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Lessons From the Managed Care Experience of the Community Health Center Network. Ralph Silber Chief Executive Officer, CHCN March 16, 2012. Introduction: What is CHCN?. Mission Statement:
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Lessons From the Managed Care Experience of the Community Health Center Network Ralph Silber Chief Executive Officer, CHCN March 16, 2012
Introduction: What is CHCN? Mission Statement: The Community Health Center Network is a partnership of community health centers committed to enhancing our ability to provide comprehensive, quality health care in a manner respectful of community traditions and values. CHCN provides: • Managed care contracting servicesand management services for our health centers’ managed care business • Practice management services for health centers
Network’s Three Broad Roles • As an Independent Practice Association (IPA) • Contracting with HMOs on behalf of our health centers • As a Managed Care Management Services Organization (MSO) • Integrated managed care functions such as contracting, claims processing, utilization management, Pay for Performance (P4P) quality improvement • As a Practice Management Organization • HIT initiatives, QI, PCMH, Data Analytics • Note that our policy and advocacy work is conducted by our sister organization, Alameda Health Consortium
CHCN Governance • Non-Profit 501(c)(3) Corporation • Board is composed of the CEOs of 8 member health centers • Community Health Center Network Members Asian Health Services Axis Community Health La Clinica de La Raza LifeLong Medical Care Native American Health Center Tiburcio Vasquez Health Center Tri-City Health Center West Oakland Health Council
Health Center Services • CHCN Health Centers serve clients at 29 comprehensive primary care sites in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties • Employ more than 150 PCPs • More than 160,000 patients seen at our health centers • In aggregate, CHCs are a very significant primary care provider in Alameda County. Our health centers are the “medical home” for approximately 2/3rds of our County’s low-income residents.
CHCN Managed Care • CHCN has HMO contracts with Alameda Alliance for Health (AAH), Blue Cross, and Health Net • HMO Programs: • Medi-Cal Managed Care (2-plan model) • Healthy Families • Access for Infants and Mothers (AIM) • In-Home Support Services Workers • Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan • CHCN has contracts with more than 500 specialists • Approximately 64,000 Managed Care Members (about 30% of health centers’ patients are through CHCN)
Network Managed Care Organization Definitions : IPA and MSO • What is an Independent Provider Association (IPA)? • Entity organized and directed by health care providers to jointly negotiate contracts with health maintenance organizations and depending on the contracts, with specialists and other providers. • The value of the IPA is aggregation into an association in order to leverage contracting strength vis-a-vis HMOs. • What is an Managed Care Services Organization (MSO)? • An organization that provides physicians or other provider groups including IPAs, services in support of HMO contracts. • These services typically include membership processing, claims processing and payment, referral and authorization processing, utilization management, P4P quality improvement, and other administrative activities.
CHCN is an IPA and MSO • CHCN as an IPA • Contracts with HMOs (Alameda Alliance for Health, Blue Cross, and Health Net) on behalf of our member health centers • Contracts with specialists and ancillary providers • CHCN as an MSO • Is organized to provide a range of services in support of the HMO contracts. These include membership processing, claims adjudication, utilization management, etc.
IPA Elements of CHCN: Health Center Participation Agreement and Criteria • Participation Agreement legally binds the health centers to participating in CHCN. • There are CHCN membership criteria. The criteria are essential to assure business success: • Assuring mutual trust • Meeting regulatory and HMO requirements
Membership Criteria • Financial / Administrative • Current ratio of at least 1 to 1 (assets to liabilities) • At least one month’s operating reserves • Ability to track costs of capitated services on a monthly basis • Most recent audits • Management IT reporting systems (e.g. track Medi-Cal patients by aid code) • Clinical services • Medical Director at least 50% time • Quality Assurance program • 24 hour advice and telephone call system • Provide case management services
MSO Components of CHCN: Managed Care Operations • Membership • Claims • Utilization Management • HMO and Provider Contracting and Relations • Finance • Quality Improvement • Information Technology • Operations Management • Pay for Performance
CHCN HMO Contracting • Types of Risk Contracting • Global • Inpatient • Full Professional (including specialty care) • Primary Care Only • CHCN is a “Delegated” group • CHCN takes “Full Professional Risk”
Payment Flows Medi-Cal Alameda Alliance for Health Anthem Blue Cross CHCN Clinic PCP Specialists, Ancillary Risk Pool Funds
CHCN Pay for Performance (P4P) to Our Health Centers • Board decides each year to distribute dollars from CHCN risk reserves (i.e., our “profits”) • % Health Center Member Months • % HC’s Contribution to Financial Reserves • % Based on Quality Improvement Measures • % Appropriate Utilization (PCP visits, ER visits, inpatient admissions)
CHCN P4P • These P4P measures are used to incentivize several areas: • Where HMOs have P4P, these give impetus to improve on those measures • Pushes us on membership growth • Pushes us to improve financial performance • Gives us a regular process to measure Patient Satisfaction • Measures our improvement in quality of care • Incentivizes appropriate utilization • Reliability and credibility of data is crucial for P4P to work. • Dollars are distributed according to data measures. These must be right! • Our clinical and utilization measurement enables us to market the health center services as quality focused.
Advantages of “Full Professional Risk” • By taking greater financial risk, we are able to reinvest “profits” from managed care business back into the health centers • By taking risk and operating efficiently, we are able to strengthen our position with our business partners – the HMOs, hospitals, and specialty physicians • Taking risk gives us access to extensive data that is being used to support quality improvement initiatives in chronic disease management and preventive health care.
More Advantages • By consolidating all our managed care contracts into one IPA/MSO, greater efficiencies are gained at the operational level for health centers. Instead of having to deal with multiple HMOs or MSOs, health center staff can operate under a single managed care system. • By taking “full professional risk”, we have developed experience with P4P programs, positioning us well for any expansion of P4P in the health care system.
Value of History of Joint Consortium/ Network Activities • Clinics working together on policy and advocacy issues is a “big plus” • Not just advocacy, but other experiences of successfully working together creates TRUST • For example, the common experience on grants, QI or IT facilitates the joint investigation of a business collaboration. • Where there are difficult moments, the advocacy experience helps keep the “big picture.” • Business partnerships have cycled back and strengthened our advocacy capacity.
Know Your Strengths: • What are a clinics’ aggregated Medi-Cal market share. • What is your geographic coverage – are you the sole provider in the area? • How do you compare in terms of quality of clinical services to other providers in the community? • Be sure to take into account your work in chronic disease management. • What is the language and cultural competency in your organization compared to others in the community? • Are you able to measure clinical performance such as immunization rates, etc. (very important to HMOs)? MORE CLINICAL DATA THE BETTER!
Systems to Hold Member Clinics Accountable • Regular meetings at the minimum of Clinic CEOs, Medical Directors, and Finance Managers • Keep track of physicians and other providers working at the clinics • Keep track of clinic services and clinic hours • Centralize a Patient Satisfaction Survey • Centralize clinical quality audits, either manual audits, electronic data or hybrid
HMO Contracting • Four Areas of Negotiations • Capitation Rate • Fee for Service (separate into buckets) • Member Auto-Assignment • Pay for Performance • Financial performance – per member per month numbers • Administrative – e.g. audits • Registry enrollment or electronic health record – e.g. diabetes registry • Clinical quality – e.g. well child, HEDIS, etc. • Bonuses • Accepting new members • Extended hours for primary care • Language capacity and services • PCMH
HMO Contracting • Caveats • Be sure to seek legal advice on the anti-trust issue of your ability to negotiate collectively. • Be sure your managed care arrangements are consistent with FQHC PPS requirements.