Events Calendar

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18th Annual Conference on Urology and Nephrological Disorders
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 18TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGICAL DISORDERS Urology 2019 is an integration of the science, theory and clinical knowledge for the purpose of [...]
2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD HEART RHYTHM CONFERENCE 2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference is among the World’s driving Scientific Conference to unite worldwide recognized scholastics in the [...]
Digital Health Forum 2019
ABOUT DIGITAL HEALTH FORUM 2019 Join us on 26-27 November in Berlin to discuss the power of AI and ML for healthcare, healthcare transformation by [...]
2nd Global Nursing Conference & Expo
ABOUT 2ND GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO Events Ocean extends an enthusiastic and sincere welcome to the 2nd GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO ’19. The [...]
International Conference on Obesity and Diet Imbalance 2019
2019-11-28 - 2019-11-29    
All Day
ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OBESITY AND DIET IMBALANCE 2019 Obesity Diet 2019 is a worldwide stage to examine and find out concerning Weight Management, Childhood [...]
40th SICOT Orthopaedic World Congresses
2019-12-04 - 2019-12-07    
All Day
With doctors attending from all over the world, it is fitting that this is taking place here, in a region that has served as a [...]
17th World Congress on Pediatrics and Neonatology
2019-12-04 - 2019-12-05    
All Day
Pediatrics 2019 welcomes attendees, presenters, and exhibitors from all over the world to Dubai. We are delighted to invite you all to attend and register [...]
6th Annual Gulf Obesity Surgery Society Meeting (GOSS)
2019-12-05 - 2019-12-07    
All Day
The Gulf Obesity Surgery Society is proud to announce the 6th Annual Gulf Obesity Surgery Society Meeting (GOSS) to be hosted by the Emirates Society [...]
AES 2019 Annual Meeting
2019-12-06 - 2019-12-10    
All Day
ABOUT AES 2019 ANNUAL MEETING As the largest gathering on epilepsy in the world, the American Epilepsy Society’s Annual Meeting is the event for epilepsy [...]
Manhattan Primary Care (Upper East Side Manhattan)
2019-12-07    
All Day
ABOUT MANHATTAN PRIMARY CARE (UPPER EAST SIDE MANHATTAN) Manhattan Primary Care is a dynamic internal medicine practice delivering high quality individualized primary care in Manhattan. [...]
Healthcare Facilities Design Summit 2019
2019-12-08 - 2019-12-10    
All Day
ABOUT HEALTHCARE FACILITIES DESIGN SUMMIT 2019 Healthcare design has transformed over the years and Opal Group’s Healthcare Facilities Design Summit is addressing pertinent issues in [...]
09 Dec
2019-12-09 - 2019-12-10    
All Day
ABOUT WORLD EYE AND VISION CONGRESS The World Eye and Vision Congress which brings together a unique and international mix of large and medium pharmaceutical, [...]
The 2nd Saudi International Pharma Expo 2019
2019-12-10 - 2019-12-13    
All Day
SAUDI INTERNATIONAL PHARMA EXPO 2019 offers you an EXCELLENT opportunity to expand your business in Saudi Arabia and international pharma industry : Join the industry [...]
Emirates Society of Emergency Medicine Conference 2019
2019-12-11 - 2019-12-14    
All Day
ABOUT EMIRATES SOCIETY OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE CONFERENCE 2019 Organized by the Emirates Society of Emergency Medicine (ESEM), the 6th edition of the conference has become [...]
Advances in Nutritional Science, Healthcare and Aging
2019-12-12 - 2019-12-14    
All Day
ABOUT ADVANCES IN NUTRITIONAL SCIENCE, HEALTHCARE AND AGING Good nutrition is critical to overall health from disease prevention to reaching your fitness goals. High quality, [...]
27th Annual World Congress
2019-12-13 - 2019-12-15    
All Day
Join us from December 13-15 for our 27th Annual World Congress in Las Vegas, marking over a quarter of a century since A4M began its [...]
International Forum on Advancements in Healthcare IFAH Dubai 2019
2019-12-16 - 2019-12-18    
All Day
International Forum on Advancements in Healthcare - IFAH (formerly Smart Health Conference) USA, will bring together 1000+ healthcare professionals from across the world on a [...]
2nd International Conference on Advanced Dentistry and Oral Health
2019-12-28 - 2019-12-30    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED DENTISTRY AND ORAL HEALTH We are pleased to invite you to the 2nd International Conference on Advanced Dentistry and [...]
5th International Conference On Recent Advances In Medical Science ICRAMS
2020-01-01 - 2020-01-02    
All Day
2020 IIER 775th International Conference on Recent Advances in Medical Science ICRAMS will be held in Dublin, Ireland during 1st - 2nd January, 2020 as [...]
01 Jan
2020-01-01 - 2020-01-02    
All Day
The Academics World 744th International Conference on Recent Advances in Medical and Health Sciences ICRAMHS aims to bring together leading academic scientists, researchers and research [...]
03 Jan
2020-01-03 - 2020-01-04    
All Day
Academicsera – 599th International Conference On Pharma and FoodICPAF will be held on 3rd-4th January, 2020 at Malacca , Malaysia. ICPAF is to bring together [...]
The IRES - 642nd International Conference On Food Microbiology And Food SafetyICFMFS
2020-01-03 - 2020-01-04    
All Day
The IRES - 642nd International Conference on Food Microbiology and Food SafetyICFMFS aimed at presenting current research being carried out in that area and scheduled [...]
World Congress On Medical Imaging And Clinical Research WCMICR-2020
2020-01-03 - 2020-01-04    
All Day
The WCMICR conference is an international forum for the presentation of technological advances and research results in the fields of Medical Imaging and Clinical Research. [...]
Events on 2019-11-26
Digital Health Forum 2019
26 Nov 19
Marinelli Rd Rockville
Events on 2019-11-28
Events on 2019-12-05
Events on 2019-12-06
AES 2019 Annual Meeting
6 Dec 19
Baltimore
Events on 2019-12-07
Events on 2019-12-08
Events on 2019-12-09
09 Dec
Events on 2019-12-10
Events on 2019-12-11
Events on 2019-12-12
Advances in Nutritional Science, Healthcare and Aging
12 Dec 19
Merivale St & Glenelg Street
Events on 2019-12-13
27th Annual World Congress
13 Dec 19
Las Vegas
Events on 2019-12-28
Latest News

