Delivery System Reform The ACA and Beyond: Challenges Strategies Successes Failures Future Arnold Epstein MSU 2018 Health Care Policy Conference April 6, 2018
The Good Ole Days 2
Per Capita National Healthcare Expenditures 2000-2014 10000 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 5300 6500 7900 8700 9650 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
McGlynn et al reviewed charts of 6,712 patients in 12 American Cities Patients received the proper diagnosis and care only 55% of the time Overuse, Underuse and Misuse of Services 45% Recommended Care 55% McGlynn, et al, N Engl J Med 2003 4
Medical Error is the 8th Leading Cause of Death
Who is the Culprit? Unfettered Fee-for-Service Fragmented, uncoordinated care Inadequate competition Excessive competition Inadequate incentives for patients
Evolution in the Health Care Delivery System The delivery system is moving from fragmented quantitybased care towards coordinated value-based care Traditional Care Characteristics of Care Fragmented Care Producer Centered Evolving future state Characteristics of Care Coordinated Care Patient-centered Payment and Policies Fee-For-Service Payment Systems Payment and Policies Episode-based payments Alternative payment models Incentives for quality value based payments
Affordable Care Act 2010 (ACA) 8
The ACA is Not Just About Coverage Expansion Affordable Care Act Insurance Market Reform Coverage Expansion Delivery System Reform Medicaid Marketplace 9
Delivery System Reform Through the ACA (CMMI) Changing Payment Systems Hospital Readmissions Value Based Purchasing Holding Providers Accountable Accountable care organizations ACOs Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) Tools to Improve Care Incentives for HIT Technical Assistance Patient Centered Outcome Research Institute (PCORI) 10
ACA Programs Hospital Readmission Reduction Program Hospital Value Based Purchasing Accountable Care Organizations Bundled Payments for Care Improvement 11
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP) Established by the ACA (2010), Penalties initiated FY 2013 Up to 3% penalty for high readmission rate ( excess readmissions) Initially three conditions: AMI, pneumonia, heart failure Roughly two thirds of hospitals penalized each year
Did the Hospital Readmissions Reductions Program (HRRP) Catalyze Changes in Behavior and Lower Readmissions?
Hospital Readmissions Have Declined Since the ACA 22% Trends in Readmission within 30 Days of Discharge 21% 21.5% Readmission Rate 20% 19% 18% 17% 16% HRRP* Conditions (heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia) 17.8% 15% 14% 15.3% Other Admissions 13% 12% Affordable Care Act Passed HRRP Penalties Began 13.1% *HRRP: Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program. Heart attack, heart failure, and pneumonia were used in the program beginning in October 2013. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and hip and knee replacement were added in October 2015 and are not included in this graph. Zuckerman et al, N Engl J Med, 2016 14
What Are the Worries? 15
Comorbidity Count Increased in HRRP Hospitals After Start of the HRRP in April 2010 Source: Ibrahim et al. JAMA Internal Medicine 2017. 1/08 to 4/10 vs. 4/10 to 12/14
63% of the Reduction in Risk-Adjusted Readmissions After HRRP Was Due to Increases in Comorbidities
Hospitals With More Minorities, Less Educated and Poorer Patients are More likely to be Penalized? 40% 37.1% 35% 30% 30.4% 25% 20% 15% 16.0% 20.9% 23.4% 10% 5% 6.3% 0% Percentage Black Less than High School Diploma Lowest Quartile of Household Income Low readmission rate hospital High readmission rate hospital Barnett et al., JAMA IM 2015. Courtesy Ashish Jha
ACA Programs Hospital Readmission Reduction Program Hospital Value Based Purchasing Accountable Care Organizations Bundled Payments for Care Improvement 19
Hospital Value Based Payment (HVBP, formerly known as P4P) Established in FY 13 Budget Neutral: 1% of Medicare payment going to 2% in FY 17 Broad set of quality metrics Clinical Process (5%): Patient experience (25%) Outcomes (25%) e.g. CHF mortality Safety (20%) e.g. Hospital acquired infections Efficiency (25%)
Has Hospital VBP Been Successful in Improving Quality?
Standardized Clinical-Process and Patient-Experience Performance among Matched Exposed and Matched Control Hospitals, 2008 2015. Ryan AM et al. N Engl J Med 2017;376:2358-2366.
