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Innovative Health Care Policies: Using ACO Principles and Financial Incentives to Improve Health Outcomes. Web Seminar January 29, 2013 Follow this event on Twitter Hashtag : #AHRQIX. Today’s Host. Judi Consalvo. Program Analyst at AHRQ Center for Outcomes and Evidence. 2.
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Innovative Health Care Policies: Using ACO Principles and Financial Incentives to Improve Health Outcomes Web Seminar January 29, 2013 Follow this event on Twitter Hashtag: #AHRQIX
Today’s Host Judi Consalvo Program Analyst at AHRQ Center for Outcomes and Evidence 2
Using the Webcast Console • Speakers or headphones are required for the audio portion of the Web Seminar • Having difficulties with audio-stream? Dial (888)-632-5061 and enter Conference ID number: 51722494 followed by the # sign. Or click on “help” 3
Submitting Questions • Click on “Ask a Question”, complete the form and click “Submit” • Technical questions? Click on “Answered Questions” • Substantive questions will be answered during the Q&A portion of the Web Seminar. 4
Accessing Presentations • Slides used during this Web Seminar may be downloaded • Click on “Supporting Material” for slides 5
What Is the Health CareInnovations Exchange? Publicly accessible, searchable database of health policy and service delivery innovations Searchable QualityTools Successes and attempts Innovators’ stories and lessons learned Expert commentaries Learning and networking opportunities New content posted to the Web site every two weeks Sign up at http://www.innovations.ahrq.govunder “Stay Connected” 6
Innovations Exchange Web Event Series How to find archived materials Go to http://www.innovations.ahrq.gov to the Events & Podcasts tab. A transcript of this event along with the slides will be available within two weeks Next Events Join our Tweetchat– February 27, 2013 Chats on Change: Supporting Priority Populations 7
Today’s Event Moderator Gerry Fairbrother, PhD Senior Scholar at AcademyHealth 8
Identifying Health Care Policy Innovations • AcademyHealth is pleased to work with Westat and AHRQ on identifying health care policy innovations • Major policy innovations in 2013: Accountable Care Organizations, payment reforms, quality improvement initiatives 9
Innovations Presented Today • The Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan and Montefiore Medical Center • A payer driven quality improvement initiative and an ACO • Both timely and cutting edge innovations 10
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Lauren Henrikson-Warzynski, MPA David Share, MD, MPH Senior Vice President of Value Partnerships Health Care Analyst 11
What are Collaborative Quality Initiatives? • Structure of Collaborative Quality Initiatives (CQIs): developed and administered by Michigan physician and hospital partners, funded by BCBSM and its HMO, Blue Care Network • Support continuous quality improvement and the development of best practices • Leverage inter-institutional data registries • Why? Reduce avoidable adverse events, provide incentives and track performance 13
Why Do We Need CQIs? • Quality of health care remains suboptimal, with wide variations in performance across institutions and avoidable adverse events • Suboptimal quality affects patients’ health; drives up costs • Regional collaborations can provide incentives and infrastructure to systematically track and improve performance 14
Overall Goals of the CQI Program • Examine the link between care processes and outcomes in complex, highly technical areas of care • Measure the quality of care within and across systems • Create a feedback loop for continuous quality improvement with participating institutions • Identify “clinical champions” at each participating hospital • Implement fast-track quality improvement initiatives targeted at specific, high-leverage procedures • Continue to demonstrate to consumers and purchasers of care that CQIs positively impact systems of care 15
The Beginning • Collaborative study on the variation in angioplasty procedures and treatment (1997) • Resulted in decreases in mortality, kidney failure, emergency bypass surgeries and other complications • Fostered development of a culture in which stakeholders pool efforts and best thinking to optimize practices, systems and outcomes of care • Collaboration was necessary for real change 16
CQI Program Framework • Contribute to the all-payer registry • Share and learn from best practices Continuous Quality Improvement Consortium CQI • Offer neutral ground for collaboration • Program funding and incentive payment design • Clinical leadership • Analytic and quality improvement support 18
CQI Financial Support Hospital CQIs: • Data collection for BCBSM/BCN, Medicare and Medicaid, and uninsured members (estimated 80% of data collection costs) • The CQI Coordinating Center Professional CQIs: • Registry-based CQIs: Data collection for BCBSM/BCN, Medicare and Medicaid, and uninsured members (estimated 80% of data collection costs) • Non-registry-based CQIs: a portion of staff resources for CQI-related processes • The CQI Coordinating Center 19
CQI Incentive Payment Hospital CQIs: • Active participation and improved outcomes are rewarded through BCBSM’s incentive program • Engaged physicians for select CQIs may receive a recognition payment through service codes beginning February 2013 Professional CQIs: • Active participation and improved outcomes as reflected in the metrics through the Physician Group Incentive Program 20
