Improving Health in a Climate of Change NACo San Diego, California January 31, 2014

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Transcription:

Improving Health in a Climate of Change NACo San Diego, California January 31, 2014 A. Clinton MacKinney, MD, MS Deputy Director and Assistant Professor University of Iowa College of Public Health 2 Price reduction threats and volume reduction pressures Changes in payment policies and financing sources Continually evolving quality measures and expectations Alternative models of care (e.g., telehealth, different care sites, new providers types) Local health care collaborations and regional affiliations 1

3 New ACA emphases Insurance coverage Primary care Financing innovation (incremental) Major ACA themes Demand for health care value Transfer of financial risk Collaboration and competition Not just the ACA! Macro economic forces will continue to drive health care reform 4 2

5 Value = Quality + Experience Cost But does our current volume based payment system impede delivering health care of value? 6 Successful physicians and hospitals seek to maximize: Office visits per day Average daily inpatient census Admission percent from the ER Profitability Is this how to identify and reward a great physician or a world class hospital? No, but what to do? 3

7 You can always count on Americans to do the right thing after they ve tried everything else. Fee for service Capitation Market Single payer What about paying for health care value? 8 Hospital Stay $200 Office Visit $2,000 ER Visit $20,000 Better yet, how about care in the home, workplace, or not at all? Preventive care may reduce the need for acute care! 4

9 Bath water Cost based reimbursement Fee for service Few quality demands Inefficiency tolerated Turning up the heat Decreased per unit price Pressure to reduce volumes Quality demands Competitive market How to avoid getting cooked? 10 Volume based Pay for service (volumes) Cost based reimbursement Hospital/physician independence Inpatient focus Stand alone care systems Illness care Value based Pay for results (quality/efficiency) Shared risk Partnerships and collaborations Continuum of care consideration Community health improvement (HIT) Wellness care 5

11 12 How do we move toward delivering value when our revenue is primarily volume driven? How do we not get soaked during the transition? We can test the waters with a new set of tools. 6

13 Patient Centered Medical Homes Accountable Care Organizations Regionalization County Based Purchasing Connected Community Resources Information and Innovation 14 Patient centered medical homes are primary care practices that offer around the clock access to coordinated care and a team of providers that values patients' needs. Access and communication Coordination of care Patient and family involvement Clinical information systems Revised payment systems Sources: Commonwealth Fund and 2007 Joint Principles of Patient-Centered Medical Homes. 7

15 All team members practice at the top (optimum) of their license and experience Best evidence is the best and only way we deliver care Care is the same, regardless of the provider Continuous performance improvement of our care is rigorously driven by data There are no non compliant patients, only those we have not reached An electronic health record is critical to managing patient/population health Let care protocols do (at least some of) the work (e.g., lab orders, med refills, vaccines) Crete Physicians Clinic Crete, Nebraska 16 A coordinated network of providers who share responsibility to provide high quality and low cost care to their patients.* Medicare requires excellent clinical quality and patient satisfaction based on 33 outpatient measures. Medicare shares savings with ACO if Medicare s total costs are less than predicted. *Source: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Accountable Care Organizations: Testing Their Impact. 2012 Call for Proposals. 8

17 18 Act locally; think regionally Economies of scale demand a contracted cottage industry Yet, future health care payment linked to local covered lives Goal: To care for populations expertly, efficiently, equitably Options are optional Affiliation is not an end in itself Independence is not a mission Success measured by clinical integration Resource: Lupica and Geffner. Enlightened Interdependence. Trustee. November/December 2012. 9

In 1990s, rural counties were concerned about Medicaid HMOs Ignoring county needs, interests, and culture Excluding local providers from networks Denying payments and shifting cost to counties Not reinvesting profits locally Not integrating public health, social services, and medical providers A county based health plan: owned, governed, and managed by 13 rural Minnesota counties Over 28,000 public health insurance enrollees and over 8,000 contracted providers http://www.primewest.org Accountable Rural Community Health (ARCH) integrates public health, social services, behavioral health, and medical providers using value based reimbursement Video conferencing to increase mental health care access Technology to improve care coordination Reduced preventable institutionalizations and other unnecessary health care costs $10 million in profits reinvested locally as grants to improve access, quality, and health status 2 NACo Achievement Awards (2006): Innovation and Best in Category http://www.primewest.org 10

21 What is available locally to improve health care value? Public Health Social Service Agency on Aging Community health workers Care transition programs Churches and foundations Do not duplicate Collaborations are less expensive than new services and build good will! 22 Excellent data and resources Morbidity Mortality Health Behaviors Clinical Care Social & Economic Factors Physical Environment 11

A. Clinton MacKinney, MD, MS 23 Rural Health System Analysis and Technical Assistance Assess the rural implications of policies and demonstrations Develop tools and resources to assist rural providers and communities Inform and disseminate rural health care innovations www.ruralhealthvalue.org Share an innovation with RHSATA that has moved your organization (or another) toward delivering value. Continue to be a leadership voice for rural health care value. Our glass is at least half full. A positive attitude is infectious! 25 12