Problem Solvers
POCs: Education for Improved Outcomes
Why oxygen providers should establish POC education programs, and how they should implement them.
- By David Kopf
- Aug 01, 2016
The portable oxygen concentrator has
been revolutionary for both long-term oxygen therapy equipment providers
and their patients. For providers, POCs create a much more affordable and
manageable cost scenario than delivering oxygen cylinders. For patients, POCs
given them increased mobility and freedom, which not only confers a much
improved quality of life, but improved therapeutic outcomes.
That said, POCs are not portable cylinders. They are much more complex
devices that end users must fully understand so that they can maximize the
benefit they derive from their POCs. Bearing that in mind, providers should
implement POC education programs that can ensure a solid level of therapy
and device comprehension among their LTOT patients.
Benefits of Education
The benefits of a POC education program should be clear to any provider:
Once a provider ensures the patient is matched to the most appropriate device,
a thorough understanding of that unit will optimize outcomes.
“The clinical literature has demonstrated that patients that are appropriately
oxygenated with various activities, particularly ambulation and exercise have
the best clinical outcomes, which includes the best life expectancy,” says Joe
Lewarski, vice president of global respiratory and sleep for Drive-DeVilbiss
Healthcare. “Stable patients will be less likely to experience unplanned healthcare
interventions, including readmission.”
“Providing the patient with a strong foundation of POC knowledge and information
at the initial delivery pays big dividends,” says Dave Marquard II, owner
and CEO of Applied Home Healthcare Equipment. “A, patient education eliminates
anxiety about being on oxygen. B, patients learn that if handled properly,
oxygen in the home is very safe. C, patients well educated on their POC are
likely to recommend the DME that educated them to others. D, patients well
educated on their POC are likely to comment favorably to physicians and other
referral sources on service capabilities of the DME. E, a well-educated POC
patient is less likely to require numerous service calls from the DME.”
Also, an education program will reinforce the basic therapeutic value of
a POC, which can get lost on patients, particularly new ones, who might be
struggling to grasp large volumes of information about their condition.
“A lot of patients don’t really understand the benefits of a POC,” says
George Coppola, director of marketing for respiratory at CAIRE Inc., a Chart
Industries company. “Patients using a POC device need to understand what
the device provides them, and that’s ample oxygen whether at rest or more
important when exercising or during exertion.”
Another reason why providers should educate patients on their devices is
that POCs are not uniform. Providers must match their patients to the POC
that is right for them, and those POCs might use different oxygen delivery
methods. Moreover, the settings on one device are not the settings on another.
Coppola points out that while POCs have various numerical settings, the
amount of oxygen at those setting vary wildly from unit to unit.
“It’s really important to understand that, if a prescription of two liters per
minute is needed to maintain saturation levels above 94 percent, then the
device that the patient is using in that pulse mode should be set to keep that
patient saturated during exercise,” he says. “The device setting on one might be
a two, but on another might be a five. So a high-quality pulse oximeter needs
to be used in conjunction with the POC to ensure the right settings are made.”
“As had been discussed myriad times in both the clinical literature and
trade press, all POCs are not equal; they produce different amounts of oxygen
and deliver it differently,” Lewarski explains. “Oxygen production ranges
from about 350 ml to 3,000 ml per minute. Oxygen delivery methods include
pulse-dose only, as well as continuous flow and pulse-dose. Pulse-dose
delivery varies significantly as well, with fixed-bolus and fixed minute volume
approaches using various bolus sizing models that ideally need to be titrated
to the patient during the different activities the device will be used (resting,
walking, exercising, etc.).”
Elements of an Effective POC Education Program
Education should start with benefits, according to Coppola. A key part of the
training should be simple understanding of the benefits of using a POC and
encouragement to get patients to use them specifically while engaging in some
kind of exercises.
“Included in the education needs to be the use of the device while exercising
and traveling to reduce risk of hypoxia and increase exercise tolerance,” he
explains. “So encourage the patient to live as normal a life as possible with
COPD, get out of their homes, stay active. We want the patients to understand
that they can go to the park; they can walk their grandkids; they can go to the
ballgame; they can do anything that they would normally do under any other
circumstances.”
In addition to benefits the program should also include a nuts-and-bolts
understanding of the device so that the patient can use it competently and
confidently. Marquard listed several:
Medical. Marquard says all POC patients should understand why they are on
oxygen generally and why they are on portable oxygen specifically.
