a community model case study

Similar documents
The influx of newly insured Californians through

Kristen Miranda Vice President Strategic Partnerships and Innovation March 20, 2013

Population Health Management in the Safety Net Elaine Batchlor, MD, MPH CEO, Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital

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

IMPROVING TRANSITIONS OF CARE IN POPULATION HEALTH

Using Data for Proactive Patient Population Management

Adopting Accountable Care An Implementation Guide for Physician Practices

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

Driving the value of health care through integration. Kaiser Permanente All Rights Reserved.

ACOs: California Style

Managing Risk Through Population Health Initiatives

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

Basic Utilization and Case Management

Emerging Models of Care Delivery Christy Mokrohisky Ex. Dir. of PI & Emerging Models

Examining the Differences Between Commercial and Medicare ACO Models

Reducing Hospital Admissions Through the Use of IT. Steven Milligan MD Medical Director of ACO Management Colorado Health Neighborhoods

Core Item: Hospital. Cover Page. Admissions and Readmissions. Executive Summary

Putting It All Together: Strategies to Achieve System-Wide Results

The Accountable Care Organization Specific Objectives

Primary Care Transformation in the Era of Value

Report Summary. Identifying the Problem

Accountable Care Organizations: The IPA Model Hill Physicians Medical Group: Lessons from 25 Years in the Trenches

JULY 2012 RE-IMAGINING CARE DELIVERY: PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE HOSPITALIST MODEL IN THE INPATIENT SETTING

INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR OXFORD COVERAGE REIMBURSEMENT PART I OXFORD HEALTH PLANS OXFORD HEALTH PLANS (NJ), INC.

How Allina Saved $13 Million By Optimizing Length of Stay

A strategy for building a value-based care program

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

Value Based Care An ACO Perspective

Care Redesign: An Essential Feature of Bundled Payment

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

Population Health or Single-payer The future is in our hands. Robert J. Margolis, MD

Connected Care Partners

OMC Strategic Plan Final Draft. Dear Community, Working together to provide excellence in health care.

Monarch HealthCare, a Medical Group, Inc.

Improving Hospital Performance Through Clinical Integration

Evolution of ACOs in California. Accountable Care Congress Los Angeles November 11, 2014 Jill Yegian, Ph.D.

OUTPATIENT JOINT REPLACEMENT & BUNDLED PAYMENTS. Chris Bishop, CEO Regent Surgical Health

PBGH Response to CMMI Request for Information on Advanced Primary Care Model Concepts

The Pain or the Gain?

Hospital Readmissions Survival Guide

Physician Compensation Methodologies and Building Clinically Integrated Communities. Walter Kopp Medical Management Services

Using Facets of Midas+ Hospital Case Management to Support Transitions of Care. Barbara Craig, Midas+ SaaS Advisor

Payment and Delivery System Reform in Vermont: 2016 and Beyond

2017/18 Quality Improvement Plan Improvement Targets and Initiatives

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

Re: Rewarding Provider Performance: Aligning Incentives in Medicare

The Playbook: Better Care for People with Complex Needs

Accountable Care Organizations

Value-Based Models: Two Successful Payer-Provider Approaches March 1, 2016

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

Medi-Cal Expansion Under Health Care Reform: Peter Winston Executive Vice President

TRANSFORMING HEALTHCARE DELIVERY A Pathway to Affordable, High-Quality Care in America

Sharp HealthCare ACO. Presented by: Donald C. Balfour, M.D. President and Medical Director Sharp Rees-Stealy Medical Group

Cultural Transformation and the Road to an ACO Lee Sacks, M.D. CEO Mark Shields, M.D., MBA Senior Medical Director

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

Accountable Care Organizations Creating A Culture Of Engaged Physicians

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

Transforming Delivery Systems for Population Health

Medicare / Accountable Care Organization CHS Finance Division CPE Day November 2, 2015

