Tag: reports and relevant news

  • MOHLTC rolling out Provincial Low Back Pain Strategy

    In order to improve the quality and efficiency of treatment for low-back pain, the province of Ontario is launching a Provincial Low-Back Pain Strategy to:

    • Decrease wait times for medically-necessary diagnostic imaging, and
    • Improve outcomes for patients suffering from low back pain.

    The strategy has three components:

    1. Evidence-based amendments to the Schedule of Benefits. Effective April 1, 2012. This change applies to all referring providers and specialists.
    2. Educational resources (e.g. a toolkit and continuing education) for primary care providers. These tools will help you better help your patients in managing low back pain.
      1. Phase one: Online tools in November 2012
      2. Phase two: Online and in-person continuing education training starting February 2013.
    3. A provincial pilot of ‘rapid assessment and education centres’ for low back pain. Launching November 2012.

    INFOBulletin updates released by the ministry:

    • Bulletin # 11048 distributed August 28, 2012: Provincial Strategy for X-Ray, Computed Tomography (CT) and/or Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for Low Back Pain
    • Bulletin # 4561 distributed May 8, 2012: Amendments to the Schedule of Benefits for Physician Services – Effective April 1, 2012
    • Bulletin # 4563 distributed June 4, 2012: Computed Tomography (CT) and/or Magnetic  Resonance Imaging (MRI) for Chronic Low Back Pain
  • Primary Care Nursing Task Force Report

    The Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario launched a task force, bringing together key stakeholders to review the role of almost 4,300 primary care nurses (RNs and RPNs) currently practising in Ontario.

    The Task Force focused on two progressive phases of outcomes.

    1. The first phase identifies the highest level of RN and RPN scope of practice utilization already present in selected primary care settings in Ontario and recommends an upward harmonization of scope of practice utilization for all primary care nurses, across all sites in Ontario.
    2. The second phase involves identifying needed expansions to the existing scope of practice of the primary care RN and RPN that would serve to further improve access to primary care for the public. The recommendations for the second phase focus on the mechanisms required to achieve the proposed scope of practice expansions.

    Click here to read the report

     

  • Ontario Think Tank on Public Health and Primary Care Collaboration

    Please find the proceedings from a full day Think Tank on strengthening collaboration between public health and primary care held on April 19, 2012 at the offices of Public Health Ontario in Toronto, Ontario.

    AFHTO’s Executive Director, Angie Heydon, participated in the Think Tank. Other participants included policy makers, decision-makers, front line practitioners and academics. They represented Ontario Ministry of Health and LongTerm Care staff, as well as PC, PH, Medical, Nursing, and Nurse Practitioner Associations, and National organizations. Multi-disciplinary perspectives were also well represented. See the participant list in Appendix E.

    Click here for Ontario think tank highlights, April 19, 2012 (PDF)

  • Drummond Commission – “Family Health Teams should become the norm for primary care”

    “Family Health Teams should become the norm for primary care”

