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EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES

EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES. EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY : ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES. Moderator: Paul A. Greve, Jr., JD, RPLU, Executive Vice President, Willis Health Care Practice Panelists:

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EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES

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  1. EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES Chicago, IL ~ March 24 & 25, 2011

  2. EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES Moderator: Paul A. Greve, Jr., JD, RPLU, Executive Vice President, Willis Health Care Practice Panelists: Thomas S. Campenella, Esq., Associate Professor, Health Economics Baldwin Wallace College; Of Counsel to Baker & Hostetler Of Counsel, Baker Hostetler William M. Marella, MBA, Director, Patient Safety Reporting Programs, Risk Management Group, ECRI Institute Andrew L. Shapiro, JD, Senior Vice President, HealthPro, CNA

  3. Unlimited financial demands placed on the finiteresourcesavailable to society Medical care must be placed within the context of other goals considered important by society To a large extent these are competing priorities The Financial Challenge Facing Healthcare Stakeholders

  4. The Financial Challenge Facing Healthcare Stakeholders The culmination of healthcare cost, quality and access to care issues: 1. Negative impact on employers 2. Negative impact on Medicare/Medicaid 3. Negative impact on both the “haves and have nots” 4. Which will in turn negatively impact healthcare stakeholders – no longer business as usual

  5. Follow the Money Our healthcare system is shaped by how we pay for services and what we pay for Medicare, the primary architect of our healthcare system Will there be “real payment” reform of Medicare? Remember, healthcare cost is revenue to the healthcare stakeholders

  6. How will Healthcare Reform Impact the Stakeholders? • Large urban hospital systems • Rural and independent hospitals • Physicians • Managed care organizations • Long-term care industry • Free-standing ambulatory provider facilities

  7. Healthcare Reform – Large Urban Hospital Systems Accountable Care Organizations are provider groups (e.g. hospitals/physicians) that accept responsibility for the cost and quality of care delivered to a specific population of Medicare patients cared for by the group’s clinicians. ACOs are rewarded in the form of shared savings if the group provides care to beneficiaries for less than the Medicare benchmark cost while meeting criteria for patient service and quality of care.

  8. Healthcare Reform –Large Urban Hospital Systems Hospital Systems and ACOs • Key to success – aligning incentives • Positive/negative stakeholder impact • The return of the HMO model? • The impact of transparency • Make or buy? • Winners and losers – house of cards?

  9. Healthcare Reform –Rural & Independent Hospitals What is the future of rural and independent hospitals under health care reform? • Independent physician collaboration • Business community collaboration • Tertiary centers of excellence collaboration

  10. Healthcare Reform –Physician Industry Patient centered medical home (PCMH) - a team based approach to delivering medicine. The PCMH practice is responsible for providing care for all the patient’s health needs or making appropriate arrangements with other quality professionals. This includes the provision of preventive care, treatment of acute chronic illness

  11. Healthcare Reform –Physician Industry Patient Centered Medical Homes 1. Focus on primary care 2. Can they stand alone? 3. Will payers support them? What is the future of the independent physician practice? • Medicare payment policy • Hospital collaboration

  12. Healthcare Reform –Physician Industry Percentages of Practices Owned by … Source: Medical Group Management Association

  13. Healthcare Reform –Insurance Industry What is the future of the MCO industry under healthcare reform? • Insurance reform • Health insurance exchanges • A new role for MCOs? • Increased consolidation? • Winner & losers

  14. Healthcare Reform –Long-term Care Industry What is the future of the long-term care industry under healthcare reform? • Aging baby boomers – a different model • Medicaid financial crisis • The role of long-term care insurance • Winner & losers

  15. Healthcare Reform –Free-standing Ambulatory Provider Facilities What is the future of free-standing ambulatory provider facilities? • Transparency + prudent purchasers of healthcare services = financial success • Medicare payment policies • Independent physician collaboration • Collaboration with MCOs

  16. The Healthcare Stakeholders’ Challenges/Opportunities Both challenges and opportunities for health care stakeholders Those stakeholders that are proactive in addressing these challenges will have the best chance for short and long-term success