ACOs the Medicare Shared Savings Program And Other Healthcare Reform Payment Methods

Value-Based Care Emergent Care Services. Presented by Cliff Frank Partnera Partners LLC

The Physician s Perspective

CPC+ CHANGE PACKAGE January 2017

JOINT REPLACEMENT & OUTPATIENT BUNDLED PAYMENTS. Chris Bishop, CEO Regent Surgical Health

Population Health. Collaborative Care. One interoperable platform. NextGen Care

Section 4 - Referrals and Authorizations: UM Department

Blue Choice PPO SM Provider Manual - Preauthorization

Transforming Physician Practices: Evolution of ACOs in California. National Association of ACOs - Washington, DC October 2015

Managed Care 101: Understanding the Basics and Opportunities for Partnership. Bruce A. Chernof, M.D. President & CEO

Healthcare Solutions Nuance Clintegrity Quality Management Solutions. Quality. The Discipline to Win.

California Community Clinics

Value model in the new healthcare paradigm: Producing value at a single specialty center.

AHA-AMGA Learning Fellowship. Monthly Webinar October 27, :00 3:30pm ET

The Alternative Quality Contract (AQC): Improving Quality While Slowing Spending Growth

Advancing Primary Care Delivery

Procedures that require authorization by evicore healthcare

Medi-Cal Performance Measurement: Making the Leap to Value-Based Incentives. Dolores Yanagihara IHA Stakeholders Meeting October 3, 2018

Medical Home as a Platform for Population Health

BCBSM Physician Group Incentive Program

NextGen Population Health TEN TEN TEN TEN TE. Prevent Patients from Falling Through the Cracks in 10 Easy Steps

Value-based Care Report. February How Value-based Care is improving quality and health.

Post-Acute Care Networks: How to Succeed and Why Many Fail to Deliver JULY 18, 2016

Physician Alignment Strategies and Options. June 1, 2011

REDESIGNING HEALTH CARE FROM THE BOTTOM UP INSTEAD OF FROM THE TOP DOWN

CAMDEN CLARK MEDICAL CENTER:

Healthcare Financial Management Association October 13 th, 2016 Introduction to Accountable Care Organizations and Clinically Integrated Networks

Saint Francis Care and Cigna CAC Meeting the Triple Aim Together

Care Management at Mercy ACO

Expanding Your Pharmacist Team

Three C s of Change in the Value-Based Economy: Competency, Culture and Compensation. April 4, :45 5:00 pm

Embedded Case Manager

Clinical Program Cost Leadership Improvement

Post-Acute Care Networks: How to Succeed and Why Many Fail to Deliver JULY 18, 2016

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act Summary of Key Health Information Technology Provisions June 1, 2010

Jumpstarting population health management

Payer Perspectives On Value-based Contracting

Aligning Health IT with Delivery System Reform: Technology Gaps in Coordinating Patient Care

Complex Patient Care Redesign: ThedaCare Innovation. Gregory Long, MD Chief Medical Officer

Value Based Care Emergent Care Services

Administrative Update: How to Implement Discharge Pharmacy Services (DPS) Objectives

Transcription:

a community model case study Juan Davila Senior Vice President, Network Management Blue Shield of California National Medicare Readmissions Summit June 14, 2011 1

agenda Background Structure Strategies and Initiatives Integrated Discharge Planning Questions 2

our brutal reality regarding affordability In the past decade, California HMO rates have increased on average 11% per year If we manage to reduce that trend to 8% in the next decade, prices will double by 2020...... and our Access +HMO family rate for CalPERS members will be nearly $39,000 per year We believe this will not happen: either the private sector will solve this issue or it will be solved for us 3

