June 07, 2018
Area(s) of Interest:
Infectious Diseases Physician Leadership Vaccination
Name:Dee Lacy, M.D., Ph.D.
City:Fresno
Specialty:Infectious Disease
Member Since:2007
As an infectious disease physician, Dee Lacy, M.D., is accustomed to asking herself how her patients’ pain and suffering might have been prevented. But an encounter with one patient—a 33-year-old man who had been admitted to the hospital with meningitis and sepsis—left her certain that Kaiser Permanente (KP) and its members can do better.
In reading through the progress notes, Dr. Lacy discovered the patient had lost his spleen as a child. “People without a functional spleen are at greater risk of life-threatening infections, so it’s important they get a series of vaccinations,” she explains. “Not only is the dosing schedule complex, but because national vaccine recommendations for asplenia have been evolving, many patients, and sometimes physicians themselves, find it challenging to keep track.
Dr. Lacy believed that creating a population management system for this group of patients would help identify them more easily and provide more support for encouraging them to stay up to date on their vaccines.
So in 2014 she launched a regionwide education campaign for physicians, pharmacists, nurses and staff. Then she collaborated with The Permanente Medical Group (TPMG) Quality and Operations Support to configure KP’s advanced medical record system to scan the medical records of all members in Northern California and identify which ones have asplenia. Today the system performs these scans every 4 months, identifying which asplenic patients are behind or due for the next vaccine in a series, and generating letters that help educate and encourage these patients to get their vaccines.
“A solution like this is so much more possible at a place like Kaiser Permanente—not only because of our advanced technology, but because there is a culture here in which the patient is the most important thing."
Prior to the implementation of the program, just 1.4 percent of patients were up to date. But within 2 years of rolling out the program across KP Northern California, 88 percent of patients are current on all vaccines.
“Part of the answer lies in creating systems that make it easier to do the right thing,” says Dr. Lacy. “But an equally important part is education. Just by tweaking a combination of elements, we established an effective safety net for these patients.”
Dr. Lacy was recently awarded TMPG’s 2018 Sidney R. Garfield, M.D., Exceptional Contribution Award. The award—named after the physician founder of Kaiser Permanente and one of the great innovators of 20th century American health care delivery—recognizes physicians who develop systems and programs that have a significant impact on patients, colleagues and the broader community.
For more information about Dr. Lacy and her award, click here.
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