    The statement above appears on p.24 of the 543-page Drummond Commission report, released this afternoon. Consuming over 40% of the province’s budget, health care receives much attention in this report (pp.145-202). There are a number of recommendations that are specific to FHTs/primary care, and are pasted below. AFHTO is pleased to see some of the themes in its submission to the Drummond Commission reflected in these recommendations. For the report overall, the Globe and Mail has identified three themes that run throughout: “One is that government decisions should be “evidence-based.” Another is integration, which is to say fewer silos and more co-operation between people working toward the same goal. A third is that the public service should be more of a meritocracy, where productivity is rewarded and a lack of it is punished.” For health overall, the Commission sets a target of a 2.5 per cent annual increase in health care funding by the province, which implies that real inflation-adjusted spending per person on health care will have to FALL by 0.8 per cent per year. This requires significant reform to the system, and so the first recommendation for health calls on government to develop and publish a comprehensive plan to address health care challenges over the next 20 years. (#5.1) At the system level it also calls for integration of all health services in a region, including FHTs, FHOs, etc. under the LHINs (#5.5). It also includes public health, moving it out of the municipalities (#5.78 – 5.81), and reducing the number of organizations with which the LHINs must deal on a day-to-day basis by forming merged leadership and boards, or physically by forming merged agencies (#5.12). LHINs would be granted the authority, accountabilities and resources necessary to oversee health within the region, including allocating budgets, holding stakeholders accountable and setting incentive systems for primary care (physicians), acute care (hospitals), community care and long-term care (#5.27). Performance pay targeted to health outcomes would apply to CEOs and senior executives in all parts of the health care system and be mirrored at the physician and health care worker levels (#5.28). Where feasible, services should be shifted to lower-cost caregivers working to full scope of practice (#5.18) and all back-office functions such as information technology, human resources, finance and procurement would be centralized across the health system (#5.95). Recommendations specific to FHTs/primary care: Case Management Recommendation 5-32: Empower primary caregivers and physicians in the Family Health Teams (FHTs) or specialized clinics to play the role of “quarterback,” tracking patients as they move through the integrated health system. All FHTs should work in tandem with clerical system navigators and hospitalist63 physicians to track their patients who are in hospitals, from admission to discharge (see Recommendation 5-55 on hospitalists for more details). Recommendation 5-37: Complex care patients should be managed through interprofessional, team-based approaches to maximize co-ordination with Family Health Teams and other community care providers. Hospitals Recommendation 5-52: Create policies to move people away from inpatient acute care settings by shifting access to the health care system away from emergency rooms and towards community care (i.e., walk-in clinics and Family Health Teams), home care and, in some cases, long-term care. Recommendation 5-55: Use hospitalist physicians to co-ordinate inpatient care from admission to discharge. Hospitalists should work with Family Health Teams to better co-ordinate a patient’s moves through the health care continuum (acute care, rehabilitation, long-term care, community care and home care). Physicians Recommendation 5-56: Make primary care a focal point in a new, integrated health model. Recommendation 5-57: Regional health authorities must integrate physicians into a rostered health system and adopt the appropriate measures to address compensation issues across disciplines; that is, the proper blend of salary/capitation and fee-for-service. The primary goal for physician performance should be prevention and keeping people out of hospitals. Collective administrative support would allow physicians to concentrate on providing better care, a value proposition that should appeal to them. Recommendation 5-58: Reduce the sole proprietorship nature of the offices of many primary care physicians and encourage more interdisciplinary integration through performance incentives and accountability. Recommendation 5-59: Compensate physicians using a blended model of salary/capitation and fee-for-service; the right balance is probably in the area of 70 per cent salary/capitation and 30 per cent fee-for-service. Physicians’ compensation, and especially performance pay, should be linked to positive health outcomes that are linked to strategic targets, not to the number of interventions performed. Recommendation 5-60: Aggressively negotiate with the Ontario Medical Association for the next agreement. The government must be very strategic in its objectives to ensure the promotion of a high quality care system that runs efficiently. Since Ontario’s doctors are now the best paid in the country, it is reasonable to set a goal of allowing no increase in total compensation. However, the negotiations must go well beyond compensation. They must also address the integration of physicians into the rest of the health care system and the objective of working towards the best possible health quality regime. Recommendation 5-61: Adjust fee schedules in a timely manner to reflect technological improvements, with the savings going to the bottom line of less expenditure on health care. Technological improvements often reduce the time required for procedures. Will Falk has recently pointed to the example of radiology, where government investments, including those made through the Canada Health Infoway program, have resulted in vast productivity improvements. Despite the fact that these improvements have drastically reduced the time it takes to diagnose (and hence greatly increased the volumes of diagnoses that can be made in any given day), the fee schedule has not been adjusted to reflect these effects.64 Recommendation 5-62: Make Family Health Teams (FHTs) the norm for primary care and design the incentive structure of physicians’ compensation to encourage this development. Among the key characteristics of FHTs are the following:

    • The regional health authority should play a key role in determining their relationship with the rest of the health care system and setting ground rules for their operation;
    • Make outcomes the focus of FHTs, not health interventions. Their operation should be tightened through objectives, accountability and a data collection system;
    • Conduct research to determine the optimal size of FHTs, taking into account factors such as geography and patient demography. Balancing economies of scale while maintaining personal connections between health care providers and patients is crucial: FHTs need the scale to support a wide range of care providers and be able to support the administration necessary, including the responsibility of tracking people through the system. It has been suggested to the Commission that the optimal size, for larger communities, may be in the range of 8 to 15 physicians, and include practitioners with a wider range of specialties than is now the case. They now typically have only three to eight physicians; and To provide a range of services at a lower cost, include other health professionals in the FHTs (nurse practitioners, registered nurses, dietitians and midwives, for example). Unlisted practitioners such as physiotherapists and massage therapists would also be part of FHTs; however, their services would be provided on a cost-recovery basis.