CQI Participation High levels of participation throughout Michigan • 95% of eligible hospitals participate in at least one Hospital CQI • 73% of hospitals participate in all of the Hospital CQI programs for which they are eligible • Over 329 physician practices participate in at least one Professional CQI 21
Angioplasty CQI: Outcomes Between 2002 and Q3 2011, death has declined by 20%, contrast induced nephropathy (CIN) by 38%, transfusions by 38%, vascular complications by 44%, emergency coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) by 92% and revascularizations by 17% 22
Hospital CQI Savings • Over 2-3 years, 4 participating programs produced $232.8 million in health care cost savings • Complications and mortality rates lowered for thousands of patients • Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative (general surgery)2009-2010: $ 85.9 million statewide savings; $49.2 million BCBSM savings • Michigan Society of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgeons (cardiac surgery)2009-2010: $30.3 million statewide savings; $2.4 million BCBSM savings • Michigan Cardiovascular Consortium - Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (angioplasty)2008-2010: $102 million statewide savings; $13.8 million BCBSM savings • Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative (bariatric surgery)2008-2010 : $14.6 million statewide savings; $4.7 million BCBSM savings 23
Award Winning Partnerships Best of Blue Clinical Distinction Award • Michigan Surgical Quality Collaborative (2011) • Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative (2011) • Quality Oncology Practice Initiative (2011) • BMC2 – Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (2012) • PGIP – “Fee for Value” (2012) Michigan Cancer Consortium Spirit of Collaboration Award (2011) • Quality Oncology Practice Initiative • Michigan Breast Oncology Quality Initiative • Michigan Oncology Clinical Treatment Pathways Cancer Innovator Award (2011) eValue8 Health Plan Innovation Award (2008) 24
CQI Model: Why It Works • Empowering the provider community to use comparative effectiveness research in a collaborative context • Measurement to inform is more powerful than measurement to judge; BCBSM does not see individual hospital data • Intrinsic motivation of professionals is harnessed when the work is owned and conducted by them • Incentives focused on: • Participation to help pay for the cost of data collection; and • Performance, to reward active and results-oriented participation catalyzes engagement and improved results. • Focus on long-term transformation of care processes improves systems of care 25
Key Takeaways • CQIs support continuous quality improvement and development of best practices for areas of care that are highly technical, rapidly-evolving, and associated with scientific uncertainty. • Collaborating across institutions accelerates improvement; more can be learned from variation in care processes and outcomes across groups than within groups. • CQIs target common clinical conditions and procedures associated with high costs per episode. • CQIs gather data on patient risk factors, processes and outcomes of care. Use data to generate risk adjusted comparative performance analyses and guide quality improvement interventions. • CQIs help to further BCBSM's social mission of cultivating a healthier future for all Michigan residents. • Patients, regardless of payer, benefit from improved care processes developed through an all-patient approach to practice transformation. 26
The Future of CQIs Ongoing CQI and Overall Program Evaluation including NIH-funded ROI analysis • Michigan Spine Surgery Improvement Collaborative Aims: To improve the quality of care of spinal surgery by enhancing patient-reported outcomes following spine surgery; reduce surgical complications; reduce average costs of surgeries and episodes of care; and reduce the rate of repeat spine surgeries. • Michigan Value Collaborative Aims: To profile approximately 20 common inpatient conditions and procedures; to partner with existing CQIs to present findings and lead discussions; and collaborate in designing and evaluating improvement interventions. 27
Montefiore Medical Center Stephen Rosenthal, MBA, MS President and Chief Operating Officer at the Montefiore Care Management Organization (CMO) 28
Where We AreHigh-Cost, High-Volume Environment High Volume: • Over 90,000 admissions annually • 3.5 million ambulatory care visits annually • 500,000 home care agency visits annually Bronx, New York: • 1.4 million people, 31% poor (vs. 21% across New York) and 90% Hispanic and/or Black • Higher prevalence of diabetes, obesity, asthma, other chronic conditions than New York City • 20% higher per capita medical expense than US • 8% of population 50% medical expense 30
Our Structure Montefiore IPA Integrated Provider Association CMO Care Management Company • Formed in 1995 • MD/ Hospital Partnership • Contracts with managed care organizations to accept and manage risk • Over 2,400 physician members • Over 500 PCPs • Over 1,900 Specialists • Established in 1996 • Wholly-owned subsidiary of Montefiore Medical Center • Performs care management delegated by health plans, other administrative functions, (e.g. claims payment, credentialing) • Licensed Utilization Review agent and certified claims adjustors 31
