The following piece was written by Jackie Wang, a HealthCorps Navigator at CHC, Inc. serving in the Quality Improvement Department.
Last Friday, Community Health Center, Inc., was honored to host Alice Huan-mei Chen, M.D., M.P.H. Dr. Chen is the Chief Integration Officer at San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH), the Director of the Center for Innovation in Access and Quality at SFGH, and an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of California-San Francisco (UCSF). At SFGH, Dr. Chen cares for primary care patients, precepts internal medicine residents, attends on the inpatient medical service, and staffs the medical consultation service. As Chief Integration Officer, she leads the ongoing creation of an integrated delivery system for the Department of Public Health. A major component of this new system is SFGH’s eReferral Program, an innovative program to close the gap between primary and specialty care. Dr. Chen championed and currently serves as Director of the eReferral Program. CHC is one of many organizations across the country working to replicate this model.
A quick primer on eReferrals at SFGH:
And eConsults, CHC’s program for electronic referrals:
Finally, some of the benefits that SFGH’s eReferrals has achieved:
At the risk of sounding completely unprofessional: cool, right?!? I haven’t directly participated in CHC’s eConsults project, so I had limited prior knowledge of electronic referrals. But, based on what I learned on Friday, they are potentially transformative. Patients often fall through the cracks at the primary care-specialty care interface; electronic referrals are a powerful way to coordinate care across these services.
San Francisco is truly leading the way in this innovation. There are a few aspects of its program that I found especially interesting. The SFGH team has recently implemented a bidirectional rating system: specialty reviewers rate the PCPs on the quality of their consultative question and information provided; PCPs rate the reviewers on the quality of their response. These surveys should provide helpful feedback to both parties, leading to improved communication. Furthermore, the electronic referrals stay open for six months after the last update, allowing for an ongoing conversation between the PCP and specialist. Finally, San Francisco’s system takes advantage of a shared electronic health record; specialists have complete access to patients’ records. CHC unfortunately does not have this advantage, and will need to work harder to collaborate effectively with specialists. I am interested to see how our program adapts San Francisco’s methods to our specific context. But I am, of course, most excited to see the impact of eConsults on the quality of care for our patients!
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