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Redesigning the care of fragility fracture patients to improve osteoporosis management: A health care improvement project

โœ Scribed by Harrington, J. Timothy ;Barash, Harvey L. ;Day, Sherry ;Lease, Joellen


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
93 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

To develop new processes that assure more reliable, populationโ€based care of fragility fracture patients.

Methods

A 4โ€year clinical improvement project was performed in a multispecialty, community practice health system using evidenceโ€based guidelines and rapid cycle process improvement methods (planโ€doโ€studyโ€act cycles).

Results

Prior to this project, appropriate osteoporosis care was provided to only 5% of our 1999 hip fracture patients. In 2001, primary physicians were provided prompts about appropriate care (cycle 1), which resulted in improved care for only 20% of patients. A process improvement pilot in 2002 (cycle 2) and full program implementation in 2003 (cycle 3) have assured osteoporosis care for all willing and able patients with any fragility fracture. Altogether, 58% of 2003 fragility fracture patients, including 46% of those with hip fracture, have had a bone measurement, have been assigned to osteoporosis care with their primary physician or a consultant, and are being monitored regularly. Only 19% refused osteoporosis care. Key process improvements have included using orthopedic billings to identify patients, referring patients directly from orthopedics to an osteoporosis care program, organizing care with a nurse manager and process management computer software, assigning patients to primary or consultative physician care based on disease severity, and monitoring adherence to therapy by telephone.

Conclusion

Reliable osteoporosis care is achievable by redesigning clinical processes. Performance data motivate physicians to reconsider traditional approaches. Improving the care of osteoporosis and other chronic diseases requires coordinated care across specialty boundaries and health system support.


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Successes and failures in improving oste
โœ Harrington, J. Timothy ;Deal, Chad L. ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2006 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 69 KB ๐Ÿ‘ 2 views

## Abstract ## Objective To improve osteoporosis diagnosis and treatment of fragility fracture patient populations because osteoporosis care is provided infrequently to those patients, leaving them vulnerable to further fractures and increasing debility. ## Methods Osteoporosis experts from 11 U