employers can hardly afford today s rates It costs less to hire a software engineer in India than it does to pay for the health benefits of a software engineer in Silicon Valley Blue Shield Analysis (after conversation with Venture Capitalist) Wow, we re paying almost twice in health care costs as what we re making in earnings Steve Burd, CEO of Safeway, The New York Times, November 29, 2009 (The company now spends) almost as much on health care for our partners as we do on the green coffee we buy. Howard Schultz, CEO of Starbucks Corp, Thomson Reuters, July 27, 2009 G.M. has to address how a company that lost more than $20 billion last year can afford $5 billion a year in medical bills. G.M s future obligations for retiree health care are estimated at $47 billion, and by next year it is required by its contract to contribute more than $10 billion to the trust set up in 2007. The New York Times, February 17, 2009 4

and our trends threaten the long-term viability of private health insurance In 2020, $39,000 could source: 2009 California HealthCare Foundation purchase a CalPERS, Access+ HMO family insurance policy from Blue Shield buy 6 years of a household s groceries be 1.6 times higher than the median income for BRIC counties buy the newest version of a Toyota Prius Source: Premium forecasts based upon standard plan manual premium PPO annual increase of 10.3% from the Milliman Group Health Insurance Survey 2008 & Commonwealth Fund California premium data of $12,254 in 2008, Paying the Price: How Health Insurance Premiums are Eating up Middle-Class Incomes August 2009. 2020 forecasted median CA household income from IHS Global Insight, annual household food expenditures from the National statistical offices/oecd/eurostat/euromonitor International, BRIC & World annual gross income projections from Euromonitor International and from national statistics, Prius pricing from April 2010 Consumer reports ($26,750 with assumed 3% trend per year over 10 years) 5

hospital costs are rising faster than other areas rapidly escalating hospital costs are one of the biggest reasons our member are seeing significant premium increases 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% BSC Cost of Healthcare Allowable Spend Distribution (Rolling 12 months Jul-Jun, Commercial Products Only) Facility, 39% Facility, 50% 50% 40% 30% Professional, 36% Professional, 30% 20% 10% 0% Drug, 19% Drug, 15% Ancillary, 6% Ancillary, 5% 2001 2010 6 Source: Internal Blue Shield claims data page 6

We know hospitals have their challenges with the significant expansion of Medi-Cal resulting from federal health reform, it is vital that hospitals work to break even on government programs. on average, CA hospitals lose over -20% on public programs and earn a 34% profit margin on their private health plan contracts in CA. Operating Margin & Net Operating Income by Payers for CA hospitals 120.0% $12,000 100.0% $10,000 80.0% $8,000 Operating margin 60.0% 40.0% 20.0% 0.0% -20.0% -40.0% -60.0% -80.0% -100.0% -91.4% -19.5% -30.8% 34.1% 3.8% $6,000 $4,000 $2,000 $0 ($2,000) ($4,000) ($6,000) ($8,000) ($10,000) Net Operating Income (in $MM) -120.0% Uninsured Medicare Medi-Cal Third Party All Payers ($12,000) Operating Margin -91.4% -19.5% -30.8% 34.1% 3.8% Net Income (in millions) ($694) ($3,823) ($2,865) $10,162 $2,317 source: BSC contracted facility population (using the OSHPD quarterly data for Q3 2009- Q2 2010) 7

collaboration is required to Develop an integrated delivery model Provide coordinated care Improve quality outcomes Drive out cost 8

why Sacramento? 4 hospitals in Sacramento County including Mercy General, Mercy San Juan, Mercy Folsom, and Methodist Sacramento Sacramento market ~ 520 MDs in Sacramento County ~ 40,000 CalPERS members ~1,500 member growth in 2010 207,000 total Sacramento members 90% in an HMO Sacramento pilot goal is to reduce the cost trend ~10% Pilot is also being used as prototype for commercial membership with intent to scale model to other segments. 9

our guiding principles 1 2 3 4 5 Reward the customer Keep it simple Be transparent Focus on the target Be bold 10

result-oriented goals Reduce cost of healthcare trend to 0% in aggregate for members in the pilot Increase enrollment in NetValue as a means to gain market share for partners Develop way to work together that aligns parties to drive continuous improvement (cost, quality, service) and allows for expansion to other geographic areas 11

