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Following the Process of Care Management

Following the Process of Care Management. Speaker Bio. Gary M. Austin , VP-NHII Solutions, Practice Lead, MA/NY/PA based Formerly BCBSMA, Director IT Strategy and Health Mgmt Systems eRx Collaborative principal ($4m payer investment in eRx)

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Following the Process of Care Management

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  1. Following the Process of Care Management

  2. Speaker Bio • Gary M. Austin, VP-NHII Solutions, Practice Lead, MA/NY/PA based • Formerly BCBSMA, Director IT Strategy and Health Mgmt Systems • eRx Collaborative principal ($4m payer investment in eRx) • Project Director, MA-SHARE MedsInfo project (Rx Payers to ED) • Mass eHealth Collaborative thought leader ($50 million payer investment in EMR) • eRx for Homeless project director • Speaker, HIT, NMHCC, DMC, TEPR, WEDI and other conferences on Payer Involvement in RHIO’s • Leading MEDecision’s RHIO pursuits in over 30 markets • Previous lives at: • Payers: Excellus, CIGNA, Preferred Care, Providence Healthcare • Delivery Systems: SHARP, St. Luke-Shawnee Mission, The Health Alliance • Nothing to do with Healthcare: Rolls-Royce aerospace, Automotive Network Exchange, British Petroleum, Marine Midland (Hong-Kong Shanghai) Bank

  3. About MEDecision • MEDecision is the software leader in Collaborative Care Management. Founded in 1988, the company’s Integrated Medical Management solutions create a seamless payer-based medical management system to analyze, apply, administer and automate management of healthcare programs and provide a common patient view at the point of care. • MEDecision’s clients include 21 of the country’s Blue Cross BlueShield plans and over 40 other payer clients -- improving patient outcomes, reducing medical errors, and increasing operational efficiencies for approximately one in every six (43 million) Americans. • Client list includes: • BCBS Plans • Anthem CareFirst HCSC • Massachusetts Michigan Excellus • Medicaid Plans • Keystone-Mercy (PA) Avidyn KeyPro • IDN’s • Fallon (MA) Scott & White NY Presbyterian

  4. Assumptions Behind DE PCS Project • Payers and providers can work together to improve patient outcomes by supplementing provider electronic medical records with payer member information • Payers can jumpstart RHIO efforts by pre-populating electronic health records systems with payer-based health record (PBHR) information

  5. Christiana Care-BCBSD Project • Payer-provider collaboration to share multi-source patient data at point of care • One-year pilot to test impact and establish evaluation criteria • Common goals: • Improved patient care through better information • Lower costs through reduced duplication and improved outcomes

  6. Collaboration for ImprovedPatient Care Patient data from all providers Phase 1 BCBSD MEDecision Patient Eligibility “Integrated Medical Management” Patient Clinical Summary CCHS EmergencyRoom Data on patients treated within the Christiana system CCHS Patient Summary Report

  7. Collaboration for ImprovedPatient Care RHIO Patient data from all providers BCBSD Other Regional Payers Follow-on Phases MEDecision 2 Way “Integrated Medical Management” Patient Eligibility and Patient Summary Report Consolidated Patient Clinical Summary Other Clinical Settings CCHS EmergencyRoom CCHS Integrated patient recordaccessed at point of care Patient Summary Report combined with Patient Clinical Summary

  8. The Provider Viewpoint

  9. Christiana Care Health System • Largest provider in Delaware • Also serving portions of PA, MD, NJ • 2 hospitals, plus multiple services • Half of all admissions in DE • 92,000+ ED visits annually • 17th busiest nationwide • Level I regional trauma center with 2600 admissions annually

  10. Background • Collaborated with ED in 2003-04 to improve information flow • Huge repository of clinical information (e.g., lab and radiological data to 1992) • Created “Patient Summary Report” • Patient demographics • Last 5 hospital visits and diagnosis • ER visits • Last 5 lab and radiology visits • Last 10 physician visits

  11. Background (cont’d) • Patient Summary Report automatically printed when patient registers at ED • ED personnel note reduction in duplicate tests • After 6 months, limitations were obvious • Need for more information sources • Pharmacological view • Other providers and procedures

  12. Basis for Improvements • MEDecision’s PCS similar to CCHS PSR • BCBSD adds patient data from physicians, pharmacies, imaging centers, etc. Christiana Care:“deep” BCBSD:“broad” +

