Innovative Coordinated Care Models

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Innovative Coordinated Care Models Rachel Post, LCSW Policy Director Central City Concern Rachel Solotaroff, MD, MCR Medical Director Central City Concern 1 May 2014

Central City Concern: Who we are Providing comprehensive solutions to ending homelessness and achieving self-sufficiency. Serving approximately 13,000 individuals yearly. 2

Four Dimensions to Mission Housing 1,600 units Integrated Care 159,360 visits 3 Peer Support 42,700 hours of service Employment 500 jobs

History: healthcare transformation in Oregon Governor Kitzhaber Governor Kitzhaber Old Town Clinic Feb 2011 Old Town Recovery Center May 2012 4

$1.9 Billion Federal Support for CCOs! l 5 year Investment Cut cost growth by 1% pts after 2 years, then 2% Measurably improve quality and access l 17 P4P metrics, 2% global budget bonus at risk l 6 Key Transformation Levers Focus on those with multiple or complex conditions Alternative payment methods focused on outcomes Integrated physical, behavioral, oral models of care Administrative simplification / new models of care Flexible services Learning systems for accelerating innovation spread

Health Share of Oregon Board of Directors Founding Members Hospital Systems: Elected Board members Adventist Health -Primary Care Provider physician Kaiser Permanente -Specialist physician Legacy Health -Nurse Practitioner Oregon Health & Science University Providence Health & Services -Mental Health Treatment Provider Tuality Healthcare -Addiction Treatment Provider Counties -Dentist Clackamas County -Community-at-Large two members Multnomah County Washington County -Chair of Community Advisory Council Other CareOregon (MCO) Central City Concern 6

Central City Concern role in CCO l Founding member l Strategic education around homelessness l Tri-County Community Behavioral Healthcare Network l Vice Chair of Finance Committee l Clinical Work Groups l Supportive Housing Work Group 7

CCO Criteria ü Operate within a global budget ü Manage financial risk, establish financial reserves, meet minimum financial requirements ü Coordinate physical, mental health and chemical dependency services, oral health care ü Encourage prevention and health through alternative payments to providers ü Engage community member/health care providers in improving health of community ü Address regional, cultural, socioeconomic and racial disparities in health care www.health.oregon.gov

CCO Model Health Share of Oregon Housing $ Mental Health $ Addictions & Physical health $ Dental $ Global Budget: $860 million Employment & Benefits support $ 9 Housing service agencies MH delivery system Medical delivery system Dental delivery system Covering 250,000 people Employment service agencies

Medicaid Enrollment in Oregon Total new OHP = 316,000 Total new OHP members projected for 2014= 240,800 Total new OHP assisted by Central City Concern= 1,750 10

DEVELOPING NEW CLINICAL MODELS IN THE CCO Health Commons Grant Pay for Performance Clinical Innovation 11

Overarching Aim: To create a regionally integrated patient- centered system to improve care coordination, care quality and health status for high cost/high acuity adult patients in the Medicaid & Dual- Eligible target population TriCounty Health Commons Level 1 strategies Unified, integrated processes: A. Yield small per member savings across large number of patients B. Function as screening and capture points for referring high acuity pts to Level 2 intensive services PRIMARY CARE Medical Homes Co- located Behavioral Health ; Integrated w/ Level 2 services COMMUNITY- WIDE Registry Real time ED & Inpt admit alerts; Program touches viewable by all providers EMERGENCY DEPT Navigators Divert non- urgent cases; support pts to establish PCMH STANDARDIZED Hospital Discharge Uniform discharge standards & processes between hospitals and PCMH Level 2 strategies Integrated community- based supports: A. Yield large per member savings across small number of (high cost) patients B. Provide individualized intensive multi- disciplinary support to high acuity patients INTERDISCIPLINARY COMMUNITY CARE Teams Integrated physical & mental health community- based teams comprised of traditional & non- traditional workforce - Geographically- based high acuity patient outreach - Aligned with Primary Care & Specialist practices - Integrated with Mental Health & Addictions Srvs INTENSIVE HOSPITAL- to- COMMUNITY Programs C- Train: high risk medical inpt- to- community transitions Intensive Transition Team: psychiatric inpt- to- community transitions - Enhanced discharge planning & patient supports - Rx reconciliation & adherence coaching - Home visit & telephonic post- discharge supports 12 - Home, community & telephonic supports - Address psycho- social challenges to health - Prompt follow up & care coordination with PCMH / specialists / mental hlth services / ICCT From The Health Commons Grant Team

CCC s Role in the Health Commons CHIPS: Central City Concern Health Improvement ProjectS This program employs five outreach workers, including 2 recovery specialists, a registered nurse, and a mental health professional who are embedded in Old Town Clinic. 13

CHIPS Outcomes Decreased ED visits 14

CHIPS Outcomes Equivocal decrease in IP visits (potential skew at end of study period) 15

CHIPS Outcomes No Overall Change in PCP visits 16

CHIPS Outcomes Initial increase in CD Treatment visits 17

18 CCO Incentive Measures Quality and Access Data Incentive Measure Oregon 2011 Baseline Focus Area: Behavioral Health Coordination 2013 Improvement Target Benchmark Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) 0.1% 3.0% 13.0% 7-day Follow-up after hospitalization for Mental Illness 57.6% 67.6% 68.0% Screening for Clinical Depression and Follow-Up Plan Focus Area: Maternal and Child Health Proof of concept Proof of concept Follow-up care for children prescribed ADHD Medication 52.3% 57.5% 51.% Timeliness of Prenatal Care 67.5% In development 89% Proof of concept Elective Delivery before 39 weeks Mental and Physical Health Assessment within 60 days for children in DHS custody In development In development 51.4% 55.3% 90% In development Developmental Screening in first 36 months of life 19.3% 22.4% 50% Adolescent Well Care Visits 31.2% 34.2% 53.2%

