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ABSTRACT: Background
Patient-to-physician continuity is the result of coordinated and consistent care. Optimizing continuity can be a challenge in medical training without impacting work hours. We sought to use quality improvement science during graduate medical training to increase outpatient continuity.Objective
The primary goal was to improve outpatient continuity in our pediatric cardiology fellowship, without increasing trainee clinic hours, from a baseline of 38% to ?70% within 18 months.Methods
Our fellowship conducted a quality improvement project across 3 years to improve continuity-of-care in our outpatient clinic using the Institute for Healthcare Improvement model for improvement. We conducted Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles and completed a key driver diagram using a multidisciplinary team. We defined continuity as a patient being evaluated by their primary fellow or a different fellow that was provided a handoff. The outcome measure was the continuity rate over 2-week periods.Results
Continuity improved from 38% to ?80%. The improvement resulted from a series of interventions, including creating a handoff system among fellows, identifying follow-up patients in advance, and communicating this information to the clinic team. Although we anticipated a decrease when new fellows were incorporated, continuity continued to be ?70%. This system retained continuity above 90% one year after completion of the project.Conclusions
Our fellowship created a system change to improve primary patient-to-fellow continuity care rates. We achieved sustainable continuity by working with a multidisciplinary team without altering staffing, infrastructure, or fellow work hours. This project engaged trainees to address the practical application of quality improvement methodology to solve a common clinical problem.
SUBMITTER: Srinivasan R
PROVIDER: S-EPMC7297393 | biostudies-literature | 2020 May-Jun
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Srinivasan Ranjini R Sambatakos Peter P Lane Mariellen M Krishnan Usha U Weller Rachel R Flyer Jonathan N JN Robinson Keith K Glickstein Julie J
Pediatric quality & safety 20200520 3
<h4>Background</h4>Patient-to-physician continuity is the result of coordinated and consistent care. Optimizing continuity can be a challenge in medical training without impacting work hours. We sought to use quality improvement science during graduate medical training to increase outpatient continuity.<h4>Objective</h4>The primary goal was to improve outpatient continuity in our pediatric cardiology fellowship, without increasing trainee clinic hours, from a baseline of 38% to ≥70% within 18 mo ...[more]