Improving the Rate of Colposcopy in an Urban Population of Patients With Known Abnormal Pap Smears

This project was designed to improve the colposcopy rate in an urban patient population with known abnormal Pap smears within 75 days of the test to rapidly identify and treat premalignant lesions. Using Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles, Lean techniques, and the electronic health record, the authors created a protocol to verify all Pap smears, then created a process whereby a phone-triage team contacted patients with abnormal Pap smears to educate them and schedule colposcopy. As a result, 100% of Pap smears were verified, compared with 95% prior to plan implementation. The mean time from Pap to colposcopy was 38.5 days, with 85% of patients having colposcopy performed after plan implementation, compared with 50% prior—a 70% improvement. If patients with medical contraindications were excluded, the percentage rose to 91%—an 82% improvement. Patient and provider satisfaction improved, staff and provider workload did not increase, and there was the potential for substantial economic savings.
Source: American Journal of Medical Quality - Category: Health Management Authors: Tags: Articles Source Type: research