Today's post is from Randal J. Thomas, MD, MS, FAACVPR, FACC, FAHA, chair of the writing committee for the performance measures for cardiac rehabilitation discussed below, and a cardiologist at Mayo Clinic.
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The ACC, American Heart Association and the American
Association of Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Rehabilitation on Monday released
updated performance measures for cardiac rehabilitation. Cardiac rehab is
associated with a 20-30% reduction in all-cause mortality rates and helps
promote other significant health benefits in patients after myocardial
infarction, CABG surgery, percutaneous coronary intervention, heart valve
surgery, and heart transplantation surgery or in those with chronic stable
angina.
Despite the significant benefits of cardiac rehabilitation,
only one in five eligible patients receives it.
Why are there so few physician referrals? There appear to be
at least four reasons:
- Lack
of awareness of the benefits of cardiac rehabilitation.
- Lack
of awareness of that health insurance policies cover cardiac rehabilitation
services.
- Lack
of awareness of the location of cardiac rehabilitation programs in their area
for specific patients.
With all the competing
demands on a provider’s time—sometimes due to the numerous clinical demands--a
provider might simply forget to include referral to cardiac rehabilitation for
their patients who are eligible.
On the patient side, there are also significant barriers
that keep patients from participating in cardiac rehabilitation. Some patients aren’t aware of the benefits
and the insurance coverage policies for cardiac rehabilitation. Some have financial, time, or logistical
restraints that interfere with their participation in cardiac rehabilitation.
On the health care system side, lack of access to a nearby
cardiac rehabilitation program and lack of health care insurance are significant
barriers to participation.
While these barriers are significant, there are movements in
play that are likely to help reduce these barriers and improve the delivery of
cardiac rehabilitation.
One such activity is the use of cardiac rehabilitation
performance measures. The performance
measures include two parts, the first offering a set of measures for the
referral of patients to cardiac rehab programs from the inpatient and
outpatient settings. Health care providers and health care systems will report
the percentage of eligible patients they refer to cardiac rehab programs. The second set is for the delivery of cardiac
rehab services. Cardiac rehab programs
will report on these measures.
The hope behind the performance measures is to increase
patient referrals by helping health care providers more easily track referral
rates, adopt tools to improve enrollment, and assess and improve the quality of
care provided. In particular, the performance measures stress tracking referral
rates and then implementing solutions to improve these rates. System-based
approaches, such as automatic ordering sets for referring eligible patients to
a cardiac rehab program, have been shown to improve referral and enrollment
rates.
Patient Education
To help patients understand cardiac rehab better, ACC’s
patient education initiative, CardioSmart, recently released a new video,
“Cardiac Rehabilitation: Your Journey Back to Heart Health.” The video follows
three recovering heart patients and chronicles how cardiac rehab has help
change their lives. The video is available online (www.cardiosmart.org/cardiacrehab.aspx)
or you can request a DVD copy from Melissa Ketchum at mketchum[at]acc.org.
Photo courtesy of the AACPR website.
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