Accountable Care: Clinical Integration is the Foundation

Similar documents
Building a Multi-System Clinically Integrated Network

Connected Care Partners

The Accountable Care Organization Specific Objectives

All ACO materials are available at What are my network and plan design options?

A Practical Approach Toward Accountable Care and Risk-Based Contracting: Design to Implementation

Adopting Accountable Care An Implementation Guide for Physician Practices

Accountable Care Atlas

Re: Rewarding Provider Performance: Aligning Incentives in Medicare

Laying the Foundation for Successful Clinical Integration

Using Data for Proactive Patient Population Management

Frequently Asked Questions

Value-Based Contracting

Executive Summary. Leadership Toolkit for Redefining the H: Engaging Trustees and Communities

Accountable Care Organizations American Osteopathic Association Health Policy Day September 23, 2011

Long term commitment to a new vision. Medical Director February 9, 2011

Physician Alignment Strategies and Options. June 1, 2011

COLLABORATING FOR VALUE. A Winning Strategy for Health Plans and Providers in a Shared Risk Environment

IMPROVING TRANSITIONS OF CARE IN POPULATION HEALTH

Continuous Value Improvement in Health Care

UC HEALTH. 8/15/16 Working Document

Leveraging Health Care IT Investment

LEGISLATIVE REPORT NORTH CAROLINA HEALTH TRANSFORMATION CENTER (TRANSFORMATION INNOVATIONS CENTER) PROGRAM DESIGN AND BUDGET PROPOSAL

Models of Accountable Care

Roadmap to accountable care: The chicken or the egg technology investment or clinical process improvement?

Thought Leadership Series White Paper The Journey to Population Health and Risk

QUALITY PAYMENT PROGRAM

POPULATION HEALTH PLAYBOOK. Mark Wendling, MD Executive Director LVPHO/Valley Preferred 1

Health Information Technology

Adopting a Care Coordination Strategy

THIRD WAVE. Over the last 20 years, we have observed two GETTING READY FOR THE OF PHYSICIAN-HOSPITAL INTEGRATION

Transitioning to a Value-Based Accountable Health System Preparing for the New Business Model. The New Accountable Care Business Model

CLINICAL INTEGRATION DRIVERS, IMPACT, AND OPTIONS JOBY KOLSUN, D.O. MEDICAL DIRECTOR CLINICAL INTEGRATION LEE PHO

Care Compact Guide Patient-Centered Specialty Care (PCSC) A Component of Medical Neighborhood Initiatives

UAMS/SVI Partnership Agreement. Proposal

PATIENT ATTRIBUTION WHITE PAPER

Building the Universal Roadmap to Population Health Management

Practice Transformation Networks

REPORT OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES

The greatest difficulty in the world is not for people to accept new ideas but to get them to forget their old ones.

Clinical Program Cost Leadership Improvement

Request for Information Regarding Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) and Medicare Shared Savings Programs (CMS-1345-NC)

Jumpstarting population health management

What inspires your life can transform your career.

How to Improve HEDIS Reporting Among Providers and Improve Your Health Plan Rankings

ABMS Organizational QI Forum Links QI, Research and Policy Highlights of Keynote Speakers Presentations

Product and Network Innovation: Strategies to Achieve Triple Aim Success. Patrick Courneya, MD Medical Director, HealthPartners October 31, 2013

Achieving Consultative Lab Testing Services

One Medicine: Incorporating Population Health Principles and Best Practices into Clinical Workflow

Katherine Schneider, MD, MPhil Senior Vice President, Health Engagement July 29, 2011

Health Services Delivery OVERVIEW

A Model for Value-Based Provider/Payer Partnerships

Completing the Specialty Practice Assessment Tool: Guide for Behavioral Health Organizations and Divisions

Population Health Management Tools and Strategies to Support Care Coordination An InfoMC White Paper April 2016

Payer Perspectives On Value-based Contracting

How an ACO Provides and Arranges for the Best Patient Care Using Clinical and Operational Analytics

CoxHealth: A Case Study in Launching a Co-Branded Medicare Advantage Plan

New Alignments in Data-Driven Care Coordination & Access for Specialty Products: Insights from the DIMENSIONS Report

VALUE BASED ORTHOPEDIC CARE

WHITE PAPER. NCQA Accreditation of Accountable Care Organizations

What is a Pathways HUB?