Tech optimization: Making quality and safety integral to clinical processes

mri scans

The technologies available to ensure high-quality care and patient safety are varied, but all depend on data, especially from electronic health record systems, to ensure care providers are making the best decisions during care delivery and have developed safe treatment plans. But making clinical decision support and advanced analytics models work together optimally is easier said than done safety integral to clinical processes In this latest installment in Healthcare IT News’ technology optimization special report series, three experts in quality and safety IT – from research firms Black Book Research and KLAS Enterprises, and from IT vendor Pascal Metrics – describe some best practices to ensure these technologies work in concert toward improved outcomes and reduced medical errors

Integrating risk, quality and safety

To start, “hospital leaders need to have the systems in place to enable communication across risk, quality and safety to get a comprehensive and timely representation of what is happening in real time,” said Douglas Brown, president and managing partner of Black Book Research, a healthcare technology and services research firm.

“When patient safety and clinical quality-data are contained in separate systems that cannot talk to each other, it’s easy to overlook signals that may seem inconsequential alone, but together add up to major troubles. “By connecting and integrating claims, insurance, legal, financial, safety and clinical data, software platforms will bridge the gap between risk, quality and safety to make sure critical patterns are not missed, Brown added. “A holistic view simplifies collaboration on overlapping issues and fosters a closer working relationship between the three disciplines to improve patient safety across the continuum of care without labor-intensive analysis and duplication of efforts,” he explained.

