Improving the quality of workers' compensation health care delivery: the Washington State Occupational Health Services Project.

Thomas M. Wickizer, Gary M. Franklin, Roy Plaeger-Brockway, Robert Mootz
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The Managed Care Pilot Project, a delivery system intervention, focused on making changes in how care is organized and delivered to injured workers. That project demonstrated robust improvements in disability reduction; however, worker satisfaction suffered. Our current quality improvement initiative, developed through the Occupational Health Services Project, synthesizes what was learned from the MCP and other pilot studies to make delivery system improvements. This initiative seeks to develop provider incentives and clinical management processes that will improve outcomes and reduce the burden of disability on injured workers. Fundamental to this approach are simultaneously preserving workers' right to choose their own physician and maintaining flexibility in the provision of individualized care based on clinical need and progress. The OHS project then will be a \"real world\" test to determine if aligning provider incentives and giving physicians the tools they need to optimize occupational health delivery can demonstrate sustainable reduction in disability and improvements in patient and employer satisfaction. Critical to the success of this initiative will be our ability to: (1) enhance the occupational health care management skills and expertise of physicians who treat injured workers by establishing community-based Centers of Occupational Health and Education; (2) design feasible methods of monitoring patient outcomes and satisfaction with the centers and with the providers working with them in order to assess their effectiveness and value; (3) establish incentives for improved outcomes and worker and employer satisfaction through formal agreements with the centers and providers; and (4) develop quality indicators for the three targeted conditions (low back sprain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and fractures) that serve as the basis for both quality improvement processes and performance-based contracting. What lessons or insights does our experience offer thus far? The primary lesson is the importance of making effective partnerships and collaborations. Our policy and research activities have benefited significantly from the positive relationship the DLI established with the practice community through the Washington State Medical and Chiropractic Associations and from the DLI's close association with the Healthcare Subcommittee of the Workers' Compensation Advisory Committee. This committee is established by state regulation and serves as a forum for dialogue between the committee and the employer and labor communities. Our experience thus underscores the importance of establishing broad-based support for delivery system innovations. Our research activities have also benefited from the close collaboration between DLI program staff and UW health services researchers. The DLI staff brought important program and policy experience, along with an appreciation of the context and environment within which the research, policy, and R&D activities were conducted. The UW research team brought scientific rigor and methodological expertise to the design and implementation of the research and policy activities. In Washington State, the DLI represents a \"single payer\" for the purposes of workers' compensation. As discussed earlier, Washington State, along with five other states, has a state-fund system that requires all employers that are not self-insured to purchase workers' compensation insurance through the state fund. No matter what one feels about the merits or drawbacks of a single-payer system of health care financing, the fact is that such a system creates important opportunities for policy initiatives and for research and evaluation. Our ability to access population-based data on injured workers and to develop policy initiatives through innovation and pilot testing to assess whether proposed changes are really improvements has been critical. Understanding what works within the constraints and complexities of the system on a small scale is critical in order to bring forth policy and processes that will be of value systemwide. Finally, we note that general medical care faces many of the same quality-related problems and challenges as occupational health care. Medical care for chronic diseases, such as diabetes, is often fragmented and uncoordinated. 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引用次数: 72