Advisory Panel for Health Care Advancing the Academic Health System for the Future: Profiles in Academic Health System Leadership.

EMS 3.0: Realizing the Value of EMS in Our Nation s Health Care Transformation

Clinical Service Lines: Mapping the Future of Community Health

Medicare Quality Payment Program: Deep Dive FAQs for 2017 Performance Year Hospital-Employed Physicians

NCQA WHITE PAPER. NCQA Accreditation of Accountable Care Organizations. Better Quality. Lower Cost. Coordinated Care

The Value of Integrating EMR and Claims/Cost Data in the Transition to Population Health Management

Enhancing the medical supply chain with clinician-driven sourcing

Bundled Payments. AMGA September 25, 2013 AGENDA. Who Are We. Our Business Challenge. Episode Process. Experience

Care Compact Guide Patient-Centered Specialty Care (PCSC) A Component of Medical Neighborhood Initiatives

Using A Data Warehouse and Analytics to Drive Population Health Management

Succeeding with Accountable Care Organizations

Outcomes Measurement in Long-Term Care (LTC)

Our detailed comments and recommendations on the RFI are found on the following pages.

Skills, Technologies & Attributes Case Managers Need to Succeed In Value- Based Care

Guy s and St. Thomas Healthcare Alliance. Five-year strategy

How to Develop a System-Wide Access Strategy

UNITED STATES HEALTH CARE REFORM: EARLY LESSONS FROM ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATIONS

GSI Health. Powering the future of Healthcare HEALTHCARE SPECIAL. The Navigator for Enterprise Solutions IN MY OPINION CIOREVIEW.COM FEBRUARY 14, 2017

Massachusetts General Hospital Nursing & Patient Care Services Strategic Plan

Last Revised February 2018

Partnership HealthPlan of California Strategic Plan

Integrated leadership for physicians, health care executives, hospitals and health systems

Succeeding in a New Era of Health Care Delivery

Primary Care Transformation in the Era of Value

The influx of newly insured Californians through

June 27, Dear Secretary Burwell and Acting Administrator Slavitt,

School of Nursing Philosophy (AASN/BSN/MSN/DNP)

Application Guidelines and Evaluation Criteria for Health Plans and Health Care Providers

Definition of Meaningful Use of Certified EHR Technology for Hospitals Approved by the HIMSS Board of Directors April 24, 2009

Alternative Payment Models and Health IT

COMMUNICATION KNOWLEDGE LEADERSHIP PROFESSIONALISM BUSINESS SKILLS. Nurse Executive Competencies

CPC+ CHANGE PACKAGE January 2017

AHLA. A. All Together Now: Minimizing Antitrust Risk when Creating and Operating ACOs, PHOs, and Other Clinically Integrated Entities

Creating a Patient-Centered Payment System to Support Higher-Quality, More Affordable Health Care. Harold D. Miller

Brave New World: The Effects of Health Reform Legislation on Hospitals. HFMA Annual National Meeting, Las Vegas, Nevada

Payment and Delivery System Reform in Vermont: 2016 and Beyond

Innovation, Quality & Accountability in Alberta Health Services

The University of British Columbia

Pushing Case Management into the Future: Six Requirements to Drive Clinical and Financial Returns

Driving Business Value for Healthcare Through Unified Communications

Transcription:

Solutions for Value-Based Care Accountable Care: Clinical Integration is the Foundation CLINICAL INTEGRATION CARE COORDINATION ACO INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT The Accountable Care Organization (ACO) is emerging as an important care delivery and financing model to address the challenges of rising health care costs and fragmented care delivery. With health care reform offering new demonstration projects, and commercial health plans piloting a variety of opportunities, provider organizations around the country are considering how best to develop the essential capabilities that will be required to thrive in the value-based post-healthcare reform environment. They are also considering whether to pursue becoming an Accountable Care Organization or to participate in other related endeavors, e.g., Medical Home or Bundled Payment programs. Currently there are more unknowns than knowns about the future details of these models, including the exact payment mechanisms, the optimal structure, and whether, how, and how quickly other payers foster accountable care methodologies and move the concepts into the broader health care market. But it is clear that future success will require providers to transform both the organization and delivery of care, all based on delivering increased Healthcare VALUE. 1

ACCESS + SHARING DATA FOR = TO DATA IMPROVEMENT DELIVER HIGH QUALITY, EFFICIENT CARE (VALUE) Clinical Integration: Success as an ACO requires provider organizations to achieve a higher level of coordination and collaboration than typically exists today. Clinical Integration provides a bridge to build the capabilities and culture needed to create a viable Accountable Care Organization. Clinically integrated provider organizations improve quality by coming together to collectively create standards of care, measure performance against those standards, provide tools to improve compliance, and work with physician members to educate and require compliance. Fully implemented, Clinical Integration comprises the organizational attributes necessary to catalyze the transformation of health care delivery to an ACO model, including governance structure, leadership, and comprehensive physician-hospital alignment. Clinical Integration also has a specific legal meaning. To meet the Federal Trade Commission s ( FTC ) definition of Clinical Integration, organizations must achieve efficiencies by monitoring and controlling quality, service, and costs; selectively choosing physician participants; employing evidence-based practice standards; and making a significant investment of monetary or human capital in infrastructure, including information technology. Providers that become clinically integrated are permitted to jointly contract with payers, which can be a tangible value to physicians while building toward a viable ACO for the future. As required to support an effective Clinical Integration program, governance structure and leaders who have the credibility and vision to lead transformational change are critical to moving a provider organization forward to becoming an ACO. Physician leaders must be able to articulate a vision of change and be champions for the adoption of evidence-based guidelines and performance measurement. Additionally, the organization must have a governance structure with the power to establish performance standards and require compliance of all physicians. 2

PM DATA FROM ALL PRACTICES PROTOCOLS, COMPLIANCE REPORTS FOR ALL PHYSICIAN SPECIALTIES ADDITIONAL CLINICAL DATA FROM EMRS & VENDORS ADD POINT OF CARE TOOLS, ADDITIONAL CLINICAL DATA POPULATION MANAGEMENT BUNDLED PAYMENTS ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATION Questions to ask yourself today: Do we have engaged physician leaders with the vision and commitment to pursue clinical integration and accountable care? Do our physicians understand and can they envision bridging the gap between fee-for-service and population-based care delivery? Do we currently have a clinically or financially integrated network of providers, or will we have to form a new legal entity? Do we have the governance structures with status and credibility to make and enforce decisions about care management and providers ongoing participation in the network? Care Coordination Transitioning to Accountable Care: Begin with a robust Clinical Integration Platform as the Foundation and Unifying Vehicle. Delivering value in health care can be summarized succinctly in the commonly quoted phrase: the Right Care in the Right Place at the Right Time, all of the Time. But that simple-sounding statement encompasses a broad shift from today s typical care delivery model. Comprehensive Care Coordination is much larger than the old paradigms of utilization management or even traditional care management models. It encompasses a truly patient-centric vision, and requires change in multiple dimensions of the care delivery enterprise. Modifications will impact the practice patterns of providers as well requiring a new set of operational competencies, backed by sophisticated information management and human resources with new skill sets. Changing practice patterns is a broad mission. To empower the kind of change required means focusing on how to translate evidence-based medicine principles into actionable best-practice delivery goals that can be applied in day-to-day practice. It means reducing variation and increasing reliability in patient care through understanding and compliance with current evidence-based guidelines. It also means establishing the processes and teamwork to ensure appropriate and complete handoffs between providers throughout the course of patient care episodes. 3