Standardized approach to safety

Brown offered another best practice: Strive for a standardized approach in safety (industry-wide) to increase the accuracy of event reporting in conjunction with analytical surveillance systems to capture events automatically.

“Your program should be in a constant state of evaluation and improvement,” he insisted. “This process is one of the keys to making your quality and safety programs lasting and effective.” Without a baseline of safety and quality event definitions, it proves difficult to correlate drivers and common causes – or interventions with differing outcomes that are useless when sharing data to achieve interoperability goals, he said. “It is crucial to establish a foundation of standardization in order to benefit from that apples-to-apples comparison, both within the organization and as benchmarking to others,” Brown said.

Use outcomes data to measure

Drew Ladner, chairman and CEO of Pascal Metrics, which works with EHR data to improve quality and safety, said that, first and foremost, quality and safety IT optimization is all about outcomes.

“Improving in any domain, and in any industry, requires knowing what’s going on,” he said. “There is no substitute for outcomes data in knowing the truth. Therefore, truth depends on measurement, and it is outcomes that deliver measurement. “Without outcomes-derived measurement, providers and health systems lack a lens truly to know what is going on,” he explained. “Indeed, most are not using outcomes but, instead, relying on event reporting or billing/coded data, based on extensive peer-reviewed and real-world evidence.”

To be clear, Ladner stated, voluntary event/incident reporting, on what most providers rely, is a useful source of learning, but not a useful source of measurement, according to extensive peer-reviewed and real-world evidence, for example, capturing approximately 5% of events. “And during a time in the field when many providers and health systems aspire to become high-reliability organizations, relying on an unreliable method – for example, event reporting – of evaluating progress is problematic,” he said. “Consider replacing an unreliable method with a reliable measure of reliability, namely EHR-based, clinically validated adverse event outcomes.”

For example, one of the major tools that providers use to improve is root-cause analysis. But if this analysis relies on unreliable event-reporting data, there is a significant opportunity to extend the adoption of outcomes not only to measure, but also to provide a timely, continuous stream of data to support quality improvement, Ladner suggested.

“In short, the opportunity is to use EHR-based, clinically validated outcomes data to drive the common cause analysis that extends far beyond the approximate 5%-of-events lens upon which root-cause analysis relies,” he said. “By doing so, providers can move beyond working hard to improve 5% of the problem, avoid missing patterns in 95% of the event data and deliver more credibility in the organizational culture to quality improvement.”

In sum, outcomes provide scientifically validated and clinically useful measurement that is critical for delivering credible data required to support change management during challenging intervention and improvement, he said. Outcomes for outcomes’ sake is neither prudent nor the goal. The purpose of outcomes is supporting change with scientific validation and clinical credibility that result in successful intervention and improvement, which are measured by outcomes, he said.

Use outcomes data to predict

Ladner went on with another optimization best practice, saying that outcomes are essential not only to measure, but to train advanced analytics models using machine learning and AI. Accurate and actionable advanced analytics are ever-widening in popularity in safety and quality, but elusive to those without EHR-based, clinically validated adverse event outcomes, he added.

“If CIOs are optimizing quality and safety technology that are not driven with EHR-based, clinically validated outcomes, then the first step is to change the technology,” he insisted. “Why? For example, patient deterioration – which many providers laudably seek to predict – is not an outcome. Instead, outcomes in patient safety are EHR-based – versus self-reported or billing/coded – clinically validated adverse events.”

Without clinical validation, outcomes lack credibility, thereby crippling earnest efforts to engage clinicians when it comes to intervention and improvement initiatives, Ladner said. If a provider wants to predict a medication-related hypoglycemic event, the model used should have been trained with a high volume of EHR-based, clinically validated medication-related glycemic events – not mortality and morbidity data to which most researchers have been historically relegated, he contended.