30-Day Risk-Standardized Mortality among Hospitalized Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction (MI), Heart Failure, or Pneumonia in Exposed and Matched Control Hospitals, 2008-2014. Ryan AM et al. N Engl J Med 2017;376:2358-2366.
What About Unintended Consequences?
Unintended Consequences: Penalizing Hospitals Caring for Indigent Patients 0.06% 0.04% 0.06% Net VBP Bonus / Penalty 0.02% 0.00% -0.02% -0.04% -0.06% -0.08% -0.10% -0.02% -0.03% -0.10% Lowest DSH Low DSH Medium DSH High DSH Jha, Online Blog, 2014
ACO Programs Hospital Readmission Reduction Program Hospital Value Based Purchasing Accountable Care Organizations Bundled Payments for Care Improvement 26
Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) Groups of providers that take responsibility for care of a population If medical expenditures are below the benchmark providers get a share of the savings; if above the benchmark may have to pay a penalty Financial incentives for meeting various quality standards Medicare Shared Savings Program and Pioneer established by the ACA
How are ACOs doing?
The Medicare Shared Savings Program is Growing 600 15-20% of Medicare beneficiaries is in an ACO 500 400 366 424 477 300 252 200 146 100 0 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Medicare Shared Savings Program (Almost all one sided risk) Quality Results- positive ACOs that reported in both 2013 and 2014 improved average performance on 27 of 33 quality measures Financial Results- mixed to weakly positive In 2015: 203 ACOs (52%) held spending $1.56 billion below their targets 189 ACOs (48%) spent more than their targets by 1.13 billion Initial Savings to CMS $429 million, cost CMS shared savings $645 million, Net impact to CMS: loss of $216 million Source: Ashish Jha Blog, August 2016; CMS fact sheet 2015
ACOs in the program for longer are doing better (2015 Data) Initial Year Net Per Capita Savings 2012 $46 2013 2014 2015 -$60 -$83 -$33
ACA/CMMI Program Hospital Readmission Reduction Program Hospital Value Based Purchasing Accountable Care Organizations Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) 32
Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Initiative is Sizeable The bundled payment model targets 48 conditions with a single payment for an episode of care In the most popular version hospitals or physician group practices are accountable for initial hospitalization and all care received in the following 90 days and share in any gains or shortfalls Provides incentives for quality of care as well More than 2000 organizations participating as awardees or episode initiators by July 2015 * Current until July 2015 Source:CMS Fact Sheet, August, 2015 33
Despite Little Information on BPCI, It Has and Will be Expanding Preliminary evaluation by the Lewin group examined 11 of 48 conditions and found savings for one: total hip or knee replacement. Nonetheless Mandatory bundle for total joint replacement began in 8 states in April, 2016 New version of voluntary BPCI due to start in October, 2018 for 27 Conditions and 3 procedures 34
To Summarize---The ACA and Other Forces Kindled Lots of Activity Some of it seems helpful Several programs show promise Further adjustments and additional time may help Overall is it winner at this point, not so clear No home runs yet 35 35 35
B-
The Delivery System is Consolidating 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 Hospital Mergers and Acquisitions, 2004-2016 59 57 58 60 51 52 107 112 100 90 88 72 102 Source: American Hospital Association, Modern HealthCare
Independent Physicians are Steadily Disappearing Percentage of Physicians Who Were Owners of Their Practices 80.00% 70.00% 60.00% 50.00% 40.00% 30.00% 20.00% 10.00% 0.00% 76.1% 53.2% 50.8% 47.1% 1983 2012 2014 2016 Percentage of Physicians who were owners of their practices Source AMA 2017 Updated data on physician practice arrangements
Goals for Medicare Federal targets for moving towards value-based payments in Medicare FFS system Alternative Payment Models 2016 2018 FFS Linked to Quality or Value 2016 2018
What to Expect Going Forward An oasis of partisan support remains for delivery system reform Continued evolution in payment systems with more risk to providers More emphasis on efficiency and costs Further integration and consolidation Expansion of activity to aid practice transformation More IT, practice facilitators, management partners A long journey ahead 40
We Have Made Progress But it is a Long Way to the Finish Line 41
End of Presentation 42