Abstract

BackgroundAdults with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring chronic dialysis continue to suffer from poor health outcomes and represent a population rightfully targeted for quality improvement. Electronic dashboards are increasingly used in healthcare to facilitate quality measurement and improvement. However, detailed descriptions of the creation of healthcare dashboards are uncommonly available and formal inquiry into perceptions, satisfaction, and utility by clinical users has been rarely conducted, particularly in the context of dialysis care. Therefore, we characterized the development, implementation and user experience with Veterans Health Administration (VHA) dialysis dashboard.MethodsA clinical-quality dialysis dashboard was implemented, which displays clinical performance measures (CPMs) for Veterans with ESRD receiving chronic hemodialysis at all VHA facilities. Data on user experience and perceptions were collected via an e-mail questionnaire to dialysis medical directors and nurse managers at these facilities.ResultsSince 2016 the dialysis dashboard reports monthly on CPMs for approximately 3000 Veterans receiving chronic hemodialysis across 70 VHA dialysis facilities. Of 141 dialysis medical directors and nurse managers, 61 completed the questionnaire. Sixty-six percent of respondents did not find the dashboard difficult to access, 64% agreed that it is easy to use, 59% agreed that its layout is good, and the majority agreed that presentation of data is clear (54%), accurate (56%), and up-to-date (54%). Forty-eight percent of respondents indicated that it helped them improve patient care while 12% did not. Respondents indicated that they used the dialysis dashboard for clinical reporting (71%), quality assessment/performance improvement (QAPI) (62%), and decision-making (23%).ConclusionsMost users of the VHA dialysis dashboard found it accurate, up-to-date, easy to use, and helpful in improving patient care. It meets diverse user needs, including administrative reporting, clinical benchmarking and decision-making, and quality assurance and performance improvement (QAPI) activities. Moreover, the VHA dialysis dashboard affords national-, regional- and facility-level assessments of quality of care, guides and motivates best clinical practices, targets QAPI efforts, and informs and promotes population health management improvement efforts for Veterans receiving chronic hemodialysis.

Highlights

  • Adults with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring chronic dialysis continue to suffer from poor health outcomes and represent a population rightfully targeted for quality improvement

  • Quality measurement for chronic dialysis care is well established in the U.S Beginning in the 1990’s, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) required ESRD Networks to monitor and improve the quality of dialysis care

  • We report on the development, implementation, and user experience with the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) dialysis dashboard

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Summary

Introduction

Adults with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requiring chronic dialysis continue to suffer from poor health outcomes and represent a population rightfully targeted for quality improvement. The prevalence of ESRD among Veterans is disproportionately high and approximately double that of non-Veterans, owing in part to high rates of predisposing comorbid illnesses, including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, older age and other sociodemographic risk factors [3] Like their non-Veteran counterparts, Veterans receiving chronic hemodialysis experience an annual mortality rate greater than 15%, spend more than 30 days hospitalized annually, and have annual mean total healthcare costs approaching $140,000 [3, 4]. Such poor outcomes underscore the critical need to improve quality of chronic dialysis care. There is little formal evidence that use of quality measures improve healthcare quality [5], they have become an essential facet of the healthcare environment [6]

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