Home Food News Annual report shows Dayton VA has improved over

Annual report shows Dayton VA has improved over

0

DAYTON — Using an annual web-based report scorecard that measures, evaluates and benchmarks quality and efficiency at its medical centers, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) recently released data that showed significant improvements at the majority of its health care facilities.

The Dayton VA Medical Center was one of the facilities that made positive strides in the benchmarks and is striving to continue progress. The facility improved in overall quality since last year.

“The Dayton VA Medical Center took an aggressive approach to drive improvement this year, which helped move us forward in our mission to provide top quality healthcare to our local Veterans,” said Jill Dietrich, Dayton VAMC Director.

Specifically, improvements were made in Mental Health measures, hospital mortality, 30-day readmission rates, and inpatient quality measures. In addition, the Dayton VAMC is a top performer in preventing patient hospitalizations due to conditions that should be managed in an outpatient setting, such as diabetes, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and congestive heart failure.

“Although we are extremely proud of the work we’ve done this year, our culture in Dayton is one of continual improvement,” Dietrich added. “Several projects are currently underway to continue pushing the Dayton VA forward.”

Compared with data from the same period a year ago, the July 2018 release of VA’s Strategic Analytics for Improvement and Learning (SAIL) report showed 103 (71 percent) VA Medical Centers (VAMCs) have improved in overall quality — with the largest gains seen in areas where there were VA-wide improvement initiatives, such as mortality, length of stay and avoidable adverse events. Seven (5 percent) VAMCs had a small decrease in quality.

“This is a major step in the right direction to improving our quality of services for our Veterans,” said VA Secretary Robert Wilkie. “Over the past year, we were able to identify our problems and implement solutions to fixing the issues at 71 percent of our facilities. I’m extremely proud of our employees and the progress they have made to raise VA’s performance for our nation’s heroes.”

Additionally, of the 15 medical centers placed under the Strategic Action for Transformation program (StAT), an initiative that monitors high-risk medical centers and mobilizes resources to assist the facilities, 33 percent (five medical centers) are no longer considered high-risk and 73 percent (11 medical centers) show meaningful improvements since being placed under StAT in January 2018.

The quarterly SAIL report, which has been released publicly since 2015, assesses 25 quality metrics and two efficiency and productivity metrics in areas such as death rate, complications and patient satisfaction, as well as overall efficiency and physician capacity at 146 VAMCs. It is used as an internal learning tool for VA leaders and personnel to pinpoint and study VAMCs with high quality and efficiency scores, both within specific measured areas and overall. The data is also used to identify best practices and develop strategies to help troubled facilities improve.