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WOMEN'S HEALTH - Overview |
If one theme emerges in the following profiles about women's
health, it is that ignorance is the enemy. Misconceptions
about the need for mammograms, or the value of prenatal
vitamins, for example, remain in many cases the biggest
barriers to better care for women. We are getting more
sophisticated at reaching and educating patients, but
there is still much room for improvement.
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The Case Studies:
BREAST CANCER SCREENING - Hitting the Road
With Screening Programs
Description: After an initial round of
awareness and education efforts (newsletter articles,
CME program, shower cards outlining how to perform
a breast self-examination), this plan provided
mobile mammography services at the work sites
and office of major employer groups, while continuing
direct mail outreach (in the form of birthday
card reminders emphasizing the importance of mammography
screening).
BREAST CANCER SCREENING - Improving Access and
Awareness
Description: While continuing its ongoing outreach
efforts, this plan sent birthday reminder cards to
women aged 50 or older. The plan also reached women
over 50 with reminder calls, which were followed up
by a letter from the plan's medical director. Both
members (through the member newsletter) and providers
received revised preventive health guidelines.
BREAST CANCER SCREENING - Raising Member and Physician
Awareness
Description: An increase in the number of breast
biopsies and cases of breast cancer prompted this
plan to launch a comprehensive education program,
which included newsletter articles, support of community
activities, distribution of preventive health guidelines
and reminder cards for women.
CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING - Improving High-Volume
Screening in an Expanding Population
Description: To increase cervical cancer screening
rates in its population of females aged 21 to 64-which
comprised more than one-third of its total membership-this
HMO engaged in an aggressive education campaign. Noncompliant
members received targeted mailings, all members received
pamphlets and newsletter articles stressing preventive
health and physicians were sent preventive care recommendations
and guidelines.
CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING - Sticking to the Basics:
Outreach and Self-Referral
Description: This organization promoted the
need for cervical cancer screening in its member and
provider newsletters, and it also mailed preventive
health guidelines to all practitioners. In addition,
the plan's handbook and schedule of benefits were
used to promote the self-referral option for annual
Pap tests.
CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING - Turning Plan Awareness
Into Action
Description: This plan identified awareness
as the primary barrier to receiving a screening for
cervical cancer, so it devoted resources to education.
An article regarding cervical cancer ran in the member
newsletter, and the plan distributed preventive health
guidelines to primary care physicians and specialists.
CERVICAL CANCER SCREENING - Understanding Noncompliance
Description: This plan's initiative began with
member and provider education through annual newsletter
articles, followed by surveys mailed to women who
had not received a Pap smear in the past three years.
Finally, the plan sought to improve access by sending
nurses to conduct cervical cancer screening tests
at the sites of two of its largest employers.
CESAREAN SECTION - Peer-Led Quality Improvement
Description: This plan re-examined its cesarean
section rate in the face of a Healthy People 2000
goal rate of 15 percent. After review and analysis
of C-section documents, C-sections with questionable
indicators were flagged, and the plan's OB/GYN committee
discussed the delivery with the provider. The plan
then distributed vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC)
guidelines to its obstetricians.
CHECK-UPS AFTER DELIVERY - Improving Program Participation
Description: This plan encouraged participation
in expectant and new mother outreach programs with
newsletter articles, consultation with OB/GYN practices
and meetings with the contracted vendor that administered
the programs. The plan also offered incentives to
OB/GYNs and primary care providers to see women for
postpartum visits.
HIGH-RISK PREGNANCY MANAGEMENT - Preventing Prematurity
With a Comprehensive Approach
Description: Data from this plan showed that
extended hospital stays were more likely related to
prematurity than any other diagnosis. With these findings
in hand, the plan created a premature delivery prevention
program that offered case management, risk assessment
services, member education, physician incentives and
a new prenatal practice guideline.
HOSPITAL QUALITY PROGRAM: CESAREAN SECTIONS AND
LAPAROSCOPIC CHOLECYSTECTOMY - Improving Care for
a Hospital Network
Description: For the initial phase of its quality
improvement (QI) initiative, this plan implemented
a program of sharing guidelines with its hospitals.
After re-measuring results, the plan's QI staff and
medical directors began conducting annual hospital
quality visits to assist the hospitals in developing
quality action plans. The plan supported these efforts
with educational mailings and seminars.
INITIATION OF PRENATAL CARE - Outreach at Open
Enrollment
Description: The plan's goal for this effort
was to encourage female members of childbearing age
to initiate prenatal care within six weeks of enrollment.
In addition to eliminating the referral requirement
for obstetrical care, the plan established a program
emphasizing regular nurse contacts and educational
materials, including prenatal care and breast feeding
guides.
PREGNANCY MANAGEMENT - Pursuing Better Care During
Pregnancy
Description: Based on the success of related
programs for pregnant women, this plan extend pregnancy
management to a greater proportion of its members.
The program focused on risk assessment and maternal
education, and it monitored, implemented and evaluated
interventions in complicated pregnancies.
PRENATAL CARE - Collaborating for Community-Wide
Improvement
Description: This plan exclusively serves a
Medicaid population, and the plan initially responded
to ongoing concerns about prenatal care by strengthening
existing programs for health education and home care.
Subsequent actions included implementation of a lead
removal program, case management of high-risk members
throughout pregnancy, contracting with a mobile unit
and revision of the member OB guide.
VAGINAL BIRTH AFTER CESAREAN SECTION - A MULTIFACETED
AND PERSONALIZED APPROACH
Description: Rising C-section rates were the
impetus for this organization to revise its maternity
management program. New components included a compensation
system for reimbursing providers, letters to providers
identifying VBAC opportunities, meetings with medical
directors for providers with high C-section rates
and case management with support for members considering
VBAC. Internally, the plan hired an OB/GYN medical
director to engage providers in discussions of obstetric
care.
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