Care Coordination Decisions EXPAND INFRA STRUCTURE BUILD COMPONENTS CLARIFY PROGRAM PRIORITIES ENGAGE PHYSICIANS Moving forward successfully requires the organization s careful review and consideration of several key Care Coordination choice points. Included among the decisions to be made are: What infrastructure do we need to build at the practice sites and in the organization? What is our best approach for developing these program components, both now and in the future? What are our specific goals, priorities and timing objectives with this endeavor? -Clinical, market, business, financial? -Immediate, near-term, long-term? How, and who, will most effectively engage and align the physicians, and lead the practice pattern change initiatives? In this process it is crucial to effectively address the choice, timing, and pace of interventions in order to ensure timely outcomes while balancing both competing resource constraints and the capacity and fortitude to implement change. Another critical component is engaging and empowering the patient. Areas of emphasis will likely include: motivational strategies, effective adult education models, development and implementation of self-care modules (with appropriate and timely professional oversight and intervention), and implementation of shared decision-making techniques. The goal is obvious: engaged, interested, informed and motivated patients partnering with their caregivers in achieving optimal clinical outcomes. The challenges extend beyond the patient to the practice and physicians to develop, implement, and embrace the tools and strategies to truly integrate these approaches. Successful organizations will also have a new set of operational competencies. They will have the staff and information resources to study, understand and improve processes. Essential is the ability to measure current performance and identify variances, providing that information to care providers at the right time and in an actionable format. They will also need more effective communication between physicians, other clinicians, and care coordination staff and new training in skills to intervene and affect change in practice patterns. 4

Ultimately, of course, the organization will also need the leadership, governance structure, and alignment vehicles in place to influence physician practice, and as needed, require participation in clinical quality initiatives and practice patterns aligned with established guidelines and standards. This may imply modification of existing governance and/or behavior norms. In some cases, the development of a new entity or organizational structure may be required to create the environment needed to move forward effectively, constructively and successfully in order to deliver the clinical value proposition embedded in accountable care models. Questions to ask yourself today: How do we measure performance? Do we have tools and data to measure and identify variances? Do our providers embrace and practice according to evidence-based guidelines? Do we have the resources and staff to identify gaps in care, track and engage patients, and coordinate their care? Do we have the leverage (and leadership) to engage physicians and ensure alignment with clinical quality/value objectives? Do we have the care coordination resources to engage patients, conduct outreach, measure feedback, and improve the patient experience? Do we have scope or affiliations to facilitate integrated care delivery across the continuum? Are systems and incentives designed and aligned to deliver the desired outcomes? And if not, do we have or can we develop plans, strategies and resources to address these areas effectively and timely? Information Technology All of the changes required to become an Accountable Care Organization require health care information to be collected, managed and shared in a far more efficient and timely manner than is true in most health care systems today. It is potentially more useful to focus on functions and data needs, rather than specific system or model for providing and exchanging data. On a conceptual level, health information technology must support delivery of clinical value: higher quality, effective and efficient patient care. Providers need the right information to make timely individual patient decisions at the point of care, based on current comprehensive information and patient history. The exchange of relevant patient data requires the capability to integrate/aggregate data from multiple community sources (e.g., hospitals, physician offices, labs) and store this data in a central data repository. Having access to credible and current data is critical to encouraging physician participation, as well as supporting performance monitoring at the provider, practice, and network levels. 5

