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Paying for Care Coordination. Starting assumptions How are states paying for limited care coordination at present What does that teach us about making this universal. Starting assumptions -- before you get to what it costs.
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Paying for Care Coordination Starting assumptions How are states paying for limited care coordination at present What does that teach us about making this universal
Starting assumptions --before you get to what it costs • Children with special health care needs are those who have or are at increased risk for a chronic physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional condition and who also require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required by children generally • The family of any child or youth with special health care needs may need care coordination at some time
Starting assumptions --before you get to what it costs, cont. • An organized, statewide system of care coordination is the only way to assure universal availability (and quality) • The medical home is the best option for a statewide system of care coordination • Care coordinators in the medical home • Can serve children and adolescents with a range of disabilities or chronic conditions effectively • Can serve children and adolescents with a range of disabilities or chronic conditions efficiently • Can leverage practice-wide change that reduces the need for jerry-rigging solutions
More precisely • Almost all Title V programs pay for some care coordination • Who they serve • Some serve a defined group who receive care in state-run or funded clinics • Some serve a subgroup group defined by diagnosis, need and/or coverage status • Some serve a patchwork of children through categorical programs • Whom they employ • Most rely on state or county employees • Some contract with hospitals to provide care coordination • Some contract out to community-based vendors, which may include counties
How they pay • Generally a mix of state and federal Title V funds • May also include Part C funds if Title V is the lead agency • Some categorical add-ons • Federal and private grants • State appropriations • Some states have significant Medicaid involvement, others little or none • Some states integrate some services with other state agencies
So… • No Title V program currently assures availability of care coordination to all CSHCN • This reflects • Lack of funding (~ $1 billion to serve all CSHCN in 59 jurisdictions) • But also • Lack of infrastructure • Which are both linked to lack of political will
But we have learned a few things… To go to scale, we need models that • Bring down the cost • Get partners to share the cost and • Build political will for financing of care coordination
Strategies to bring down the cost • Leverage practice-wide improvement • Leverage state systems improvement • Use less costly personnel
Leveraging practice-wide improvement Chapel Hill Pediatrics Pre-visit Contact • Care Coordinator does Pre-visit Contacts for 10 docs/1,000 CYSHCN • Care coordinator screens schedule for upcoming CSHCN physicals based on registry • The child’s MD assesses child’s complexity and requests PVC • Care Coordinator makes call to parent. • Parent concerns are identified • Labs (and pain control!) are anticipated and scheduled for • Consultant notes are available, ED and specialty visits are noted • New issues/special needs are anticipated • 93 % of Families find PVC’s helpful: • Less reviewing, more looking forward”. . . “it shows you care about my child”. . . • It “makes my visit more useful and efficient • Even “late adopter” MD’s like PVC’s and love care coordination The lesson practice-wide change expands reach of single care coordinator
Leveraging state systems improvement • Massachusetts Consortium as a vehicle to address diaper crisis • Massachusetts care coordinators identified a decline in quality of diapers • Statewide network makes clear it’s a shared problem • -> instead of solving over and over one, child at a time, seek systemic solution • We don’t have a broad, statewide network of medical home care coordinators, but Consortium served as proxy The lesson: statewide network reduces need for individualized solutions -> increased care coordinator efficiency
Using less costly personnel • Rhode Island Pediatric Practice Enhancement Project • 20 parents employed as practice-based care coordinators • 10 in primary medical home sites • 10 in NICU, specialty clinics • Parents are employees of parent organization (RIPIN) • Title V oversees contract • RIPIN provides intensive training and supervision • Payment is to the organization, which pays parents • New payment sources are emerging • Practices • Private insurers The lesson: parent experience is a huge potential resource to the system
Strategies to get others to share the cost • Maximize reimbursement • Make the most of Medicaid waivers • Make the most of state partnerships
Maximize reimbursement • Chapel Hill Pediatrics • Has retrained pediatricians on coding to maximize reimbursement for their own potentially covered activities • Has gotten raised reimbursement rate based on cost savings • Decreased ED use • Replaced by after-hours use of practice • Define as P4P to payers The lesson: education of physicians and payers about care coordination is key
Make the most of Medicaid waivers • Florida • Uses a waiver to serve targeted populations • Reserves Title V-funded care coordinators for children ineligible for waiver The lesson: creation of a universal system requires a central intelligence
Make the most of state partnerships • Minnesota alliance of Title V with • Mental Health • Child Welfare • Medicaid child health policy unit • State-mandated community teams The lesson: as long as you are all discussing the same model, it doesn’t matter if it means different things to different people
Build political will • Show effectiveness • Show cost savings • Build a constituency
Show effectiveness:Establish medical home (including care coordination) as standard of care • Documentation of improved outcomes • Parent, provider satisfaction: NC, MN, Center for Medical Home Improvement • Reduced days out of school, work • Reduced preventable hospitalization • Need new tools for this purpose
Show cost savings • Reduced ER use: NC • Reduced hospitalization: RI • Earlier referral to appropriate resources: RI
Build a political constituency Requires • Data: MN, CMHI, NC • Case studies: RI and • A grasp of systemwide parameters • Evidence of feasibility
Estimating cost for WA • 375 FTE care coordinators • Distributed among 750 FTE physicians • Each caring for about 530 children • To serve the state’s population of 200,000 CYSHCN
System costs for 375 care coordinators with benefits @ .25 • Advanced practice RN $34,125,000 • Social worker $24,375,000 • Certified paraprofessional $14,625,000 • Plus Estimate $2,000,000 in system oversight cost • -> Cost is between $16 and $36 million
One parallel model • MA blended funded for Part C • Broad eligibility • Mandated benefit • State certifies vendors • Generic service (rather than specific discipline) is reimbursable
The Catalyst Center on Financing and Coverage for CYSHCN • Our priorities • Medical debt among families of CYSHCN • Cover more kids through Medicaid buy-in • Reduce gaps through Catastrophic Relief • Enhance quality through financing of care coordination • Our team • Carol Tobias, Susan Epstein, Sally Bachman, Meg Comeau, Deborah Allen • Find us at http://www.bu.edu/hdwg/ • Contact me at dallen@bu.edu