  13. Expectations • Improved decision-making • Reduction in preventable errors • Higher quality of care plus greater safety • Cost savings through reduced duplication • “Why not us?” from other providers • A preview of what DHIN can accomplish

  14. The Payer Viewpoint

  15. Why Get Involved? • Patient safety: expectations amongst patients and accounts that we are trying to improve the safety of the care provided • Cost containment • NCQA accreditation • Improved relations with major providers of care • Incubator for other ways to share data

  16. Why? (cont’d) • Christiana Care an attractive partner • Academic rigor • High-volume Level I trauma center • High overlap with BCBSD • ER best site for proof of concept • Controlled setting and access • Most likely to deliver ROI from reduced duplication

  17. Payer Concerns • HIPAA and patient privacy • Concerns of BCBSD • Data may not be current • Claims history file may not contain all details • Project costs and ROI • Capital and operating expenses • Personnel and training • Measurement criteria

  18. Some Prospective Metrics

  19. Utilization Statistics • 25,257 total ED visits during CY 2004 • 10,922 ED visits resulted in lab testing being performed • Total cost of lab tests $5.8 million • 12,192 ED visits resulted in a radiological examination • Total cost of radiology tests $6.1 million

  20. Utilization Prior to ED Visit • 425 doctor visits had a lab test within 30 days of the ED visit • 296 doctor visits had a lab test within 14 days of the ED visit • 598 doctor visits had a radiological examination within 30 days of the ED visit • 457 doctor visits had a radiological examination within 14 days of the ED visit

  21. Utilization After ED Visit • 811 doctor visits had a lab test within 30 days after the ED visit • 574 doctor visits had a lab test within 14 days after the ED visit • 2,582 doctor visits had a radiological examination within 30 days after the ED visit • 2,043 doctor visits had a radiological examination within 14 days after the ED visit

  22. Measuring Success • ED staff satisfaction • Was the data valuable? • Member satisfaction • ROI calculations

  23. Vendor Perspective

  24. Electronic Health Record “EHR” EHR = PBHR + EMR + PHR The Electronic Health Record

  25. Leveraging Payer Data • The PBHR is one component of a comprehensive Electronic Health Record (EHR) • The PBHR is a clinically useful summary based upon data the payer holds – demographic, claims, care management, Rx, Labs, risk analysis, etc. • Data is aggregated, sanitized, and presented to the clinician • Clinical rules highlighting gaps in care, care opportunities and the like can be overlaid, yielding the Patient Clinical Summary (PCS) • Clinical data can also be included as you mature the system • MEDecision KNOWS payer data as well as any company in the industry; it is forming “data alliances” with data owners and clinical systems companies in a drive to deliver comprehensive EHRs

  26. A Payer RHIO Win! • Utilize the Payer-based Health Record (PBHR) as a launch strategy • Turn on payers in a market one at a time • Initial delivery to high cost delivery sites such as hospital ED’s • Subsequent delivery to ambulatory providers • Speed to Value: ≈ 90-120 days following receipt of clean data from plans • Clear public, payer, and clinical value • Low risk (payer data), low cost (by the drip), low complexity (ASP and web) • A wonderful public story; Betty came into the ED unconscious…

  27. Sample Preliminary ResultsFrom Retrospective Study

  28. Study Methodology • Inclusion Criteria: Registered in the CCHS ED on or after 2/1/2005 Triage severity level 1 or 2 (scale 1 to 5, 1 = most severe) Verified as BCBSD members • Sampling Strategy: The patients were sorted in order of registration date and 59 consecutive patients meeting the above criteria were selected.

  29. The Study • 59 consecutive BCBSD patients • High triage severity • Compare completeness of medication record (ED admission medication records compared to Payor PBM claims)

  30. Review Outcome PCS Contributed Value

  31. Other Interesting Observations • Patients with chest pain in the ED who had already received a full cardiac workup and EGD within the last 6 weeks • Patients with asthma who had no claims for home nebulizer therapy • The most severely ill patients had the greatest number of missing medications • Trauma patients unknown to be taking anti-platelet or anticoagulant medications • Patients with symptomatic coronary artery disease taking Viagra • More To Come…

  32. Edward Ewen, Jr, MDDirector of Clinical Infomatics, CCHS The Moral of the Story… “In an emergency setting alone it appears this information could significantly impact medical decision-making and clinical outcomes”

  33. For Further Information Gary M. Austin, D.A. VP, MEDecision 610.389.3562 or Gary.Austin@MEDecision.com

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