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1. Health Care Reform Update Jeff Schiff, MD, Medical Director, DHS
Pat Adams, Assistant Commissioner, MDH
Scott Leitz, Assistant Commissioner, MDH
Presentation to Health Care Access Commission
December 1, 2008
2. Health Reform Bill Key Elements Health reform bill passed in May contains a number of key elements:
Public health improvement (SHIP)
Health care coverage/affordability
Chronic care management/health care home
Payment reform and price/quality transparency
Administrative efficiency
Health care cost measurement
3. Vision and Framework for Implementation Create meaningful, transformative health reform based on the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Triple Aim. The goals of the Triple Aim are to simultaneously:
Improve population health;
Improve patient/consumer experience; and
Improve affordability of health care.
4. Health Reform Implementation Principles Purpose of reform is to improve health of Minnesotans and redesign care to improve value (quality/costs).
We must “start with end in mind” and always remain focused on what we want to accomplish and what success looks like.
To ensure all Minnesotans benefit, we will aim for market-wide implementation of health reforms —not just reforms for government programs.
We will seek—and expect—unprecedented collaboration among public and private partners as we implement comprehensive health reform initiative.
5. Overview of presentation Quality Incentive Payment System (QIPS)
Provider Peer Grouping
Baskets of Care
Other Activities
SHIP
Health Care Homes
6. Article Four:Update on Implementation of Quality, Transparency, and Payment Reform Scott Leitz
Assistant Commissioner
Minnesota Department of Health
Health Care Access Commission
December 1, 2008
7. Quality and Incentive Payment System Minnesota Statutes, section 62U.02
MDH contracted with local organizations to implement the QIPS
Minnesota Community Measurement – contract lead with:
Minnesota Hospital Association
Minnesota Medical Association
StratisHealth
University of Minnesota
$ 3 million contract over 4 years
8. Quality and Incentive Payment System Key Tasks
Task One: Quality measures identification and documentation to be used for public reporting
Task Two: Development of an incentive payment system
Task Three: Collection and public reporting of standardized quality measures
Important Dates
July 1, 2009 – MDH specifies quality measures and quality incentive payment system
Jan. 1, 2010 – Providers submit standard quality measures
July 1, 2010 – Standard quality
measures reported publicly
9. Quality and Incentive Payment System
10. Quality and Incentive Payment System
11. Provider Peer Grouping Collection of encounter data
Collection of pricing data
Analytical work for peer grouping providers based on:
The quality and outcome data from QIPS
The resources used to achieve the outcomes
The price of those resources
Important Dates
July 1, 2009 – Health plans & TPAs begin submitting data
Jan. 1, 2010 – MDH specifies peer grouping methodology
June 1, 2010 – MDH disseminates results of peer grouping to providers
Sept. 1, 2010 – MDH publicly publishes
the results of peer grouping
12. Provider Peer Grouping Encounter Data Minnesota Statutes, section 62U.04, subd. 4
MDH will execute a data collection contract in 2-3 weeks
Project Status
On schedule to meet statutory timelines
Met all key milestones to date (e.g., RFP, contract, etc.)
13. Provider Peer Grouping Analytical Work Minnesota Statutes, section 62U.04
RFP currently open for bid
Key contractor tasks:
Issue a request for information (RFI) on peer grouping systems
Collect and synthesize available research and data on peer grouping systems
Participate in public meetings to discuss the results of the RFI and research efforts
Stakeholders will have an opportunity to respond to the RFI
Public meetings to discuss peer grouping methodologies will begin Summer 09
14. Baskets of Care Minnesota Statutes, section 62U.05
MD will execute a contract to facilitate a steering committee and seven work groups in 1-2 weeks
Steering Committee will:
Identify conditions/episodes of care to include in the seven baskets, using:
Prevalence, Cost of treatment, Potential for innovations
Identify issues related to implementing baskets
General oversight of the work groups
Work groups will:
Identify the health care services and/or outcomes to include in each basket
Identify/define quality measures for the baskets of care
Incorporate patient-directed, decision-making
support in baskets
15. Baskets of Care Steering Committee Chairs:
Dr. George Isham, HealthPartners
Dr. Doug Wood, Mayo
Steering Committee Members:
MMGMA
MMA (2 – primary and specialist):
MHA (2 – rural/critical access hospital and urban hospital)
Council of Health Plans (2)
Mayo
Insurance Federation
Employer (1):
Organization with market experience with baskets of care
Consumers (2)
Work Groups Members – All Interested Parties
16. Baskets of Care
17. Other Activities All activities prioritized by due date of deliverables
Anticipated starting dates of public meetings/workgroups:
Essential Benefit Sets
Due Dates:October 15, 2009 - Work group submits initial recommendationsJanuary 15, 2010 – MDH submits a report to the Legislature
Work Group Meetings: Late Spring 2009
Uniform Claim Study
Due Dates:January 1, 2010 – MDH submits report to Legislature
Work Group Meetings: Late Winter 2009
18. State Health Improvement Program SHIP Pat Adams
Assistant Commissioner
Minnesota Department of Health
Health Care Access Commission
December 1, 2008
19. Description of SHIP Signed into law as integral public health component of Health Reform Initiative
SHIP intended to reduce obesity and tobacco use in Minnesota through policy, systems, and environmental changes
$47 million appropriated for fiscal years 2010 and 2011
Competitive grants to Community Health Boards and tribal governments rolled out beginning July 1, 2009
20. SHIP Model for Achieving Success Community input into planning, implementation and evaluation
Adherence to socio-ecological model
Health promotion in four settings: community, schools, worksites, health care
