The Medical Home: Disruptive Innovation for a New Primary Care Model

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The Medical Home: Disruptive Innovation for a New Primary Care Model The National Medical Home Summit March 2, 2009 Philadelphia PA Paul H. Keckley, Ph.D. Executive Director The Deloitte Center for Health Solutions Washington, DC 1

Framework: Four major roles in developed systems ADMINISTRATORS/WATCHDOGS Employers Insurers HCIT Media Pharma INNOVATORS Academic Medicine SERVICE PROVIDERS Regulators BioTech Professional Societies/ Special Interests Device Accrediting Agencies Long Term Care CAM Hospitals BIOTECH Allied Health Professionals Physicians Outpatient Facilities Disease Management CONSUMERS 2

Disruptive innovation: better, cheaper According to Clayton Christensen, Harvard Business Professor and author of The Innovator s Dilemma and The Innovator s Solution, a disruptive innovation is a technology, process, or business model that brings to a market a much more affordable product or service that is much simpler to use. It enables more consumers in that market to afford and/or have the skill to use the product or service. The change caused by such an innovation is so big that it eventually replaces, or disrupts, the established approach to providing that product or service. Health care exists along a spectrum: from judgment/specialist-based medicine to a simpler rules-based medicine. Most health care today is concentrated at the specialist end of the spectrum, creating a situation that not only excludes many who need the care but also resists any downward pressure on costs. The opportunity for change lies in the simplicity and diagnostic power of rules-based medicine Providing solutions patients want and see as better alternatives is the driver for disruption to occur. 3

Retail Medicine 1,300 operating 12/08, increasing to 5,000 by 2011 Strong consumer satisfaction: driven by convenience (not substitutionary care) Unique business model: incremental revenues from front store sales, et al Sticky issues: Scope of practice constraints Competition & program scalability 4

Disease Management and Retail Pharmacies: A Convergence Opportunity 13,400 retail pharmacies with capacity for patient engagement Medication management and selfcare coordination key focus of cost containment with strong consumer and payer support Potential to enter population-based care management sector (esp in tandem with primary care clinics) Sticky issues: Regulation Liability Released July 2008 5

Connected Care: Technology-enabled Care at Home Use of technology for diagnostics and monitoring Two targeted applications: chronic patients in established treatment programs, post-acute coordination Strong support across all consumer segments & payers Sticky issues: Liability Privacy Payments Released March 2008 6

2009 Survey of Health Care Consumers Six distinct segments of consumer market: 53% lean traditional, 19% prefer innovations, 28% don t engage Strong support for transparency (price and quality), use of technology by providers, and universal care Use of alternative providers, disruptive innovative channels growing and significant Trusted source up for grabs Sticky issues: Lack of knowledge Lack of consensus re: reform 7

The public view: The system is confusing Only 3 in 10 consumers feel they know how the U.S. health care system works. How Well Do You Think You Understand How the U.S. Health Care System Works? 27% 17% 17% 16% 14% 9% 10% 7% 3% 4% 4% 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Not at all Completely Source: 2009 Survey of US Health Consumers 8

The public view: And it wastes a lot of money 52% of Americans feel that at least half of health costs are wasted. What Percentage of All U.S. Health Care Dollars Spent Are Wasted? 52% 22% 4% 2% 6% 15% 13% 10% 8% 9% 6% 5% 2% 0% 1-9% 10-19% 20-29% 30-39% 40-49% 50-59% 60-69% 70-79% 80-89% 90-99% 100% Source: 2009 Survey of US Health Consumers 9

The public view: The system isn t working very well Only 1 in 5 consumers give the U.S. health care system an above-average report card grade; those grading the system F outnumber those giving it an A by 6 to 1. How Would You Grade the Overall Performance of the U.S. Health Care System? 43% 38% 20% 25% 18% 13% 2% A B C D F Excellent Failing Source: 2009 Survey of US Health Consumers 10

Consumers views of health reform: medical court system, employer mandate, mental health coverage, expanded scope of practice for nurses popular Reform Favor U.S. Oppose Improve health insurance / care for military 77% 5% Expand teaching programs in U.S. schools of medicine to increase the supply of PCPs Establish special court system to address medical malpractice issues Require every employer to provide health insurance for their employees Pass state laws to allow consumers to purchase drugs directly from Canada 74% 5% 54% 12% 53% 17% 49% 15% Increased federal funding for mental / behavioral health services 49% 17% Allow nurses to diagnose problems and administer care for uncomplicated conditions Increase government funding and incentives to support adoption of EMRs by providers / plans Allow FDA to compile information about individuals who take Rx medications to monitor 47% 21% 41% 21% 41% 24%

EMR use, performance-based payment popular; increased taxes for uninsured coverage unpopular Reform Pay doctors and hospitals based on clinical results and outcomes rather than number of patients served or services provided Require holistic and non-traditional methods of care to be taught in U.S. medical schools Require every American to have health insurance via purchase / employer / government Establish national program that provides financial incentives for doctors who follow scientifically-proven approaches to treatment Assign every American to a PCP who will assist in coordinating care and referring to specialty Have federal government assume responsibility for and control over Medicaid Increase taxes to help provide health insurance coverage for the uninsured * Statistically significantly different from the U.S. average (p <.05) U.S. Favor Oppose 39% 21% 38% 20% 37% * 25% * 33% 23% 27% 38% 26% 31% 25% 43%

