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Definition of Pega Care Management application components

Updated on April 26, 2021

With the reusable components that are described in this topic, you can create and maintain care plans to manage programs that are based on the needs and designs to meet your business objectives. Your care management application provides a guided process to help you define components that are needed for care plans, programs, and the personal health plan.

Pega Care Management Implementation Guide Pega Care Management Implementation Guide Pega Care Management Implementation Guide

The dashboard in the Business Analyst portal provides a system administrator or a business analyst access to instances of configured rules such as goals, tasks, interventions, and alerts for the management of chronic conditions and wellness and preventative programs. Each rule type has its own template for creating and maintaining these instances. At run time, when these rules are called in the context of a patient’s care plan, a work object is created. With these reusable components, you can create and maintain care plans to manage programs that are based on the needs and designs to meet your business objectives.

You must plan for and create the instances of the following rule types to meet your business needs:

Program category
Specifies the name of the clinical category in which the program is being managed, such as Care Management, Disease Management, and Health and Wellness.
Program
Specifies the name of the clinical condition or chronic disease program that is being managed such as Diabetes, Asthma, Smoking Cessation, Post-Discharge or Re-Admission Prevention, Falls Risk, and High-Risk Maternity. The programs are categorized as Disease Management, Case Management, or Health and Wellness programs.
Care plan
Specifies the name of the clinical condition or chronic disease program that is being managed such as Diabetes, Asthma, Smoking Cessation, Post-Discharge or Re-Admission Prevention, Falls Risk, and High-Risk Maternity. The programs are categorized as Disease Management, Case Management, or Health and Wellness programs.
Task
Defines the automated and manual user actions such as scheduled phone calls, scheduled risk assessments, sending fulfillment, sending correspondence (emails and letters), and interventions.
Goal
Defines an objective to be met by the patient within a given time frame, for example, achieve HbA1c levels <7.
Alert
Defines the automated queries against claims and authorizations data sources that are used for monitoring changes, that is, the presence or absence of clinical events.
Problem
Defines issues that are associated with the patient that need to be addressed.
Fulfillment
Refers to documents, brochures, or educational materials that are sent to a patient or a patient's Primary Care Physician (PCP). By selecting this rule, you can attach these files to the associated program and program category.
Barrier
Defines situations that prevent a patient from completing a goal, including social determinants.

For more information, see the Diabetes example.

Intervention
Promotes behavior to improve mental and physical health or discourage or redirect those with health risks.

To create the components, see Creating your application components.

Program enrollment care plan

You create a care plan that includes a set of activities that are identified to manage the care of a patient. A care plan can contain problems, goals, barriers, tasks, and interventions.

Additionally, patients can be enrolled in condition-specific programs that contain alerts, goals, interventions, and tasks within the program (You configure these items in the Business Analyst portal). Within the care plan, users can filter on a specific program in order to see the care plan elements that are associated with that program. For example, during an assessment, answers to a specific question, or series of questions, results in the triggering of tasks and goals for the patient. In working with a patient, a care manager can also personalize the care plan with other problems, goals, and tasks that are agreed to by the patient.

The following example shows that a patient is assessed for diabetes and then is enrolled into one of the three Diabetes Programs, based on the assessment.

Initial Risk assessment
This type of care plan is used to schedule an initial risk assessment task.
Low Risk diabetes management
This type of care plan is used to manage a low-risk diabetic.
High Risk diabetes management
This type of care plan is used to manage a high-risk diabetic with more active management.

Diabetes program example with three care plans

The following example shows that a Diabetes Program is managed with three care plans.

Initial Risk Assessment Care Plan
This type of care plan is used to schedule an initial risk assessment task.
Low Risk DM Care Plan
This example shows the types of alerts, goals, and tasks that can be set up to manage a low-risk diabetic.
High Risk DM Care Plan
This example shows the types of alerts, goals, and tasks that can be set up to manage a high-risk diabetic with more active management.

  • Previous topic Creating your application components in the Business Analyst portal
  • Next topic Uploading code sets to Pega Foundation for Healthcare

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