23-681m Improve Quality Metrics While Helping Members Manage Asthma
Date: 07/17/23
Talk with patients about ways to improve medication adherence
An estimated 26.5 million Americans have asthma, including 6.1 million children. Asthma has also led to 13.8 million missed school days, 14.2 million lost workdays for adults and is the third leading cause of hospitalization for children under age 15.1
How you can help
Apply HEDIS guidelines
Use HEDIS®2 guidelines to help track whether your patients consistently fill their prescriptions for asthma controller drugs.
Measure | How to interpret the measure rate |
|---|---|
Asthma Medication Ratio (AMR): This HEDIS measure evaluates the percentage of members ages 5-64 who were identified as having persistent asthma and had a ratio of controller medications to total asthma medications of 0.50 or greater during the measurement year. The AMR is the number of controller units of medication divided by the number of units of total asthma medications (controller and rescue units) dispensed. | Goal: A medication ratio higher than 0.50 for the year. If a member’s ratio is less than 0.50 it means that a member is using too much rescue medication and their asthma may not be controlled well. |
Talk about challenges to adherence as part of routine conversations with patients
You can identify poor adherence during an empathetic discussion with the patient. Find out if these barriers are present so you can address each. Is the patient:
- Not filling their medication?
- Stopping treatment too soon?
- Not following up with their physician or appointments?
Also consider addressing these other factors when you speak with patients:
Factors leading to poor adherence | |
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Medication/regimen factors |
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Unintentional factors |
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Perceptions or beliefs |
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Other |
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Remember these key components of asthma care
Applying the following guidelines may improve care:
Assess, diagnose and monitor asthma severity and control
- Review medical history. Establish asthma diagnosis.
- Initial visit: Assess asthma severity to start treatment.
- Follow-up visit: Assess and control asthma at every visit. In the past four weeks, has the patient had:
- Daytime asthma symptoms more than twice/week?
- Any night waking due to asthma?
- Any activity limited due to asthma?
- Quick reliever use for symptoms more than twice/week?
- Prioritize patients with a low asthma medication ratio (e.g., less than 0.5).
Educate for a partnership in care
- Review medication technique and adherence. Demonstrate and have the patient demonstrate back.
- Assess side effects.
- Identify poor adherence: Check medication usage, date of last controller prescription, and date and dose counter on the inhaler.
- Identify and/or review potential triggers and how to minimize exposure to them. Encourage patients to quit smoking and refer them to smoking cessation programs.
- Discuss solutions with patients if they have any barriers to filling their prescription.
- Discuss basic asthma facts:
- Explain how the medications work.
- Review the difference between a controller and a rescue medication.
- Discuss how some are required even though you may not be having symptoms.
Maintain, step up, or step down the approach to manage asthma
- Therapy is increased as needed and decreased when possible.
- Identify and address any common problems such as inhaler technique, adherence, allergen exposure and provide patient education.
Complete a written asthma action plan and schedule follow-up
- Review the asthma action plan with the patient and revise as needed. Encourage patient to follow their action plan.
- Schedule next follow-up appointment with patient.
Resources
Refer to these resources for more information.
Resource - URL, link or web path |
|---|
Member flyer: Controlling Your Asthma (for use only with members on Health Net Commercial plans; not for Medi-Cal members) |
Member flyer: Understanding Asthma (for use only with members on Health Net Commercial plans; not for Medi-Cal members) |
Member flyer: Live Your Best Life with Asthma (PDF) (for use only with members on Medi-Cal) |
Provider tip sheet: Asthma Medication Ratio Visit the Provider Library > Select an applicable line of business > Education, Training and Other Materials > Asthma Medication Ratio (PDF). |
Provider flyer: Language assistance Visit the Provider Library > Select an applicable line of business > Health Equity, Cultural and Linguistic Resources > Interpreter Services for Members (PDF). |
Provider flyer: Transportation services at no cost Visit the Provider Library > Select an applicable line of business > Education, Training and Other Resources > Quality Patient Transportation = Positive Health Outcomes (PDF). |
Additional information
If you have questions regarding the information contained in this update, contact the Health Net Provider Services Center by email, by telephone or through the Health Net provider portal.
1American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology.
2Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS). HEDIS is a registered trademark of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA).
This information applies to Physicians and Participating Physician Groups (PPGs).
For Medi-Cal, this information applies to Kern, Los Angeles, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, and Tulare counties.