What CAH Board Members Need to Know About Rural Health

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What CAH Board Members Need to Know About Rural Health ND Flex Program CAH Board Members August 10, 2012 Presented by: Brad Gibbens, Deputy Director and Assistant Professor Seven Seas Hotel Bismarck, ND Established in 1980, at The University of North Dakota (UND) School of Medicine and Health Sciences in Grand Forks, ND One of the country s most experienced state rural health offices UND Center of Excellence in Research, Scholarship, and CreaPve AcPvity Focus on EducaPng and Informing Policy Research and EvaluaPon Working with CommuniPes American Indians Health Workforce Hospitals and FaciliPes ruralhealth.und.edu 1

What is Rural Health? Philosophy: rural people have the same right to expect healthy lives and access to care as do urban people fairness frame Access essential services locally or regionally Access to specialty services through network arrangements Quality of care on par with urban Availability of technology Rural health is very community oriented interdependence frame Integral part of what a community is and how people see themselves More cooperation and collaboration between area providers and systems to increase access and better outcomes for the patient Community Sectors: Economic/business, public/government, education, faith/ church, and health/human services, housing Direct services provided to the public and secondary impact for other sectors Health care is a major employer Community Engagement and Development stronger connections with community 2

So Why Is Community Important to Rural Health? Rural culture more interdependence, connectedness, cohesiveness, collaborative, and people identify with institutions and each other Relationships things get done because of people, and sometimes don t get done because of people are the right people at the table? Rural health contributes to the community provision of health services (access), improvement of health, economic contributions, community development, health facilities are a sense of community identity Communities contribute to the rural health system employees, purchase of health services, financing, fund raising, volunteers, ideas and vision 3

What are Some Important Rural Health Issues? Access to and availability of care Financial concerns facing rural hospitals and health systems Health workforce Quality of Care Health Information Technology Networks rural hospitals, urban hospitals, clinics, others Emergency Medical Services EMS, ambulance, quick response units Community and Economic Development Health System Reform Sources: 2008 Flex Rural Health Plan, 2009 Environmental Scan, and community presentation feedback surveys Access to and availability of care 4

CAHs and Rural Health Issues Overall, CAH administrators in 2011 found issues associated with finance (reimbursement and factors that impact finance including the ability of paoents to pay for services) and health professional workforce were the two most pressing rural health issues Highest rated issue in all 3 surveys was hospital reimbursement from non- Medicare 3 rd Party Payers o About 95% in all 3 years (only issue to do this) Problem, Moderate Problem, and Severe problem Medicare is a concern but not to the same degree mid to high 80% (88% in 2011) ImpacOng the financial picture insurance o Impact of the uninsured 91% o Impact of the underinsured 91% o Increased from about 80% in 2008 Workforce o Physician workforce supply - 91%, increased from 2008 and 2005 o Nursing workforce supply 85%, down slightly from 2008 and up from 2005 o Ancillary workforce supply (lab, X- ray, PT, OT, RT) 73% and down from 2008 and 2005 5

Figure 2. Rural Hospital Issues Comparison of CAH Administrator Surveys 2011, 2008, 2005 Issue Hospital Reimbursement (non-medicare 3rd Party Payer) Health Care Reform Readiness Physician Workforce Supply Impact of Uninsured Impact of Underinsured Hospital Reimbursement - Medicare Nursing Workforce Supply Physical Plant Building Issues Access to Mental Health Services Ancillary Workforce Supply (lab, x-ray, PT, etc.) 2011* 2008 2005* 94% 96% 95% 94% Not Asked Not Asked 91% 82% 72% 91% 79% 96% 91% 75% 95% 88% 86% 84% 85% 89% 81% 79% 64% 88% 79% 79% 73% 73% 86% 88% *Totals represent the combination of problem, moderate problem, and severe problem Financial concerns facing rural hospitals and health systems 6