    Recommendation 5-63: Require Family Health Teams (FHTs) to accept patients who choose them, and the FHTs should work with each patient to connect them with the most appropriate constellation of care providers. Recommendation 5-64: The regional health authority should establish incentives to discourage Family Health Teams from referring patients to acute care. Recommendation 5-65: Regional authorities should also be responsible for assigning heavy users of the health care system to the appropriate Family Health Team (FHT). If, for example, there are 300 heavy users within a region and three FHTs, the regional health authority would try to steer 100 to each, so that no FHT is overburdened. Recommendation 5-66: Because Family Health Teams (FHTs) will be responsible for patient tracking, they will need to build a critical mass of an administrative arm to carry out this task. This administrative arm should be shared among a number of FHTs. Recommendation 5-67: Better after-hours care must be offered and telephone/Internet services should direct patients to the most appropriate and convenient care provider. Recommendation 5-68: All Family Health Teams must be encouraged to add more specialists to their teams, which will reduce referrals and ease some of the complexities of patient tracking. Recommendation 5-69: The Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care should allow the flexibility necessary for Family Health Teams to share specialists by permitting part-time contracts. Recommendation 5-70: All Family Health Team physicians must begin engaging in discussions with their middle-aged patients about end-of-life health care. Recommendation 5-71: Improve access to care (e.g., in remote communities) and productivity for specialists by triaging appropriate patients for telemedicine services (e.g., teledermatology, teleophthalmology). Recommendation 5-72: Remove perverse incentives that undermine the quality and efficiency of care. For example, physicians are penalized when one of their patients goes to another walk-in clinic, but not when the patient goes to the emergency department of a hospital. More generally, the fee-for-service compensation model gives an incentive for medical interventions without due consideration to quality and efficiency of care. Such incentive issues must be addressed by focusing the Ontario Medical Association’s negotiations more on quality of care and amending payment systems for physicians and throughout the health care system. Recommendation 5-73: The model described in the above recommendations must be supported by a robust data collection and sharing system that allows the creation of the necessary records. For example, the model works only if we know how many patients are not visiting emergency departments or how many diabetes patients are not experiencing complications (see Recommendations 5-17 and 5-50 on Health-Based Allocation Model data for more details).

  • Toward a Primary Care Recruitment & Retention Strategy for Ontario

    The Association of Family Health Teams (AFHTO), the Association of Ontario Health Centres (AOHC) and the Nurse Practitioners’ Association of Ontario (NPAO) are pleased to share our joint report with our members.

    It has been a challenge for primary care organizations to recruit and retain the skilled and compassionate staff needed to deliver accessible, high quality, patient-centred primary care. Our three associations – representing all of Ontario’s interprofessional primary care organizations – teamed up in September to gather the facts and create the solid case to address the issues. About half of the 295 organizations – 10 aboriginal health access centres (AHACs), 73 community health centres (CHCs), 186 family health teams (FHTs) and 26 nurse practitioner led clinics (NPLCs) – responded to our survey.  This information, together with data from salary studies by the Hay Group, has been combined to make the compelling case. Our joint report was finalized this week and sent to the ADMs of Negotiations and Accountability Management Division and Health Human Resources Strategy Division in advance of our meeting on Feb.22.  The meeting had been scheduled for Feb.9 but was postponed due to personal circumstances. The report makes the case that:

    • The full compensation package – salaries, pensions and benefits –must be addressed to make working in primary care sufficiently attractive to recruit and retain competent staff in this sector.  Recognizing current economic constraints, it is well understood that reaching a competitive compensation level will need to be phased in over a few years.
    • As an immediate first step, the barrier to labour mobility must be removed to enable all primary care organizations to offer the HOOPP pension plan and reasonable benefit package.  This entails a 2.5% increase in compensation funding, for a total of $10.36M.
    • Since staff are required to contribute a minimum of 6.9% of gross earnings toward the pension, a matching increase of 2.5% should be added for all staff to defray their reduction in take-home earnings.  This would bring the total investment across all of primary care to $19.48M.