Local program advocates
Informed by evidence-based interventions
Focus on common risk factors
Extensive and comprehensive evaluation linked to program planning
Policy, systems, and environmental change that supports healthy behavior
Accountability and oversight
21. SHIP Development Structure- Internal and External
22. Work Group Accomplishments Intervention
Drafting a Menu of Interventions for potential grantees to assist in implementation of policy, systems, and environmental change
Evaluation
Drafting an evaluation plan to address community and tribe assessment, process and outcome evaluation, and surveillance
Developing linked evaluation options for Menu of Interventions
Technical Assistance
Providing three major pre-implementation opportunities
Developing statewide, regional, and grantee-focused support
Communications
Developing consistent messaging, branding, and market-wide coordination
Chronic Disease Integration
Developing strategies to better coordinate systems throughout Minnesota to promote chronic disease reduction
RFP
Drafting Request for Proposals to be released in February 2009
23. Achievements Planning is fully underway
Involving key stakeholders in planning (local public health and tribal governments)
Working closely with other stakeholders to ensure SHIP adds value and builds on existing efforts
Using evidence- and practice-based interventions to maximize program impact
Utilizing and modifying existing data collection, assessment, and reporting systems
RFP is on track to be released February 2009 and will be due May 1, 2009
24. Opportunities Building on existing prevention efforts to expand and not duplicate work that is already being done
Enhancing capacity of local public health and tribal governments to implement policy, systems, and environmental changes
Integrating with other Health Reform Initiative components to support overall health reform transformation
Developing an statewide system to demonstrate that reductions in risk factors ? decreases in chronic disease ? substantial health care savings!
25. SHIP Next Steps Continue planning with our partners
Award funds to roll out July 1, 2009
Provide technical assistance to grantees to ensure successful implementation
Secure future funding to achieve goals of reducing obesity and tobacco use and exposure in Minnesota
Reduce the burden of chronic disease to generate future health care-related cost savings
26. Health Care Homes Dr. Jeff Schiff, Medical Director, DHS
Pat Adams, Assistant Commissioner, MDH
Health Care Access Commission
December 1, 2008
27. Health Care Homes (HCH) A model of delivering care that is:
comprehensive
coordinated
culturally-competent
continuous
accessible
family-centered
compassionate
28. HCH Program Development Tasks Criteria for participation
Verification process
Common payment methodology
Incorporation of collaborative learning
Measurement of results JeffJeff
29. Assumptions for Development and Implementation of HCHs Learning from and building on local and national experiences with HCH models
Collaborative process with broad stakeholder input
Flexibility within the parameters of the legislation creating opportunity to test different models
Meaningful measures that focus on desired outcomes more than process
Refinement of model over time
30. HCH Development process Collaboratively organized in state government between the Departments of Human Services and Health with emphasis on public-private collaboration
A combination of grant contracts and state organized processes
Integration with all of the other parts of the Health Care Reform legislation
31. HCH Activities Active current work:
Foundational
Outcome recommendations
Capacity Assessment
Consumer and Family Council
Criteria development workgroup
32. HCH Activities Program components in development
Verification
Collaborative learning model development and testing
Payment system development
Development of specific evaluation measures
33. HCH Activities to Date Outcomes: Start with the end in mind.
RFP issued October 2008 to develop recommendations for broad outcomes or goals to be used to guide the evaluation of health care homes.
Contract awarded in November 2008 to Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement (ICSI). Work product due 12/31/08.
Draft outcomes were sent out for public input on 11/21/08.
34. HCH Activities to Date (cont.) Capacity Assessment.
RFP issued October 2008 seeking an entity to conduct an assessment of: 1) the readiness of the primary health care delivery system to implement health care homes; 2) consumer understanding and readiness for the implementation of health care homes; and 3) to make recommendations that will guide capacity building efforts in establishing a statewide health care home system.
35. HCH Activities to Date (cont.) Consumer/Family Council
Opportunity for consumer and public engagement and input
First meeting – November 21st
Representatives to serve on other work groups, including criteria/standards work group
36. HCH Activities to Date (cont.) Creation of criteria/standards.
Process will include facilitated group processes for broad input from a variety of stakeholder groups.
HCH Community Meeting – Dec. 12, 2008 (will be archived for later viewing).
Work groups will convene beginning Dec. 18 to develop standards.
Collaboration with leading national criteria/standards organizations
Development process will include opportunity for public input.
Recommendations to Commissioners of Health and Human Services in late Jan. 2009
37. HCH Opportunities and Challenges Transformational change in care delivery
Changes in infrastructure and culture
Creation of a patient and family centered health care system
Measurement must evaluate all three goals of the IHI Triple Aim
Measures will be developed concurrent with the program and refined over time
Measures must evaluate progress to decreasing disparities
Payment must blend payments for services, coordination of care, and improved outcomes
Payment mechanisms will evolve over time
38. Contact Information Jeff Schiff, MD, DHS
Jeff.Schiff@state.mn.us
Pat Adams, MDH
Patricia.Adams@state.mn.us
Scott Leitz, MDH
Scott.Leitz@state.mn.us