Safety. While Marquard notes that POCs are safe and effective when
“common sense” rules are followed, he says an effective training program
should include safety training to ensure users understand issues such as the
dangers of smoking while on a POC. “Safety issues related to the operation of Productsthe POC should be the No. 1 item stressed to the patient,” he says.
Operational. As Marquard puts it, “Operating a POC is not rocket science. But every user of a POC should feel comfortable in his or her knowledge of how to properly operate a POC, its limitations, its advantages over being teth-ered to a stationary oxygen tank, and how to deal with an alarm or get help should one go off.”
Trouble shooting. POCs are the future of home oxygen and are reliable. Almost 40 percent of patient returns of POCs end up classified as “no trouble found,” he says. In these cases, there was nothing wrong with the POC. The patient was confused or not properly trained. Marquard says Applied Home Healthcare dedicates training to its DMEs to help them in turn educate the patient on how to understand and take advantage of their POCs. This includes helping patients do minor trouble shooting, such as removing pet fur from filters, making sure the power supply is plugged in, and similar technical checks.
Maintenance. POCs need to be maintained to ensue they operate at optimum performance levels for patients. Bearing that in mind, patients should be instructed on what are the correct maintenance practices and service sched-ules and how to follow them.
Lewarski stresses that any patient POC training must be hands-on. The
provider needs to see that they patients are demonstrating their knowledge of
their devise through actual use. Also, patients should be monitored and appropriately
titrated to their device during the training, he advises.
An Ongoing Effort
Also, once the patient is educated on his or her device, the instruction doesn’t
stop. It’s important to keep up with that patient and continue the education.
“Each patient is different, so a follow-up and re-education care plan should
be individualized based on the educator’s evaluation of the patient and
caregivers,” Lewarski notes. “Some patients may do well with one session and
others may need additional follow-up, which may be face to face, by phone or
email.”
And that follow-up effort gives providers and opportunity to update patients
on new developments. As POCs improve, patients need to be kept aware of
new advances, Marquard says. As technology of miniaturization help POCs
become lighter and more portable, patients can gain even more benefits
through expanded usage.
“Allowing patients to keep up with and benefit from new advances in technology
requires some sort of patient follow up education,” he explains. “It’s
just good DME business practice to have such a program in place. The chance
to re-instruct a patient when needed should be looked at as a customer sales
opportunity by the DME, not as a burden.”
Coppola adds that the process is an ongoing effort that should come from
the providers as well as peers. The more group support that patients can get,
the more peer-to-peer insights they will gain in managing their conditions and
their devices.
“Education in terms of managing or improving condition, such as COPD,
does take time,” Coppola adds, stressing that providers must offer, “follow-up,
specifically being provided in a modular fashion, to assist the patients’ learn
styles and abilities. So getting enrolled in pulmonary rehab programs and
being around other patients to share their experiences on what works and
what doesn’t work is very helpful to them.”
He adds that even if patients have limited mobility or don’t have local
access to such groups, there are a number of online resources and groups that
providers can leverage as part of their ongoing education efforts.
Enlisting Help
The provider isn’t alone in helping educate patients on their POCs, either.
Referring physicians and other healthcare providers can help ensure that
patients are getting the best use and benefit from their devices if they understand
what the patient is learning.
“As many providers know, referral sources may also benefit from education
about POCs, along with an understanding of the home education provided to
POC users,” Lewarski explains. “For all of the reasons previously stated, referral
sources also benefit from their HME partner providing patient-specific clinical
and therapy-specific education. Referral sources, patients and providers are all
key stakeholders in the care of oxygen dependent individuals.”
“It pays to keep the referral partners in the loop,” Marquard says. “Some of
the smartest OxyGo providers I have seen make it a point to always let the
providing medical staff referral source know exactly how the patient was
educated. They report on what the instruction covered, any questions the
patient had, the comprehension level of the patient observed. This can be
done electronically or by personal visit to the referring source. It should be
looked at as another opportunity to enable the providing referral source to do
a better job of reinforcing what their patients need most. By doing this the
partnership between referral source, provider and patient is strengthened to
the max.”
Ultimately, this can be a unified front. Everyone involved in the patient’s
respiratory care can help reinforce the lessons from the provider’s POC education
program.
“Patient outcomes should be first on everyone’s mind; making sure that
patients are well taken care of and well educated,” Coppola says. “So providers
linking up with local pulmonary centers and local physicians is very important.
There is no such thing as too much information. The more information
the better.”
This article originally appeared in the August 2016 issue of HME Business.