team approach Pilot Board Program oversight strategy, contracting and funding decisions from Senior Staff Core Team Coordinates sub-groups and provides update to board Finance Marketing/PR COHC/Research NM/Contracts Legal Strategy 1: 1: IT IT Integration Strategy 2: 2: Reduce Drug Cost Strategy 3: 3: Physician Variation Strategy 4: 4: CalPERs Specific UM Strategy 5: 5: Population Management 12

strategy development is all about data Compiled datasets from disparate sources to determine a comprehensive look at the population What are the cost drivers? Who is driving the cost and for what? Spotlight on chronically ill members Identified top 5K patients accounting for 75% of total pilot population spend Identified opportunities to expand care program and develop additional programs Identified utilization outliers at the MSDRG level/established benchmarks for improved care in key areas, e.g.: OB/GYN Knees and Hips Bariatric 13

strategies and initiatives 14

strategy one: IT integration initiatives Physician Technology Acceptance CCD to Mobile MD Mercy Health Information Exchange (MHIE) Increase the adoption and use of existing technologies (Relay Health, NextGen, Mobile MD, etc.) to facilitate the rapid and efficient communication of patient medical information to care providers Interconnect cross-organization technologies to streamline processes and support consistent communication Allow selected physicians to push the ambulatory continuity of care (CCD) from the Hill Electronic Health Record (EHR) to CHW hospitalists upon scheduling of patient admissions Build a tool on the Mobile MD platform for the sharing of clinical information such as the clinical summary, patient summary and lab/radiology results expected outcomes and status Strong technological framework to automate processes 15

strategy two: reduce drug costs initiatives Oncology Co- Hort Case Rate Generic Drug Interventions Injectable Cost Management Provide support to physician offices for the implementation of processes/workflows that support oncology case rate methodologies to reduce injectable medication costs Increase use of generic medications through evaluation of PCP and specialist prescribing patterns Expanded BSC s Generic Smart program to drive generic utilization Identify brand users and perform pharmacist member outreach to promote conversion to generic Affiliate Hill with CHW s drug purchasing program to reduce costs of injectable drug costs expected outcomes and status Reduce drug cost 16

strategy three: physician variation initiatives ER utilization strategy and management Outpatient surgery Program development Reduce ER costs and utilization by shifting non-emergent ER visits to an urgent care clinic (UCC) setting or the primary care provider (PCP) office for improved patient management Optimize outpatient surgery utilization and reimbursement to lower cost alternatives; shift ASC from non-chw facilities to CHW facilities Developed end to end programs to include preauthorization, clinical pathways, care planning and adherence; educate and monitor physicians on outlier behavior based on accepted protocols with possibility for provider stratification Knee and hips Bariatric Ob/gyn expected outcomes and status Narrow practice patterns Address inappropriate and over or under utilization of key services Reduce unnecessary LOS, admissions and readmissions 17

strategy four: CalPERS specific um initiatives Pre-surgical checklist Variant days Readmissions Review Discharge planning Enhance prior authorization Medical access planning Developed pre-surgical checklists to use as part of patient calls performed for certain procedures including: knee/hip replacement, hysterectomy, and spinal surgery Built a process to identify, review and correct the root causes that lead to variant days (i.e., delay in service) to determine opportunities to modify the process or change behaviors for physicians, hospitals and/or support teams Built a process to identify, review and correct the root causes for high-risk patients with 3+ readmissions Implemented coordinated pre- and post- discharge planning process to avoid discharge delays and readmissions Defined and implemented enhanced evidence based guidelines for surgeries targeting high volume, high cost MSDRG s. Identify by procedure the use of ineffective and marginal procedures (e.g. Spinal Fusion, Carotid Endarterectomy) and proactively monitor for avoidance Ensure CalPERS patients receive medical treatment and CHW hospitals, when possible, through the process of pre-patriation and/or repatriation expected outcomes and status Reduction in LOS, admissions, readmissions OON spend 18

