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Pay-for-Performance Experience of DMC Primary Care Physicians, P.C. Marilyn Bachelor, R.N., Healthcare Performance Consultant. Primary Care Physicians, P.C. (PCPPC) The Group. Incorporated in 1990 as an IPA Comprised of approximately 150 primary care physicians share holders
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Pay-for-Performance Experience of DMC Primary Care Physicians, P.C. Marilyn Bachelor, R.N., Healthcare Performance Consultant
Primary Care Physicians, P.C. (PCPPC) The Group • Incorporated in 1990 as an IPA • Comprised of approximately 150 primary care physicians share holders • From Family Practice, Internal Medicine, and Pediatrics • Located in 5 southeastern Michigan counties • Many have Detroit Medical Center affiliation • Board of Directors meet regularly to review financial, utilization, and other issues to assist with management of the group’s contracts
Primary Care Physicians, P.C.Administrative Specialists, LLC • A licensed TPA • All administration is delegated to Administrative Specialists for PCPPC’s managed care contracts: • Contracting • Physician advocate with health plans • Performance (Financial & Quality) analysis and reporting • Managed care education • Computer & technical support • Encounter processing • Commercial & Medicaid contracted health plans: • BCBSM, BCN, Midwest Health Plan, OmniCare Health Plan, and ProCare Plus Health Plan • Participation with each health plan is optional
Pay-for PerformanceBCBSM POGS • BCBSM Physician Group Incentive Program (PGIP) was established in 2004 • Focused on chronic disease management and promoting generic drugs • A reward pool was created which BCBSM allocated 100 percent to PGIP-participating physician organizations • Physician Organization Gain Sharing Program, (POGS) began in 2006 • Focused on reducing service category costs • PCPPC participated only in POGS • PCPPC focused on : • Increasing the use of generic drugs • Implementing electronic prescribing • Distributing Evidence Based Care (EBC) quality reports • All members received at least minimal incentive payment for participation • Established committee of the Board for program oversight
Pay-for Performance PGIP • PGIP combined both groups in 2007 • 35 physician organizations from across Michigan, including 6,415 primary care physicians and select specialists who are members of BCBSM's TRUST PPO network and provide care for about 1.7 million PPO members • Approximately 64 percent of active primary care TRUST physicians (internal medicine, family practice, pediatrics, and general practice) • Focuses on chronically ill populations • Introduced Patient Centered Medical Home concept
PCPPC PGIP Activities Year 1 - 2007 • Administrative Specialists increased capabilities: • Hired in-house IT support • Hired clinical performance consultant • Hired communications consultants • Purchased computers for members’ practices • Increased use of electronic communication tools • Began evaluating electronic registries & EMRs
PCPPC PGIP • 20,000+ BC Trust members • 992 diabetics, 4.9% of panel* • 162 asthmatics, 0.8% of panel • 75 CHF, 0.4% of panel • 337 CAD, 1.7% of panel * Opportunity for greatest initial impact
PCPPC PGIP Activities Year 2 - 2008 • Increased participation with BCBSM PGIP work groups • Setting initiatives for the year • Selecting disease registry • CDEMS with Data Entry & Reporting Training • WellCentive – limited # licenses • Membership in the Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative • POGS Committee to PGIP Committee • For goal setting • Tracking progress
PCPPC PGIP Activities Year 2 - 2008 • PCPPC Initiatives: • Increasing the use of generic drugs • Increasing electronic prescribing • Decreasing unnecessary high tech radiology utilization • Improving evidence based care (EBC) quality scores – focus on diabetics • Implementing the basic requirements for the patient centered medical home • Test tracking
PCPPC PGIP Activities Year 2 - 2008 • Focus for PCMH • Patient -provider agreements for at least 10% of BC patients (> 20% of all patients last qtr) • All-payer electronic patient registry - CDEMS & WellCentive (selected practices) • Install registry and train staff in data entry at each selected practice site • Patient demographics and key clinical measures for diabetes accessible at site of care • Enter a minimum of 20 patients per physician per month • ePrescribing • Selected 7 practices (14 physicians) for PCMH pilot • Added 5 practices (6 physicians) last qtr 08
PCPPCPGIP Accomplishments Year 2 - 2008 • Increased generic drug rates • Increased ePrescribing • 10 practices consistent • 1 practice re-implementing • 1 practice to begin 1st qtr 09 • Practices using AIMS high tech radiology precert program • Improving EBC rates • Patient-provider agreements • Developed and provided to the pilot practices • Distributed to all patients • Tracked in CDEMS • Registry implemented • CDEMS loaded with diabetic BC patients for all 12 practices • CDEMS at site of care for 10 practices • Practices responsible for entering 20 diabetics/month - all payer • WellCentive licensed for 5 practices • Identifying additional reporting needs
PCPPC - PGIPPlans for Year 3 - 2009 • 2009 initiatives: • Continue 2008 initiatives • Add reduced utilization of ED & inpatient • Add asthma/COPD, CAD, CHF & well child measures to CDEMS • Add more practices to PCMH pilot • Get some of the pilot practices certified by BC as PCMHs • Implement and evaluate WellCentive for 5 sites • Increase IT capabilities • Finalize reporting format • Improve website for communication and 1-site software connectivity
PCPPCBarriers to PGIP Success • Resistance to change • Most of the physicians are aged 50+ • Physicians do not incent staff to participate • Reluctance to make major commitment to practice change: • Upgrading staff • Incorporating disease management • Facilitating self management • Cost of health IT (computers, ePrescribing, eHealth education, EMRs, electronic scheduling, electronic registries)