Abstract

This article has summarized research and policy activities undertaken in Washington State over the past several years to identify the key problems that result in poor quality and excessive disability among injured workers, and the types of system and delivery changes that could best address these problems in order to improve the quality of occupational health care provided through the workers' compensation system. Our investigations have consistently pointed to the lack of coordination and integration of occupational health services as having major adverse effects on quality and health outcomes for workers' compensation. The Managed Care Pilot Project, a delivery system intervention, focused on making changes in how care is organized and delivered to injured workers. That project demonstrated robust improvements in disability reduction; however, worker satisfaction suffered. Our current quality improvement initiative, developed through the Occupational Health Services Project, synthesizes what was learned from the MCP and other pilot studies to make delivery system improvements. This initiative seeks to develop provider incentives and clinical management processes that will improve outcomes and reduce the burden of disability on injured workers. Fundamental to this approach are simultaneously preserving workers' right to choose their own physician and maintaining flexibility in the provision of individualized care based on clinical need and progress. The OHS project then will be a "real world" test to determine if aligning provider incentives and giving physicians the tools they need to optimize occupational health delivery can demonstrate sustainable reduction in disability and improvements in patient and employer satisfaction. Critical to the success of this initiative will be our ability to: (1) enhance the occupational health care management skills and expertise of physicians who treat injured workers by establishing community-based Centers of Occupational Health and Education; (2) design feasible methods of monitoring patient outcomes and satisfaction with the centers and with the providers working with them in order to assess their effectiveness and value; (3) establish incentives for improved outcomes and worker and employer satisfaction through formal agreements with the centers and providers; and (4) develop quality indicators for the three targeted conditions (low back sprain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and fractures) that serve as the basis for both quality improvement processes and performance-based contracting. What lessons or insights does our experience offer thus far? The primary lesson is the importance of making effective partnerships and collaborations. Our policy and research activities have benefited significantly from the positive relationship the DLI established with the practice community through the Washington State Medical and Chiropractic Associations and from the DLI's close association with the Healthcare Subcommittee of the Workers' Compensation Advisory Committee. This committee is established by state regulation and serves as a forum for dialogue between the committee and the employer and labor communities. Our experience thus underscores the importance of establishing broad-based support for delivery system innovations. Our research activities have also benefited from the close collaboration between DLI program staff and UW health services researchers. The DLI staff brought important program and policy experience, along with an appreciation of the context and environment within which the research, policy, and R&D activities were conducted. The UW research team brought scientific rigor and methodological expertise to the design and implementation of the research and policy activities. In Washington State, the DLI represents a "single payer" for the purposes of workers' compensation. As discussed earlier, Washington State, along with five other states, has a state-fund system that requires all employers that are not self-insured to purchase workers' compensation insurance through the state fund. No matter what one feels about the merits or drawbacks of a single-payer system of health care financing, the fact is that such a system creates important opportunities for policy initiatives and for research and evaluation. Our ability to access population-based data on injured workers and to develop policy initiatives through innovation and pilot testing to assess whether proposed changes are really improvements has been critical. Understanding what works within the constraints and complexities of the system on a small scale is critical in order to bring forth policy and processes that will be of value systemwide. Finally, we note that general medical care faces many of the same quality-related problems and challenges as occupational health care. Medical care for chronic diseases, such as diabetes, is often fragmented and uncoordinated. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
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提高工人补偿保健服务的质量:华盛顿州职业保健服务项目。
本文总结了过去几年在华盛顿州开展的研究和政策活动,以确定导致受伤工人质量差和过度残疾的关键问题,以及可以最好地解决这些问题的系统和交付变化的类型,以便通过工人补偿系统提高职业卫生保健的质量。我们的调查一致指出,职业卫生服务缺乏协调和整合,对工人赔偿的质量和健康结果产生了重大不利影响。管理式护理试点项目是一项提供系统干预措施,其重点是改变如何组织和向受伤工人提供护理。该项目显示了在减少残疾方面的有力改进;然而,员工的满意度受到了影响。我们目前透过职业健康服务计划发展的质素改善计划,综合了从MCP和其他试点研究中学到的知识,以改善服务系统。该倡议旨在制定提供者激励措施和临床管理流程,以改善结果并减轻受伤工人的残疾负担。这一方法的基础是同时保护工人选择自己医生的权利,并根据临床需要和进展保持提供个性化护理的灵活性。OHS项目将成为一个“现实世界”的测试,以确定协调提供者的激励措施,并为医生提供优化职业健康服务所需的工具,是否可以证明可持续地减少残疾,提高患者和雇主满意度。这一举措取得成功的关键是我们能够:(1)通过建立以社区为基础的职业健康和教育中心,提高治疗受伤工人的医生的职业保健管理技能和专业知识;(2)设计可行的方法来监测患者的结果和对中心的满意度以及对与之合作的提供者的满意度,以评估其有效性和价值;(3)通过与培训中心和供应商签订正式协议,建立激励机制,以提高成果和员工及雇主满意度;(4)为三种目标情况(腰扭伤、腕管综合征和骨折)制定质量指标,作为质量改进流程和基于绩效的合同的基础。到目前为止,我们的经验提供了什么教训或见解?主要的教训是建立有效的伙伴关系和合作的重要性。我们的政策和研究活动大大受益于DLI通过华盛顿州医学和脊椎按摩协会与实践社区建立的积极关系,以及DLI与工人赔偿咨询委员会医疗保健小组委员会的密切联系。该委员会是根据国家规定设立的,作为委员会与雇主和劳工团体之间对话的论坛。因此,我们的经验强调了为交付系统创新建立广泛支持的重要性。我们的研究活动也得益于DLI项目工作人员和威斯康星大学卫生服务研究人员之间的密切合作。DLI的工作人员带来了重要的项目和政策经验,以及对开展研究、政策和研发活动的背景和环境的理解。华盛顿大学的研究团队为研究和政策活动的设计和实施带来了科学的严谨性和方法上的专业知识。在华盛顿州,DLI代表工人赔偿的“单一付款人”。如前所述,华盛顿州和其他五个州都有一个州基金制度,要求所有没有自行投保的雇主通过州基金购买工人赔偿保险。无论人们对单一付款人卫生保健筹资系统的优点或缺点有何看法,事实是,这种系统为政策倡议以及研究和评估创造了重要机会。我们有能力获取基于人群的受伤工人数据,并通过创新和试点测试制定政策举措,以评估拟议的变化是否真的有所改善,这一点至关重要。了解在小范围内系统的约束和复杂性中的工作是至关重要的,以便提出将在系统范围内具有价值的政策和过程。最后,我们注意到,普通医疗保健面临着许多与职业卫生保健相同的质量问题和挑战。慢性疾病(如糖尿病)的医疗保健往往是支离破碎和不协调的。(抽象截断)
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