“For reasons of both accuracy and actionability,” he added, “predicting outcomes using health IT- or EHR-based validated outcomes is far superior to predicting patient-condition deterioration – which is what most providers are doing today if they’re using any machine learning or AI to predict safety problems.

It’s all about outcomes

“Whether in detection or prediction, it’s all about outcomes,” he continued. “Whether predicting global harm – for example, a patient will suffer some kind of injury or death as a result of the care versus the disease; specific harm – for example, a patient will suffer from a specific kind of preventable harm or other safety vulnerability; or simply knowing what’s going on to figure out what to do now, having EHR-based, clinically validated outcomes is essential.”

And this foundation of AI-assisted patient safety – starting with applying machine learning, AI or other technology to adverse events – becomes likewise the foundation for AI-assisted quality, Ladner added. “The imperative to ‘first, do no harm,’ reminds us that patient safety is foundational and the core of quality,” Ladner said. “All safety problems are quality problems, but not all quality problems are safety problems. Therefore, choose the right evidence-based method and proven technology to address patient safety and extend to quality improvement – versus the other way around.”

Key to clinical transformation

Research firm KLAS looks at quality management in three focus areas: core measures reporting, quality performance improvement and patient safety and risk. It has started tracking core-measures reporting on the ambulatory side. This is because, the firm said, quality and safety reinforce each other and are key attributes to clinical transformation.

Many providers have focused on two core attributes (there are many more) of a successful and optimized system: A consolidated platform that encompasses both quality and risk solutions, and integration into the EHR, said Ryan Pretnik, director of research and strategy – analytics, at KLAS Enterprises. “Regarding a consolidated platform that encompasses both quality and risk solutions, in the provider world, having a solution that can check off more boxes on the capabilities end is always very intriguing to providers, even if the solution isn’t the top-performing solution in the space; sometimes good is good enough,” he said.

“Why is that? Having fewer systems to work with is a plus. It’s easier for provider departments to learn and work on the solution, which drives better adoption of the solution, and since solutions that encompass multiple products tend to be integrated nicely, providers don’t have to hop from system to system or try combining data from different solutions to get a holistic view of the data.”

Also, pricing, maintenance of the system and upkeep of multiple systems is taxing for providers, who already manage thousands of applications, he added. “Having a consolidated, integrated platform that encompasses modules or solutions like claims, peer reviews, credentialing, eCQMs, surveillance, regulations, performance improvement, etc., helps to drive higher provider satisfaction,” Pretnik advised.

“Here is a reference conversation with a provider we recently spoke with: ‘The quality and safety system we currently use is very integrated because we have many, if not all, of their modules/solutions, and the modules/solutions work very nicely together. The system is fully integrated, which makes the solution very intuitive and easy to use, which helps support us on our high-reliability journey.'”

EHR integration is key

And on a final note, integrating quality and safety into the EHR is key, he noted. With the EHR being a hub for information, having a quality and risk system systematically work with an EHR is a key driver in decisions by providers, he said.

“Just like other systems, having an optimized workflow and being able to accurately pull or push data to or from the EHR that your quality and risk solutions play nicely with, helps providers feed their EHR or other solution of choice with the accurate information needed for users to interact with,” he said. “When we look at the scoring of solutions in the quality and risk space, solutions that integrate nicely with the EHR tend to be associated with an increase in overall provider satisfaction.”

This shows how important this core attribute is to providers, he added. For vendors looking to make a jump in this space, having integration with multiple EHRs, with seamless workflow and data transfer, is incredibly valuable to providers, Pretnik said. “Here,” he concluded, “is a quote from a provider we recently spoke with: ‘I am really happy with the integration we get with our quality and risk solution. The overall product quality is top shelf. The product is basically attached to our EHR, which is fantastic. The solution deals with the EHR by basically reading all the data and helping us produce an output. We started using the solution because of the tight EHR integration and the need for reporting to the governing bodies.”