  17. Major Trends in the Landscape Declining reimbursement, growth in less profitable populations Consolidation of providers More coverage = more care = more claims Shifting patients to least costly acceptable settings Expanded utilization of ASCs and O/P Expansion of patients and procedures in ASCs More home care & tele-health 17

  18. Exacerbates existing primary care shortage Increased patient volume Physicians more pressured for time (dx error, lack of follow-up on tests) ACOs: Financial incentive to reduce utilization Medical Homes: 24x7 responsibility; what are they promising? Crunch on Primary Care 18

  19. Will physicians push them too far Level of supervision Defining scope of practice Who is reviewing their cases What standard of care applies Issues around ostensible agency Expanded Use of Mid-Level Providers 19

  20. CMS non-payment for hospital acquired conditions (HACs) Medicare payment reduced by 1% for all d/cs for hospitals in the top quartile of HACs (2015) Incentive payments for hospitals (Oct 2012) exceeding standards for AMI, heart failure, pneumonia, surgery, & HAIs Value-Based Purchasing 20

  21. 30-day Readmissions payment penalties (Oct 2012) Results posted on HospitalCompare and PhysicianCompare Changes the ROI calculations for safety improvements Liability for failure to adopt specific patient safety practices? Value-Based Purchasing 21

  22. Hospital Acquired Conditions - Sample Source: Hospital and HealthSystem Association of Pennsylvania 22

  23. ACOs and Medical Homes will fail without information flow across care settings $19B in incentives for EHR adoption in ARRA Critical that we adopt the EHR, despite the short-term problems Many problems are analogous to those with the paper record Orders & studies posted to wrong chart Inaccurate info charted, failure to chart Wrong box checked, wrong selection chosen from list Privacy concerns/HIPAA EHR is Integral toHealth Reform 23

  24. VA terminates access to data from DOD EHR system when entries appear intermittently in wrong patients’ charts (March 2010) Selected cases of massive data loss First year of HITECH: 166 breaches, 4.9M people affected The Scale ofProblems has Changed 24

  25. Technical Learning curve associated with new technology User errors (failure to save entries, connectivity failures) Data corruption, availability Can lead to delay in treatment, misdiagnosis Alert atrophy and alert fatigue Legal EHR audit trail of document access, changes made Failure to act on information timely Automation of discovery process in fraud investigations Marginal risk of actively rejecting evidence-based guidelines Some Problems areNew and Unique to HIT 25

  26. Data communication/transmission problems and software problems may be less detectable Failure of images being transferred to PACS from diagnostic devices (CT, radiography, echocardiography) Incorrect processing of information (spatial orientation, patient position, measurements of pathology) Missing sections of CT studies, images reconstructed incorrectly Some cases of mass data loss The Case of PACS 26

  27. In February 2010, MIM Software received FDA marketing clearance for an App for diagnostic viewing of CT, PET, MRI, and SPECT images on iPhone, iPod Touch, & iPad Get Ready for theGolf Course Diagnosis Source: PR Newswire 27

  28. Corporate Form Leadership Structure Governance Providers Members Capitalization Organizational Issues

  29. Coverage of entity and or providers Breadth of coverage Transient nature of insureds Primary or secondary? Character of patient population Financial Risk Insurance Considerations

  30. Quality of provider integration Degree of physician leadership Quality of systems for coordination of care Patient satisfaction monitoring Progress toward meaningful use More Insurance Considerations

  31. Causes of action relative to coordination of care Standard of care relative to EMR Financial risk impact on level of care decisions Liability Issues

  32. QUESTIONS?

  33. EVOLUTION OF HEALTHCARE DELIVERY: ACO’S & MEDICAL HOMES Moderator: Paul A. Greve, Jr., JD, RPLU, Executive Vice President, Willis Health Care Practice Panelists: Thomas S. Campenella, Esq., Associate Professor, Health Economics Baldwin Wallace College; Of Counsel to Baker & Hostetler Of Counsel, Baker Hostetler William M. Marella, MBA, Director, Patient Safety Reporting Programs, Risk Management Group, ECRI Institute Andrew L. Shapiro, JD, Senior Vice President, HealthPro, CNA

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