Results of a Regional Effort to Improve Warfarin Management

Author:

Rose Adam J.12,Park Angela3,Gillespie Christopher1,Van Deusen Lukas Carol14,Ozonoff Al156,Petrakis Beth Ann1,Reisman Joel I.1,Borzecki Ann M.124,Benedict Ashley J.7,Lukesh William N.3,Schmoke Timothy J.3,Jones Ellen A.8,Morreale Anthony P.9,Ourth Heather L.10,Schlosser James E.11,Mayo-Smith Michael F.12,Allen Arthur L.13,Witt Daniel M.14,Helfrich Christian D.1516,McCullough Megan B.14

Affiliation:

1. Bedford VA Medical Center, MA, USA

2. Boston University School of Medicine, MA, USA

3. New England Veterans Engineering Resource Center, Boston, MA, USA

4. Boston University School of Public Health, MA, USA

5. Boston Children’s Hospital, MA, USA

6. Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

7. VA Sunshine Healthcare Network, St Petersburg, FL, USA

8. VA Central Western Massachusetts Healthcare System, Northampton, MA, USA

9. VA Pharmacy Benefits Management Services, San Diego, CA, USA

10. VA Pharmacy Benefits Management Services, Hines, IL, USA

11. Manchester VA Medical Center, NH, USA

12. VA New England Healthcare System, Bedford, MA, USA

13. VA Salt Lake City Healthcare System, UT, USA

14. University of Utah College of Pharmacy, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

15. VA Portland Healthcare System, OR, USA

16. VA Center for Veteran-Centered and Value-Driven Care, Seattle, WA, USA

Abstract

Background: Improved anticoagulation control with warfarin reduces adverse events and represents a target for quality improvement. No previous study has described an effort to improve anticoagulation control across a health system. Objective: To describe the results of an effort to improve anticoagulation control in the New England region of the Veterans Health Administration (VA). Methods: Our intervention encompassed 8 VA sites managing warfarin for more than 5000 patients in New England (Veterans Integrated Service Network 1 [VISN 1]). We provided sites with a system to measure processes of care, along with targeted audit and feedback. We focused on processes of care associated with site-level anticoagulation control, including prompt follow-up after out-of-range international normalized ratio (INR) values, minimizing loss to follow-up, and use of guideline-concordant INR target ranges. We used a difference-in-differences (DID) model to examine changes in anticoagulation control, measured as percentage time in therapeutic range (TTR), as well as process measures and compared VISN 1 sites with 116 VA sites located outside VISN 1. Results: VISN 1 sites improved on TTR, our main indicator of quality, from 66.4% to 69.2%, whereas sites outside VISN 1 improved from 65.9% to 66.4% (DID 2.3%, P < 0.001). Improvement in TTR correlated strongly with the extent of improvement on process-of-care measures, which varied widely across VISN 1 sites. Conclusions: A regional quality improvement initiative, using performance measurement with audit and feedback, improved TTR by 2.3% more than control sites, which is a clinically important difference. Improving relevant processes of care can improve outcomes for patients receiving warfarin.

Funder

Health Services Research and Development

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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