    The investigation found:

    • The biggest vacancy rates appear among the largest staff groups, e.g. 19% for Nurse Practitioners, 14% for dietitians, 10% for RNs, and 5-12% for administrative managers.  Add to this an 18% vacancy rate for pharmacists, and the result is a serious gap in skills to provide the full scope of primary care, particularly chronic disease prevention and management.
    • Factoring in turnover rates and the time needed to fill each type of position, roughly 6-7% of overall staff service capacity is lost each year due to turnover.
    • The most troubling finding is that the majority of staff who leave are then lost to the primary care sector – only 1/3 move to other primary care settings, but about 1/2 go to work in hospitals and other health care settings.
    • While Ontario’s Action Plan for Health Care calls for placing “Family Health Care at the Centre of the System,” there are barriers to attracting health providers to primary care and keeping them in this part of the health system.
    • There is overwhelming evidence that compensation packages are the root cause. Independent review found salaries to be 5 – 30% below market. Lack of the HOOPP plan makes it hard to compete with the other health sectors that do offer it.
    • Growing inequity in compensation is creating conditions for rapid expansion of unionization in this sector, beyond the 10% of PCOs who currently have staff under collective agreements.

    Please click here to read about the outcome of the joint meeting.

  • Strengthening Primary Care in Ontario: Reports are now available

    The Government of Ontario’s recently released Action Plan for Health Care puts a strong emphasis on primary care, placing “Family Health Care at the Centre of the System”. In the last week the final set of reports on Strategic Directions for Strengthening Primary Care in Ontario were also released by the Ministry to participants involved in the five working groups engaged in the process.  While these reports have no “formal” status in the Ministry, they may give some insight and ideas to government and stakeholders moving forward on this Action Plan. AFHTO has received the go-ahead to share these reports with members, please click to access:

    The Strengthening Primary Care initiative grew out of the McMaster Health Forum’s June 2010 stakeholder dialogue on “Supporting Quality Improvement in Primary Healthcare in Ontario”. It was chaired by Susan Fitzpatrick, Assistant Deputy Minister, Negotiations and Accountability Management Division and overseen by a planning group consisting of the Ontario Medical Association, Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, Ontario College of Family Physicians and Association of Ontario Health Centres. (PHPG was set up before AFHTO had staff in place and did not have the capacity to participate at that time.) The process involved working groups on Quality, Access, Efficiency, Accountability and Governance. AFHTO participated in 3 of these 5 groups. The synthesis report was developed thereafter. A draft was discussed with participants in the working groups in September. The final product, entitled Strategic Directions for Strengthening Primary Care in Ontario: Overview of the Recommendations of the Primary Healthcare Planning Group states, “it is not meant to be a stand-alone document, rather a high-level summary and synthesis of the recommendations of PHPG’s five Working Group reports and our joint grouping of the strategic directions for strengthening primary care in Ontario under five core themes:

    1. Integration Supported by Governance
    2. Patient Centered Approach
    3. Strategically Aligned Goals and Measures
    4. Accountability Levers and Incentives
    5. Continuous Quality Improvement.”
  • AFHTO welcomes Ontario’s focus on family and community care

    Primary care is fundamental to the health of patients and our health system. Family Health Teams have been working hard to innovate, to improve care, and from that, to improve health. For this reason, AFHTO is pleased to see the Ontario Government is placing “Family Health Care at the Centre of the System”.  Released today, Ontario’s Action Plan for Health Care calls for faster access to primary care, expanded access to house calls from health care professionals, and greater integration of primary care with all the other providers involved in the patient journey. The experience of Family Health Teams provides some guidance for moving forward. Since their first introduction in 2005, Family Health Teams have made significant strides in providing faster access to care for patients and integrating care. Some examples can be found at:

    AFHTO looks forward to working with the Ministry and primary care colleagues to share what Family Health Teams have learned, to work out the best way to implement the Action Plan, and to ensure the necessary conditions are put into place that will enable the Teams (and all of primary care) to improve quality and access to primary care for the patients of Ontario.

