic access to all of the video calls and assessment notes. Having the necessary tools to help guide a family though those moments when their child’s complex conditions go awry and help them overcome barriers to care is critical to helping families receive better care, achieve better health and gain a healthcare partner to share in their patient experiences.
HealthSpotSM Station
UH’s Rainbow Care Connection aims to reduce ER costs by finding new ways to support patients who go the ER with minor medical problems.
“Since we know that 70% of Medicaid patients in the ER can be managed in a less acute setting, we were looking for an alternative to provide access to care after hours. We wanted to test offering a solution in a community setting to see if this population would feel more comfortable getting after hours care in their own neighborhood rather than from a medical setting. We felt that telemedicine would be the most cost effective solution to accomplish this”, shares Dr. Andrew Hertz, Medical Director of University Hospitals Rainbow Care Connection. We had already piloted a HealthSpotSM kiosk running in our clinic and were ready to place a kiosk into a community setting”, Dr. Hertz explains.
“We decided on the HealthSpotSM kiosk vs other telemedicine units because of the incredible patient experience provided by the HealthSpotSM unit, including diagnostic equipment and the ability to transmit real-time vital signs and physical images.” Dr. Hertz and his team thought carefully about where to place the kiosk. “We started with a zip code analysis of patients coming into our ER to select potential locations and met with Community Neighborhood Association Leaders to discuss options. We chose the Friendly Inn Settlement (community building) in Cleveland and launched the program in October 2013.”
How does the HealthSpotSM kiosk work? A patient and their family members step into the fully enclosed kiosk with a medical assistant who helps support them during their high-definition video conference visit with the doctor who may be located a few towns away. “Our doctor is on the computer screen, with video and audio connectivity to instruments (i.e. scale, blood pressure cuff, stethoscope, otoscope, thermometer, dermascope, pulse oximeter) and decides which tools to use and when by unlocking the door at the right time. It is cool when they unlock it. It is magical to see the door open and the instrument there. Our patients and their families see what physician is seeing as they use their different devices. It is a wonderful educational experience”, describes Dr. Hertz.
Patients use the HealthSpotSM kiosk to take care of minor ailments and get check-ups, as an alternative to an emergency room visit. A parent/guardian can accompany a child from age three to 18 during their visit to the UH Rainbow HealthSpotSM station during weekdays from 5:30 – 11 p.m. and weekends from 1 – 11 p.m.
Since the launch of HealthSpotSM, Dr. Hertz and his team at UH have met with over 50 patients, with problems including rashes, fever, strep throat and pink eye.
After the remote appointment with the doctor, the visit summary is documented and sent manually to the patient’s PCP. “Our physicians currently document the visit on paper and fax it to the PCP who may be outside of the UH network. Over 50% of these patients are not in UH Rainbow’s system so we share their information like a retail clinic. We have an interest in having HealthSpotSM integrate this visit information into our hospital EMR,” explains Dr. Hertz.
“Anytime we can spend time with a patient in their own environment, we can better understand and address their needs.” Dr. Hertz adds that by understanding why patients choose the ER as their source of care enables his team to identify opportunities to change that behavior and meet patient needs. Certainly, having after-hours access to quality care in the inner city is valued by patients since the ER is often their only after-hours option.
Patients and family caregivers have had a very positive experience with the telemedicine visit within UH’s HealthSpotSM kiosk. 85% have indicated that if they did not have the HealthSpotSM visit, they would have gone to the ER. Over 90% would use it again. Here are some comments around value of the visit to them:
It's convenient and less time consuming.
I love the equipment and technology.
The one on one with the doctor.
That you get to see what's going on inside the little areas most doctors won't show you.
Close to home and speed of service.
Very helpful for my community.
Future Opportunities for UH Patient & Family Engagement
The team at the UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital Rainbow Care Connection is already planning ways to use the HealthSpotSM kiosk to bring care access to other patient populations. “Next we want to use telemedicine to enhance access to care in rural areas, where there are not a lot of specialists or after hours care options. We are planning to place a kiosk in a community building or a school”, Dr. Hertz adds.
In addition to expanding the HealthSpotSM kiosks, Dr. Hertz is interested in finding patient engagement tools that will help patients receive care through their phones to support the lower social economic population that tends to own mobile phones rather than computers. “No one has developed the mobile app for patients to receive care through smart phones which would enable a ‘meaningful clinical interaction’,” concludes Dr. Hertz.
Sharp Healthcare Uses Interactive Patient Care Technology to “Meaningfully” Engage Patients
Sharp HealthCare, a Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award winner, continues to provide a superior patient experience by investing in technologies to bring better care to patients and their families.