strategy five: population management initiatives Chronic and Complex Care Mgmt Palliative Care Professional Home Visits PT Centers of Excellence Patient Education Lose to Win Actively manage high risk patients and high costs through synchronized stratification, innovation, outreach and coordinated processes Developing a comprehensive palliative care program across hospital, physicians and care managers to proactively engage members and their families in end of life decisions Implementing home based medical care to high risk home-bound commercial and frail elderly patients which will enhance quality of life for the patients Identify PT Centers of Excellence partners to provide services to chronic pain patients so that patients will learn new behaviors and explore their underlying issues related to pain Created back pain management website to support case managers and providers as well as for use by self-referral among patients receiving outreach materials Pilot a 12 week 'Lose to Win' program geared towards helping participants lose weight and promoting a safe transition to a healthier lifestyle expected outcomes and status More CalPERs members actively managed in a dm/cm program Better coordination and hand-off between programs Fewer members falling through the cracks 19

2010 results exceeded targets Exceeded 2010 target of $15.5M healthcare cost savings for the 42,000 member pilot population 17% Reduction in inpatient readmissions 15% Reduction in average length of stay for inpatient admissions 14% Reduction in inpatient days per thousand 50% Reduction in inpatient stays per thousand of 20 or more days 20

integrated discharge planning 21

CHW/Hill physicians/calpers ACO pilot: sample of key 2010 accomplishments Implemented industry best practice for: Discharge planning process including hospital teach back Follow-up visit within 7-10 days, including measure adherence Sharing of discharge plan with PCP and care managers within 24 hours Expanded Health Information Exchange (HIE) including: Hospital discharge summary and patient discharge summary to IPA Electronic Medical Record (EMR) and/or physician portal IPA continuity of care (CCD message) data into the hospital EMR Re-admission discharge plan into hospital portal Automation of ER time of day report to expedite member outreach following ER encounters 22

integrated discharge planning process A problem-oriented post-discharge needs assessment and summary of the key medical issues Analysis of the clinical course and major events of the hospitalization Integration of labs into confirming diagnoses Identification of principal and relevant secondary discharge clinical diagnoses Review of medication errors and interactions Safety and studies Ensuring follow-up appointments are scheduled within appropriate timelines Redesign of the patient education process to improve patient and family/caregiver understanding of discharge plan and self-care Provide patient a written discharge plan in lay terminology and forward to medical group 23

primary cross-organizational stakeholders needed for integrated discharge Hospital Medical Group Blue Shield Case manager communicates prospective discharge date and patient needs upon discharge Clinical nurse performs medication reconciliation and patient/caregiver education Discharge planner initiates discharge planning on day one or 48 hours after admission and coordinates services to meet patient needs upon discharge Concurrent care review nurse communicates discharge summary to PCP Director of case management educates case/clinical managers on new discharge planning tools/processes; educates physicians/ hospitalists on new discharge planning processes/um best practices; establishes toolkit for patient education Analyst creates and run reports Project resource manages implementation plan based on defined scope/timeline; serves as point of contact to Blue Shield program managers to provide project updates/issue escalation Attending physicians discharge in a timely manner Staff schedule patient appointment with PCP Director of case management serves as project driver Program manager engages stakeholders to define scope and implementation plan; provides ongoing project monitoring 24

project risks and constraints Delays in access to admission data Changing the process for a subset of patients (i.e. only ACO patients) can be challenging for the facility Project team needs on-site access to the facility for as-is process mapping 25

lessons learned Automatically schedule the PCP follow-up appointment for two weeks from the admit day If multiple facilities are involved, identify a point person at each facility and a designated manager over all the facilities who can handle exceptions for individual facilities Implement changes in small increments as soon as they are ready Agree on best-in-class discharge practices early in the project 26

questions? 27