CCO Incentive Measures (continued) Incentive Measure Oregon 2011 Baseline Improvement Target Benchmark Focus Area: Chronic Conditions Colorectal Cancer Screening 12.5/1000 12.9/1000 21.9/1000 Controlled High Blood Pressure Proof of concept Proof of concept Proof of concept Diabetes: HbA1c Poor Control Proof of concept Proof of concept Proof of concept Focus Area: Reducing Preventable and Costly Utilization Ambulatory Care utilization: outpatient 363/1000 370.6/1000 439/1000 Emergency Department utilization 64.6/1000 62.6/1000 44.4/1000 Focus Area: Member Experience CAHPS Access to Care, Getting Care Quickly 83.0% 85.0% 87.0% CAHPS Satisfaction with Care 80.0% 82.0% 84.0% Focus Area: Improving Primary Care 19 Patient-Centered Primary Care Home Enrollment 50.3% n/a 100% (tier 3) EHR Adoption 32.0% 0.0% >49.2%

CCO Incentive Measures our focus Focus on areas of need in our population: SBIRT: Only clinic to meet this metric Provide TA to other sites Decreased ED utilization Less focus on: CRC screening (to be added this year) Maternal/child health 20

SBIRT DATA: YEAR TO DATE Internal Metric I: Screening Metric Total unique patients screened Total unique patients with visits within the past year Internal Metric II: Intervention Metric Total interventions Total positive screens in unique patients with visits within the past year Internal Metric III: CCO Metric Total interventions Total unique patients with visits within the past year Goal: 90% Goal: 36% Goal: 13% 21 Outcome:83.7% Outcome: 48.3% Outcome: 13.6% 21

Clinical Innovation l Clinical workgroup comprised of medical directors of all health systems in our RAE (risk-accepting entity, a subset of our CCO) Struggle to get behavioral health at table Finally added operational directors as well l Took 2 years to norm as a group and get traction l Now have workplans, projects, and some investment 22 l CCC is only HCH program at the table

Care Oregon RAE Clinical Workplan DRAFT Short (6 mo) Medium (1 year) Long (> 1 year) Community Care To be developed Primary Care 23 Improve Access Core F ns of primary care Manage High Risk Popns Behavior al Health Integrat n Secondary Care Tertiary Care Define capacity and do scan of RAE Proactive planning (prev care) Patient activation/self mgmt Care mgmt/care coordination Medication management Maximize capacity/access Team models Spread NICH to Legacy Initiate pilots for managing high utilizing patients in primary care (Advanced Primary Care) Key projects in chronic pain/ addiction Key pilots in BH in primary care Supply/demand matching Align incentives to maximize patient engagement Create accountabilities and align incentives to maximize core competencies of primary care Determine best practices, align incentives, and spread to other clinics in RAE Increase capacity for Suboxone Spread successful pilots Align payment To be developed. Ideas- hub for specialty access, ED diversion programs, Specialist/ Primary care shared standards To be developed Develop Trauma-informed systems HIT infrastructure: Develop Care Coordination/Information exchange and Data/ Analytics Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative PCPCH Enrollment 23

Integration of Addictions and Primary Care 24 Convened stakeholders from primary care, specialty addictions, public health, payers and public health who defined following work: q Expand evidence-based treatment for chronic pain (with and without concurrent addiction) q Building capacity for buprenorphine prescribing in Primary Care through PCP/addictions partnerships q Improve provider knowledge, skills and understanding of addiction ( Addictions 101 ) q Create addictions hub for consultation and service referrals q Improve bi-directional communication between addictions and primary care providers q Align and engage payers in all of the above

Clinical Vignette Meet Catherine: 54 year old Native American female Longstanding history of alcohol dependence, tobacco dependence, severe COPD requiring oxygen, PTSD, panic disorder, homelessness Multiple ED visits/hospitalizations for COPD exacerbations, alcohol withdrawal, falls while intoxicated Unable to complete inpatient EtOH treatment (patient s stated request) due to complex medical issues Unable to participate in pulmonary rehab due to ongoing EtOH, related to untreated PTSD and panic Multiple admissions to our respite program without resolution of underlying issues Multiple agencies involved including primary care, Aging and Disabilities, Adult Protective Services, Tri-County 911 Outreach team 25

Clinical Vignette (continued) l Overwhelmed primary care team placed CHIPS referral in June 2013 l Interventions of CHIPS team: Identified patient goal of stable supportive housing and to cut back, but not quit alcohol Collaboration with CHIPS RN and primary care team to improve respiratory and physical status while in respite care Coordinated all agencies to provide support for transfer to care facility with managed alcohol program Coaching with patient to tolerate facility, continue rehab until congregate housing option could be achieved Patient currently in process of transport to congregate housing and transfer to ICM team One ED visit, one hospitalization (from jail) since CHIPS engagement 26

Lessons Learned l In performance measures, it s okay to be selective as long as you perform well in chosen area l Utilize expertise of partners in other disciplines (especially behavioral health) for hot spot programs l Difficult to get seat at the table, but the value of HCH expertise is evident in Triple Aim l Promise of CCO still in question when we continue with FFS payment models 27

THANK YOU! rachel.post@ccconcern.org rachel.solotaroff@ccconcern.org 28