Abstract Background Infectious complications are common during cancer treatment and lead to delays in optimal care. At our center, an NCI-designated comprehensive cancer institute, outpatient infectious disease (ID) care for oncology patients traditionally depended on the malignancy type. Hematologic malignancies were managed at the cancer center, while solid organ tumor patients were seen at off-site fellows’ clinic that also covered HIV. This approach presented issues with geographic and EMR separation resulting in poor continuity of care. To address this, we performed a quasi-experimental quality improvement (QI) project to expand our cancer center-based clinic to include all cancer patients, regardless of malignancy type. Figure 1Process Map of Infectious Disease Outpatient Clinic Scheduling ProcessFigure 2Run Chart of Patients Seen Per Week and Clinic Attendance Methods From Jan 2023 to Dec 2023, our scheduling process was analyzed with QI tools including process map (Fig 1) and Ishikawa diagram. We engaged stakeholders and designated ID fellows as owners of a homogenized scheduling request process starting Jan 2024. After demonstrating need, clinical slots were expanded from 4 to 8 per session starting in August 2024. We then analyzed how our changes affected clinic volumes, show rates, and revenue (Fig 2). Figure 3Types of Solid Organ Malignancies SupportedFigure 4Financial Impact of Scheduling Changes Results From Jan 2023 to Dec 2023, our scheduling process was analyzed with QI tools including process map (Fig 1) and Ishikawa diagram. We engaged stakeholders and designated ID fellows as owners of a homogenized scheduling request process starting Jan 2024. After demonstrating need, clinical slots were expanded from 4 to 8 per session starting in August 2024. We then analyzed how our changes affected clinic volumes, show rates, and revenue (Fig 2). Conclusion Patients seen weekly in the clinic increased significantly (p=0. 0002) from 266 to 409. No-show rates were not affected (p=0. 508) and remained below 10% even after including solid tumor patients (Fig 2). ID clinic utilization was particularly robust for patients with head/neck and lung malignancies (Fig 3). Hematologic malignancy patient volumes were not negatively impacted. RVUs generated increased by 69%, with over 8, 000 additional annual revenue (Fig 4). Disclosures All Authors: No reported disclosures
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Joshua M Modrick
Wayne State University
Ryan Nazareno
Wayne State University
Sikander Chohan
Wayne State University
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Wayne State University
Detroit Medical Center
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Modrick et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6966f33b13bf7a6f02c012c2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.2191