Updated quality measures for the care of patients with dementia, including a new measure to encourage disclosure of a diagnosis to patients and family members, have been published by a joint work group of APA and the American Academy of Neurology (AAN).
The document, “Updated Dementia Management Quality Measures,” was written by a 26-member work group convened by the two associations and published this month in their respective journals, the American Journal of Psychiatry and Neurology. It covers nine broad areas of assessment, diagnosis, and treatment and may be adopted for future reporting in the Medicare Quality Payment Program; if so, the measurement set is also likely to be incorporated for use by psychiatrists and other clinicians participating in PsychPRO, APA’s mental health registry.
“Driving improvement in clinical practice and care of dementia is the purpose of the new measures,” psychiatrist Robert Roca, M.D., M.P.H., M.B.A., co-chair of the work group, told Psychiatric News. “The work group was formed for the purpose of updating quality measures that would be truly relevant to clinical practice and that would help align everyday clinical practice with guidelines for quality care.”
Roca is vice president and medical director at Sheppard Pratt Health System and chair of the APA Council on Geriatric Psychiatry.
The nine broad areas addressed in the measure set are disclosure of diagnosis, education and support of caregivers, functional assessment, screening for behavioral and psychiatric symptoms, screening for safety concerns, screening for driving safety, advance care planning, screening for pain, and treatment of dementia. (A description of the measures is given in the box at left; specific metrics associated with each measure are in the AJP article.)
An especially important and potentially controversial addition to the set is the measure assessing the percentage of patients who are informed that they have been diagnosed with dementia.
“This may be the measure most likely to provoke the most discussion,” Roca said. “Because we do not currently have treatments that can definitively alter the course of dementia, clinicians are sometimes apprehensive about revealing a diagnosis of dementia because of the concern that patients will be very demoralized. In fact, the data show that people want to know the diagnosis and want to be able to make plans. Clinicians need not be afraid to take this subject up directly with patients and their caregivers. For the most part, people don’t want this information hidden from them and want to be able to make appropriate plans.”
Roca said the dialogue with a patient about a diagnosis of dementia may call especially for the skills of a psychiatrist. “People in the field will recognize that this is a conversation that needs to be opened with special sensitivity and that timing is crucial,” he said.
Other important changes to the measure set involve combining separate measures for screening and management of behavioral and psychiatric symptoms associated with dementia into one measure and a new measure assessing pharmacologic treatment of dementia.
Roca told Psychiatric News that the new measures may be incorporated into the Medicare Quality Payment Program and PsychPRO.
APA Director of Research Philip Wang, M.D., M.P.H., said one of the benefits of PsychPRO is that it will allow APA to develop, test, and deploy new quality measures like the dementia measures.
“The multidisciplinary work group should be congratulated on its hard work to update these critically important quality measures and ensure they are clinically relevant,” Wang told Psychiatric News. “Going forward, PsychPRO can also help in this process by allowing the field of psychiatry to develop, test, and deploy new quality measures that truly capture the value of psychiatric care.”
PsychPRO was created by APA to assist members with quality reporting requirements as well as meeting the requirements for Maintenance of Certification by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
The original Dementia Management Quality Measurement Set was developed and published in 2013 by AAN as part of the AMA’s Physician Consortium for Performance Improvement (PCPI).
Some of those original measures were incorporated into the Physician Quality Reporting System, previously the main quality reporting program for Medicare. The program has been replaced by the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS).
In 2015, the AAN and the APA formed the multidisciplinary work group to improve the original measures and to identify areas calling for new ones. The work group consisted of 26 members from 21 organizations including physician, patient, caregiver, advanced practice provider, psychologist, payer, and nursing representatives.
“APA worked closely with the AAN to come up with a set of measures that would reflect the state of the art in dementia care,” Roca said. “We are hoping that members who take care of persons with dementia will look at these measures as useful guides to what constitutes quality of care.” ■
A description of the new quality measures and the process by which they were developed can be accessed
here. A summary of the measures is posted
here.