Last October, Sharp Memorial Hospital, a Sharp HealthCare hospital, began piloting GetWellNetwork's Interactive Patient WhiteBoard™ in their cardiology unit to communicate and collaborate with patients and their families about their care throughout their stay.
"Our goals for the pilot were to engage patients in their care, deliver information they need, help them understand their treatment plan, provide a way for them to interact with their care team and prepare for their discharge," explains Verna Sitzer, MN, RN, CNS, Manager, Nursing Innovation and Performance Excellence at Sharp Memorial Hospital.
Patients use the Whiteboard to learn about their care team, their day (i.e. goals, schedule, discharge activities) and participate in the personalized communication area to journal and share information. Patients use their Whiteboard to see tasks that need to be completed such as viewing educational videos that have been ordered and filling in a discharge planning questionnaire. A summary of the patient’s education activity and discharge information is accessible to the care team for review and follow up.
Sharp uses GetWellNetwork’s Interactive Patient Whiteboard to help care providers engage, educate and empower patients along the care continuum. This patient-centered platform, delivered across mobile devices, computers and televisions, enables Sharp to implement a new care delivery model called Interactive Patient Care (IPC). Based on the premise that a more engaged patient is a satisfied patient with better outcomes, GetWellNetwork’s IPC combines the tools, process and people to activate patients in their care, transform clinical practice and advance key performance measures.
Pilot Insights
During the Whiteboard pilot, the Sharp team learned about the importance of enabling better communication between the care providers and patients. "Our patients wanted to have critical information and to be able to write down questions for the care team for a more meaningful interaction. Knowing what to expect and when to expect it is important for patients so we made this a priority in the design of the display,” adds Sitzer
One of Sharp Healthcare's big accomplishments was to connect the Interactive Patient Care solution to their EMR to capture the patient's engagement and document progress towards their discharge education plan. “Having this connection was an essential condition for launching the technology throughout the healthcare system. Providers are able to integrate patient education into their daily workflow using the EMR for ordering education videos and obtaining results of the education”, explains Sitzer
Sharp Healthcare is in the process of rolling out the Interactive Patient Care solution to their other hospitals. Sharp Grossmont hospital implemented it early this year (February) and Sharp Mary Birch Hospital for Women and Newborns will begin this summer (July).
Sharp & Patient Engagement Framework
Last Fall, National eHealth Collaborative (NeHC) launched their Patient Engagement Framework. The Patient Engagement Framework is designed to guide providers along the path for meaningful use. Sharp Memorial Hospital has adopted this framework to further enhance the Interactive Patient Care Solution. Sitzer shares examples below and describes ways they are enabling patients to participate in the care process.
Stage 1: Inform Me
'We use the Interactive Patient Care solution to send the patient messages about what we need them to do during their stay so they can play an active role in their recovery. We have them watch a video on hospital safety when they are admitted and recommend other relevant educational information. We ask them if they would like to take a self-assessment of their risk for falling and provide them with a video about fall prevention”, describes Sitzer.
Stage 2: Engage Me
Sharp Healthcare puts their patients in the driver’s seat and gives them the option of when they would like to be engaged. Sharp has devised pathways to deliver and gather information from the patient. The 'discharge pathway' presents a set of questions when the patient is preparing for home to determine if there are obstacles that need to be addressed and confirm that all educational information has been viewed and understood. "Our motto is 'when the learner is ready, the teacher will appear’," shares Sitzer. "We want to give our patients control over their recovery."
Stage 3: Empower Me
By giving patients the information that they need, Sharp empowers them to participate in the care planning process, enabling them to ask questions of and provide answers to the care team. For example, patients are able to respond to assessment questions, message providers or services about their needs, or respond to focused surveys on their care or service experience. Their responses notify a provider to deliver patient and family- centered care.
Stage 4: Partner with Me
Care pathways can be tailored to meet various health conditions such as heart failure management. These modules rely on the patient partnering with providers to meet specific goals. For example within the heart failure module, patients must complete certain videos and comprehension questions to move to the next module or phase so that they get the necessary education and preparation for discharge.
Stage 5: Support my e-Community
The Sharp Healthcare team is planning to use the Interactive Patient Care system to support patients after they leave the hospital. "We are working on ways we can use this system to provide the patient with personalized education information when home through online and mobile channels," explains Sitzer.
In the future, Sharp Healthcare would like to tie in health-related devices to gather and monitor information about the patient to provide support or to intervene when needed.
Mayo Pilots myCare iPad App for Cardiac Surgery Support, Engaging Patients & Families
Central Indiana Beacon Community’s Pilots Leverage Remote Monitoring Technologies to Successfully Engage Patients