The Medical Home Four basic models Primary care paid for coordinating care, managing population-based outcomes and costs Pilots projects underway by most major plans, Medicare Tricky issues: Scope of practice and liability for PCPs, mid-levels Compensation and risk sharing Metrics: process vs outcomes Released January 2008 13

Traditional Primary Care vs. Medical Home Primary Care Practice Medical Home Primary Provider Primary Care Physician PCP with health coaches Provider Accountability Limited incentives for quality Increased incentives through transparency Physician s Role Trusted source Trusted source supplemented by others; member of a collaborative health care delivery team Care Fragmented Integrated, whole person oriented, anywhere/anytime Care coordination Disintermediated to disease management industry Responsible and reimbursed Primary Incentive Visits & procedures (volume) Patient adherence to selfcare regimen Decision Support Limited, largely physicianpatient relationship Customized, internet and personal coaching, EMR & EBM guided 14

Economic Impact: Costs Incremental Cost Assumption EMR with Registry Functionality and Knowledge Management Tools for Clinicians Physician Revenue for care coordination $80-120K initial investment, $5-20K ongoing maintenance per medical home EBM and Clinical Decision Support Guided Practice 300,000,000 US Population / 1-2,000 patients per medical home * incremental costs $100-115 K per PCP $50-100 per patient in panel Health Coach $78K + 56% load Load for benefits, coaching tools, etc Data Manager $65K / 3 FTE 1/3 FTE per medical home Panel size 1-2K, depending on prevalence and intensity of chronic care management requirements Physician Incentive $150-400K $500/patient in panel, inclusive of clinical performance bonus, current state $350-600K vs. future state $.5-1MM 15

Four programmatic areas bend the curve to reduce cost and improve care For each of these, current legislative groundwork has been laid, and current reform proposals by Baucus, Wyden-Bennett, and Obama are aligned All can be implemented within context of continued private markets for providers and plans 3 4 Consumerism Focus: CDHPs, Transparency, PHRs, Incentives, Value Primary Care 2.0 Focus: Primary Care 2.0 New Medical Home ) Respond to transparency & PC 2.0 Connected care Rx reimportation Medical tourism PHR (Shared Decision Making) Incentives Experience rating & differential premiums Healthy behavior rewards Complementary/Alternative Medicine New medical homes Reimbursement realignment Primary care workforce MD led clinical care coordination 1 2 Comparative Effectiveness/ Evidence based Medicine Focus: (1) Personalized medicine, (2) comparative effectiveness; episode based payments to acute organizations Healthcare Information Technology Focus: (1) e-prescribing, ( (2) care coordination (3) administrative cost reduction 3 7 NMEs per year Center for comparative effectiveness Knowledge management Prepare for tort reform Decreased errors Decreased care gaps Reduced malpractice premiums Improved efficiency 16

Long term: Health reform in two stages Stage One:2009-2011 Stimulus Package Inclusions Focus will be expansion of benefits to newly unemployed, executive orders that extend coverage (SCHIP 2/2/09) and jobs related programs In additon, certain programs that buoy states against expected increases in Medicaid enrollment A few campaign promises: EX. HCIT Stage Two: 2010-2016 Systemic Reforms Long Term Insurance market reforms Individual mandate + employer pay or play + FEHP2 Comparative effectiveness Episode based payments Medical Home Expansion of role: FDA, CDC Medicare eligibility Federalization of Medicaid During Stage One and into Stage Two, the banking system correction under the Fed Reserve Board, US Dept of Treasury will be a key parallel process: deployment of $700+B TARP funds, mortgage market stability focus 17

Potential Savings Metric Acute 10% fewer hospital admissions; 20% fewer ER visits; 10% less absenteeism Diagnostic Therapeutic 20% fewer tests Prescriptions should increase with more patient adherence, but overall medical costs should decrease ~30% 1 1. www.dartmouthatlas.org/atlases/2006_chronic_care_atlas.pdf 18

Breakeven Scenario Medical cost drivers: Health coaching and increased effectiveness in patient enrollment in disease management programs. Health coach can manage 250 disease management patients on average 150K new medical homes (300 million US population / 2K panel size) with total system cost = 150K x cost drivers Future medical cost trend 8%, non medical cost trend 4% 4 years to breakeven 19

Key Questions Is the current model of the medical home bettercheaper? Is the primary goal of the medical home to recruit physicians to primary care or manage population-based care? How can/should the medical home fit within the context of health reform and transformational change in the industry? 20

For more information Paul H. Keckley, Ph.D. Executive Director Deloitte Center for Health Solutions 555 12th Street N.W. Washington, DC 20004 Phone 202 220 2150 Fax 202 379 2429 Email pkeckley@deloitte.com Web http://www.deloitte.com/centerforhealthsolutions 21