Financial CondiOons ND CAHs higher financial constraints in comparison to naoonal data o ND CAH OperaOng Margins (2009) - 2.66 Ø NaOonal CAH OperaOng Margins +0.66 Ø MN +3.57, SD +1.72, MT - 3.53 Ø NaOonally about 52% of CAHS have negaove operaong margins; in ND 63% o ND CAH Total Margins (2009) - 2.14 Ø NaOonal CAH Total Margins +1.89 Ø MN +2.93, SD +1.61, and MT +1.60 Ø In every year since 2004, ND CAHs averaged negaove total margins but naoonally, posiove Ø NaOonally about 40% of CAHs have negaove total margins; in ND 53% o Some improvement in ND over last year for both total and operaong margins o Cash on hand naoonally (about 66 days); ND (about 37 days) recommended is 60 days Financial CondiOons Local Community Support is CriOcal o 13 CAHs (2011) had local tax support 10 CAHs (2008), 4 CAHs (2005) o A few thousand dollars to 3 CAHs receiving $100,000/year and 2 CAHs $200,000 o 26 CAHs (2011) had a hospital foundaoon 18 (2005) CommuniOes are willing to support their local hospital with their money willing to tax themselves and target donated funds Message conveyed to congressional delegaoon need some level of federal funding for rural health but communioes also willing to support their health systems 7

Health Workforce North Dakota Health Workforce o Issues Ø Supply are we producing enough? But the first quesoon is, what is our need? Ø Demand where is the demand located? What types of disciplines? How will demand change over the years? Ø Mal- distribuoon maybe enough but again, where are they going? Ø SoluOons what do we do? And, who is we? 8

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Health Workforce What Can We Do? SoluOons o ACA (naoonal level) has 18 direct focal areas on health workforce NHSC, AHEC, residency training changes, Accountable Care Orgs to rely on PC, etc. o AHEC naoonal funds with state level matching funds o CRH Workforce Development Program state supported to UNDSMHS Ø Workforce specialist R/R assistance, residency fairs, sourcing candidates, work with your recruiter/recruitment firm Ø R COOL- Health Scrub Camps and Scrub Academy o o o o o Ø Workforce research, data analysis, projecoons, and planning GOOD Grow our own Doctors state supported to UNDSMHS Ø Increase number of residency slots, medical students, and health sciences, MPH, Geriatrics Rural Medicine Program state supported tuioon waivers to UNDSMHS ROME rural medical training at 6 sites (3 rd yr med. students) Inter- professional Training UND 1 of only 30 MS out of 126 with this focus Community Level Ø R/R commijees Ø Community Awareness and Involvement Economic Development Ø Networks hospitals working with other hospitals and systems collaboraovely Ø Workforce specialist Quality of Care 10

The report finds that several states in the Upper Midwest Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota were all providing high quality care at lower cost. Their examples suggest that be3er coordinated care and more efficient use of resources could improve the quality of care people receive while keeping cost in check. Source: Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System's second state scorecard report, October 2009 11

Commonwealth Fund (2009 data, most recent, updated this document July 11, 2012) 9 th overall ranking in health system performance (13 th in previous report) 4 th avoidable hospital use and costs (9 th in previous report) 10 th healthy lives 14 th prevenoon and treatment 13 th equity 10 th for children health system performance (access and affordability ranked 16 th, prevenoon and treatment 23 rd, potenoal to lead healthy lives 11 th, and equity 17 th Source: hcp://www.commonwealthfund.org/maps- and- Data/State- Data- Center/State- Scorecard/DataByState/State.aspx?state=ND Health InformaOon Technology (HIT) 12

North Dakota HIT Efforts 2006 First State HIT Summit held 2006-2009 ND HIT Steering Committee created 2009-Senate Bill 2332 Established, Governor appointed, Health Information Technology Advisory Committee(HITAC) Hired ND HIT Director - Sheldon Wolf Establish state HIT Office (within ND ND Information Technology Dept.) Established HIT ($5M) Loan Program $8 million for required federal match and operating the HIE 2010 - State received $5.4 M (five years) federal funds to plan and implement a state Health Information Exchange 2011 State funding to expand HIT Office by 3 FTE Renew ($5 million) State Loan Program Continue ($8 million) for required federal match and operating the HIE 2012 HITAC continues work to implement state Health Information Exchange Electronic Health Record Adoption Significant Changes in North Dakota (2008 to 2012) Adoption and Use of Electronic Health Record(EHR) 20 hospitals have gone live with a certified EHR 17 hospitals have gone live with EHR between 2008 and 2012 12 anticipate they will go live within the next year. Drivers most significant to EHR implementation different from 2008 Medicare/Medicaid incentives and availability of state loan funds Barriers to EHR implementation identified in 2012 - difficulty in justifying expense or return on investment, development of a sustainable business model and difficulty changing workflow patterns. Infrastructure, Hardware, Software Increase in the number of computers in the rural and urban hospitals with access to the internet. Overall access to high-speed/broadband internet remains high Increase of rural hospital respondents, by 20%, that indicated wireless internet is in place Number of facilities sharing data servers with another rural or tertiary increased. Workforce Decrease in number of rural facilities with no FTE designated to oversee the IT (13 in 2008) by nearly half (7) in 2012. Increase in number of facilities that have adequate IT staff 13