Value Equation ACCESS SHARING DATA FOR TO DATA + IMPROVEMENT = DELIVER HIGH QUALITY, EFFICIENT CARE (VALUE) The information technology platform must include: Timely clinical information that can be accessed by multiple providers across the care team Clinical decision support based on evidence-based guidelines agreed upon by the organization Measures of compliance with guidelines and quality outcomes at the provider, practice, and network level Physician performance benchmarking As an ACO, the organization must also have the capability to calculate and redistribute payments to providers out of shared savings or other incentive pools, and possess the transactional capability to distribute capitation payments. Questions to ask yourself today: Do we have baseline data to measure physician performance? How will we obtain physician practice level data? How will we expand or create those data sets? How will we provide timely, actionable information to providers to support clinical decision making? Financial Management To succeed, ACOs will need tools and data to support a new level of financial modeling. They will have to establish actuarial cost and utilization targets for defined populations, and then apply care coordination resources to achieve those targets. This process of benchmarking and managing toward targets requires a high level of understanding and coordination between the financial and clinical teams. Provider organizations will need to develop financial and managerial expertise as they model various forms of at-risk payments associated with accountable care models including shared savings models, bundled payments, and partial and full-risk capitation. They will also need to strengthen or put in place the cost accounting and data collection systems needed to manage under those payment models. It will also be critical to factor plans into managed care contracting strategies. Provider organizations that are pursuing Clinical Integration and developing strong accountable care capabilities should approach payers early and engage them in understanding the value of the clinical and operational improvements the organization is making, in order to gauge their support and gain their investment in your programs. 6

Questions to ask yourself today: Do we have Experience with risk and/or pay-for-performance programs? With bundled payments and episode payment? Data to estimate performance under alternative payment arrangements? Actuarial support to validate targets? Financial stability to weather new risk/financial arrangements? Phases of Accountable Care INTEGRATION Create an Integrated organization Culture and capabilities to organize for and deliver coordinated care DELIVERY SYSTEM IMPROVEMENT Implement infrastructure to support efficient, effective care delivery Governance structure to value and deliver results ACCOUNTABILITY Expertise and financial/management processes Monitor results; manage risk & reward What should we do to be ready? The most important advice is to start now to assess your position and determine how to move further toward a sustainable accountable care model. The first stage is Integration building the culture and capabilities of a clinically integrated organization. Key steps in this phase are to analyze the physician panel and referral patterns; understand drivers of hospital cost and utilization as well as ancillary services cost and utilization; and ensure that leadership, governance structure, and alignment vehicles are in place to influence physician practice, and as needed, require alignment and compliance with standards. The next phase is Delivery System Improvement building the vital infrastructure to enable effective care coordination and fully integrated care delivery. An essential step at this stage is the acquisition of information system capabilities to measure performance and deliver actionable information to the provider for timely and effective decision support. Finally, moving to true accountability requires financial, operational sophistication to monitor outcomes, manage risk and costs, and deliver optimal outcomes across a population. 7

The Accountable Care Organization model holds enormous promise as an integrated care delivery and financing model; but the future of ACOs is far from certain. What is clear is that provider organizations that develop the capabilities and culture necessary for success in an accountable care environment will deliver on the clinical value proposition, and thrive in the post-healthcare reform environment. Valence Health delivers patient-centered, data-driven solutions so providers can achieve optimal reward for quality care. > > > Clinical Integration & Population Management integration of providers across delivery settings to enable comprehensive patient care through intelligence Value-Based Analytics & Services full suite of medical, financial, analytic, and call center services for the effective utilization of health care dollars Focused Consulting highly experienced healthcare executives provide customized guidance and implementation to ensure sustainable success > ACO Expertise strategy, implementation and operations expertise for the fastest, most effective path to accountable care Founded in March 1996, Chicago-based Valence Health, Inc. offers hospitals and risk-bearing provider organizations such as PHOs and IPAs, a wide selection of products and services geared toward powering operational excellence, clinical quality and financial sustainability. For more information, please contact us at: E: information@valencehealth.com T: 888.847.0250 www.valencehealth.com 8