MIPA and CMO Cont. Premium $ Insurance Company CMO MIPA Savings Primary Care Specialty Care Hospital 32
How We Got Started Catalysts for Innovation • Reality of population Montefiore serves: low income, with chronic illnesses • Early advent of managed care and the need for Montefiore to manage the premium • Significant competition among insurance companies insurers saw partnering with us as opportunity to grow market share Also substantial competition among provider groups 33
How We Got StartedEarly Questions Why Fill the Care Management Gap: • Dominant presence in the Bronx • Developed diverse set of primary care practices through which to serve beneficiaries • Improved relationships with providers in the community Decision Points: • Determining the structure - combination of legal parameters and financial considerations • Seeking risk arrangements with payers vs. becoming a payer • Focusing on particular care management and network support functions • Which payers to target initially and longer term 34
Implementation Worked with a few key partners: • Collaborated with healthcare leaders to brainstorm • Participated in National IPA coalition to learn about practices used across the country Developed agreements with payers: • First needed to understand their populations • Getting the correct payment was critical • Used a consistent model (full risk) Getting up and running: • Cultivated a dedicated workforce • Focused on transactional aspects of the business e.g. timely claims payment • Understood the benefit packages and what employers expected of insurance companies • At start, systems limitations were challenging 35
OutcomesPost-Discharge Call Program Readmission Rate Decreased 33% At-risk patients defined as: age >69; having had a readmission in past 60 days; or having had home care services prior to admission 39
OutcomesEffective Management of Diabetes 12% Drop in Total Costs Source: CMO Paid Claims; Author: H. Shao Notes: Rx costs not available. Projected Costs Estimated using healthcare inflation trend of 16% 40
Key TakeawaysCare Coordination Individual level: • Focus assessments on medical and psychosocial issues • Expand capability to work with participants face to face • Incorporate tools to support individual behavior change Provider level: • Improve access and availability • Expand PCMH infrastructure • Incorporate behavioral health expertise into care management System level: • Support organizational behaviors that reduce preventable utilization • Partner to identify vulnerable patients and create comprehensive care plans • Develop IT infrastructure to support cross-organizational communication and data exchange 41
Key TakeawaysPromoting an Accountable Delivery System • Organizational governance, structure, alignment, and data are the foundation • Must define and understand the population • <20% of the population determine the costs 100% determine the quality of care • Sustainable cost reduction, improve performance and patient-centered care only with delivery system transformation 42
Key TakeawaysSetting the Stage for Growth • Use empirical evidence to support the spread of your best practice • Develop or engage in forums for sharing information (like AHRQ’s Innovation Exchange) to engage new champions • Leverage technology to advance your success; need technology to move information to the right people at the right time and to enable staff to practice at the top of their license 43
What’s Next? • New targeted interventions for select groups • Additional interventions for skilled nursing facility (SNF) residents • Expand linkage with community-based providers • Expand strategies for beneficiary engagement • Focus on patient satisfaction (33 ACO quality measures) • Expand current programs 44
Respondent Xavier Sevilla, MD, MBA, FAAP Vice President for Clinical Quality Catholic Health Initiatives, Denver, Colorado
Quality Health Policy Background • 2000 To Err is Human: Call to improve the delivery system as a whole • 2001 Crossing the Chasm: 6 Quality Dimensions, 10 Rules for Redesign of Health Care • 2007 Joint Principles of the Patient Centered Medical Home • 2007 IHI Triple Aim
Quality Health Policy Background New approach to measuring quality: National Quality Strategy April 2011 • Better care • Healthy communities • More affordable care ACO Medicare Shared Savings Program 2012
Current Landscape in Health Care Policy/ Quality • Using data to build a culture of quality: Slow improvement in quality (2.5% per year) • Delivery system transformation • Aligning payment policies with quality • Bending the cost curve: $2.7 trillion, $1 out of every $6 in the economy
Using Data to Build a Culture of Quality Pediatrix Medical Group Clinical Data Warehouse • Automated data extraction from EHR • Accessible and easy to use at the bedside • Extensive data validation Decreased clinical variation • Data down to individual clinician • Change culture to ongoing continuous quality improvement
Delivery System Transformation HealthPartners in Minnesota • “Prepared practice teams interacting with informed, activated patients through continuous healing relationships supported by ongoing availability of health information” • Care Model Process (Delivery System) • Team based care • Primary care based system • Reliable, timely and actionable data • Change of clinician’s culture