  • AFHTO response to Globe and Mail comment about FHTs

    On January 17, Globe and Mail columnist Adam Radwanski wrote about the upcoming MOHLTC-OMA negotiations, focusing on costs and value for money (echoing the Auditor General of Ontario’s report). Unfortunately he used the term “family health team” when he was refering to physicians in capitated models in his statement, “The province will continue trying to get more family doctors away from fee-for-service. But that won’t do much good if it doesn’t get better value out of ‘family health teams,’ which a majority of doctors have already moved toward because the Liberals provided financial incentives to do so.” AFHTO’s response appears below. To read the Globe column, go to:   http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/adam-radwanski/ontario-sets-out-to-change-the-way-doctors-work/article2304673/ Dear Mr. Radwanski, Thank you for your article this morning on the upcoming OMA-MOHLTC negotiations. You’ve hit on a number of key issues, including the need to know what value is being received from increased investment in primary care. As pointed out in Auditor General of Ontario’s press release regarding his chapter on Funding Alternatives for Family Physicians,  “What concerned me about this was not that these doctors were making more money but rather that the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care has not analyzed whether this has actually resulted in Ontarians getting better access to a doctor.” I’m writing to you for two reasons — One is to clarify and correct the terminology and concepts you used in your column.  This is the challenge of the alphabet soup of Ontario’s primary care system!  There is an important distinction between Family Health TEAMS (the term used in your column)and the methods for paying family physicians, i.e. Family Health Groups (FHG), Family Health Organizations (FHO), and Family Health Networks (FHN).  The Auditor General’s report was focused on the latter (i.e. FHG, FHN, FHO). He reported that in the 2010/11 fiscal year, these three types of arrangements accounted for over 90% of family physicians (7,739) participating in an alternate funding arrangement and over 90% of enrolled patients (9.6 million enrolled Ontario residents). Just over 2000 of these family physicians also participate in Family Health Teams (FHTs), and over 2.6 million Ontarians are enrolled. FHTs are organizations that bring together a group of physicians (FHO or FHN or salaried physicians) with other health care professionals (e.g. nurse practitioners, pharmacists, dietitians, social workers) to provide comprehensive primary care and health promotion for their patients. In addition to reporting on FHG, FHN and FHO arrangements, the Auditor General’s report made a few brief comments to explain what FHTs are, and offered the following observation:

    In December 2008, the Ministry commis­sioned the Conference Board of Canada to conduct a five-year study on Family Health Teams to identify their successes and short­comings. Each year, the Ministry has been receiving interim study results, which focus on areas such as team functioning, patient access, and chronic disease management. The Ministry indicated that it will use the final report—expected in 2013—to assist it in determining whether any changes should be made regarding Family Health Teams. …  We also noted that interim results of the Min­istry-commissioned study on Family Health Teams have indicated that enrolled patients were generally satisfied with their access to health services.

    We reiterate that the key issue, as pointed out by the Auditor General, is the need for a plan for on-going collection and reporting of data to monitor and improve on the value being delivered for Ontario’s investment in primary care.  The only data from FHTs that is currently available is from the Conference Board study; the Association of Family Health Teams of Ontario (AFHTO) continues to encourage the Ministry to release the results to enable FHTs to learn from it and improve. This brings me to point #2. FHTs have been committed to improving quality, and the interprofessional model has enabled a number of interesting innovations. I draw your attention to one example – Dorval Medical Associates Family Health Team – which monitors the quality, capacity and cost of their operation, together with a unique method for engaging patients in determining priorities, and uses the results to continually improve in all three of these domains. Over the past 3 years, Dorval has evidence of that accomplishment. A report on Dorval’s method and results is posted at – http://www.dorvalmedical.ca/about-us/the-dorval-model/ If you’d like to pursue any of this further, I’d be pleased to speak to you further about Family Health Teams and connect you to leaders and thinkers in this area. FYI —  AFHTO’s ideas for improving value in the delivery of health care services are outlined in our presentation to the Drummond commission, posted at http://www.afhto.ca/news/afhto%E2%80%99s-submission-to-drummond-commission-on-broader-public-sector-reform/ . Thanks again for your interest in bringing these issues to the public. Sincerely, Angie Heydon Executive Director Association of Family Health Teams of Ontario (AFHTO)

  • AFHTO’s submission to Drummond Commission on Broader Public Sector Reform

    AFHTO was invited to present to the Commission on Broader Public Sector Reform, chaired by economist Don Drummond and announced in the 2011 Ontario Budget speech last spring.  The Commission is to report in early 2012, in time to inform development of Government’s 2012-13 Budget, on its mandate to examine long-term, fundamental changes to the way government works including:

    • Programs that are no longer serving their intended purpose and could be eliminated or redesigned;
    • Areas of overlap and duplication that could be eliminated to save taxpayer dollars; and
    • Areas of value in the public sector that could provide a greater return on the investment made by taxpayers.

    AFHTO prepared a formal submission to provide the basis for discussion.  Last week the AFHTO board of directors formally adopted this paper as policy direction for AFHTO’s advocacy work. Click here to access the paper. AFHTO’s advocacy work with and on and behalf of members continues.  In addition to the Drummond Commission, recent meetings have included the OMA Negotiations Committee, the Minister of Health and Long-Term Care’s Office, MOHLTC’s FHT Unit, NPAR Advisory Committee and others.  We look forward to continuing to keep you informed.