Networks CAHs and Networks CAHs work within network arrangements to bejer address common issues Use networks to gain greater efficiency and effecoveness, provide cost savings, build capacity, and achieve a higher level of organizaoonal performance CAH survey found that the areas that ND CAHs network around tend to correspond with the areas they expressed concern cost factors, greater efficiency, sharing services, and staff CAHs are responding to key federal health policy focus through networks 14

CAHs and Networks CAHs belong to mulople networks 36 CAHs work with 9 hospital networks total of 65 CAH arrangements Network with: Altru, CHI, EssenOa, MedCenter One, Northland Healthcare Alliance, North Region Health Alliance, Sanford, St. Alexius, and Trinity 2 most common funcoons that CAHs address through networks are quality improvement (38 CAH arrangements) and HIT (37 CAHs). Average size of a CAH- based network is 7 CAHs (St. Alexius 11 CAHs, and smallest is EssenOa 1 CAH) How Flex could assist: o Building and facilitaong collaboraoon o Addressing staffing, educaoon, and specialty care o SupporOng technology o Emphasizing quality issues as they relate to credenoaling and peer review o SupporOng primary care o Addressing EMS transport and educaoon CAH/Tertiary Networks Assessment of Characteristics 15

Community and Economic Development Community and Economic Development Community PerspecOves on ND Issues Rural Health Issues o Financial issues facing rural hospitals 4.17 o Health system reform 4.12 o Health workforce (physician, nurse, and other health professionals) 4.00 o Access and availability of care (Keeping hospitals and clinics open) 3.96 o EMS 3.90 o Community and economic development 3.85 o Quality of care 3.55 o HIT 3.39 o Networks 3.36 Likert Scale of 1-5 with 1 = no concern and 5 = severe concern Surveys at 7 events 16

Community and Economic Development Community PerspecOves on ND Issues Community Factors o Retaining and/or recruipng youth 4.11 o Community growth 3.87 o Local populapon 3.75 o Local economics 3.71 o Available/affordable housing 3.53 o Community leadership 3.50 o Maintaining quality school system 3.47 o Confidence for the town 3.38 o Responsive local government 3.36 o TransportaPon services 3.27 o AcPve faith community 3.12 Likert Scale of 1-5 with 1 = no concern and 5 = severe concern Surveys at 7 events What is the Relationship Between Rural Health and Economic Development? Employment 10 percent of direct employment and 5 percent indirect (15%) Rural hospital first or second largest employer 36 CAHs payroll impact Ø About $215 million impact on rural ND economy Ø About $4-10 million for each CAH, (direct and indirect) CAH average about 220 jobs (about 150 direct and 75 indirect) Statewide CAH s contribute about 8,000 jobs to the rural economy About 40% of CAHs have local tax support and 75% have hospital foundation community support One rural physician can have an impact of $1-1.5 million in a year and generate over 20 additional jobs Statewide 8 of top 10 private employers are health related Statewide health care is 8.5%-9% of GSP ND ranks 6 th for percentage of workers in health care jobs Health jobs rank 2 nd only to business jobs for growth in ND (2000-2010) 17

Health System Reform Contact us for more information! Brad Gibbens Brad.gibbens@med.und.edu 701.777.2569 501 North Columbia Road, Stop 9037 Grand Forks, North Dakota 58202-9037 701.777.3848 ruralhealth.und.edu 18