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San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project (LTCIP)

The San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project aims to enhance chronic care management through integrated service delivery systems. Explore integrated care models and financial feasibility for improved care services.

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San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project (LTCIP)

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  1. San Diego Long Term Care Integration Project (LTCIP) November 9, 2005 LTCIP Planning Committee

  2. Long Term Care Integration Project Organizational Chart & Decision Tree San Diego County Board of Supervisors & State Office of Long Term Care Jean Shepard,Director County of San Diego, Health & Human Services Agency, (HHSA) • Internet • Facilitates communication • Provides broad public education Pamela B. Smith, Project Director Evalyn Greb, Project Manager Aging & Independence Services Lead County Agency Advisory Group: Goal: Make final decisions and recommendations for inclusion in the plan. Planning Committee: Goal: Guide the LTCIP planning process. Suspended Workgroups pending need for further action/decision-making Health Plan Partners Workgroup Finance/Data Workgroup Options Workgroup MH & SA Workgroup Community Education Workgroup LTCI Strategies: 1) Network of Care 2) Physician Strategy 3) Healthy San Diego Plus Ad Hoc workgroups: Care Management, Provider Network Development, Cultural Responsiveness Explore use of public health education models that promote improved chronic care management for LTCIP Determine the financial feasibility of the proposed LTCIP for San Diego County. Make recommendations to Planning Committee re: inclusion of mental health and substance abuse services in LTCIP. Explore use of the Healthy San Diego model for potential Service delivery system for LTCIP. Governance -Case Management -Info/Technology -Quality Assurance -Scope of Services -Workforce Issues -Developmental Disabilities -Community Network Development April 2005 www.sdcounty.ca.gov/cnty/cntydepts/health/ais/ltc/

  3. Why the Interest in ALTCI? Unintended consumer consequences Cost shifting in both directions Important public financing considerations An opportunity to do better with limited resources Managed/Integrated Care implications Aging of the population/Chronic Care Imperative

  4. Ideal System In-HomeServices PrimaryCare AcuteHospital MealsService MRS. C. DayHealthCare Transit Medical Specialty SkilledNursingFacility Mrs. C & Care Manager Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, Feb. 1997

  5. Special Needs Plans Institutional Beneficiaries (In or expected reside ther >90 days; Community NHC) Dually Eligible (subsets of duals OK) Beneficaries with Chronic Conditions (untested to be evaluated on case by case; e.g. disease specific, plan focuses) Lumpers vs. Splitters!

  6. Models: Buy-In Wraparound Capitated Wraparound Three-Party Integrated Plan-Level Integrated Key Considerations: Enrollment Operations Benefits Payments Appeals Part D Implementation CMS Guidance to Integrating Medicare/Medicaid

  7. Chronic Care Model Community Health System Health Care Organization Resources and Policies ClinicalInformationSystems Self-Management Support DeliverySystem Design Decision Support Prepared, Proactive Practice Team Informed, Activated Patient Productive Interactions Improved Outcomes

  8. P P P P P P A A A A A A D D D D D D S S S S S S S S S S S S D D D D D D A A A A A A P P P P P P A A A A A A P P P P P P S S S S S S D D D D D D P P P P P P A A A A A A D D D D D D S S S S S S Overall Aim: Implement the CCM for a specific Dual Eligible/Chronic Care Population Community Resources and Policy Organiz-ation of health care Clinical Information Systems Self- Manage- ment Support Delivery System Design Decision Support Develop Strategies for Each Component of the CCM

  9. Core Building Blocks Targeting Beneficiaries: Risk vs. Reward Case Management / Care Coordination - Integrating Information Quality Methods and Measures Primary Care / Chronic Care Management

  10. sco Senior Care Options Bringing Medicare and MassHealth Together

  11. What Works? • Centralized Enrollee Record • 24/7 Access to Nurse Case Manager • Joint CMS-state Medicare-style monitoring • “Extra” benefits, i.e. vision, dental, hearing, podiatry services to encourage enrollments • Rates sufficient for start-up phase • “Real” people to support automated enrollment, screening, and reporting requirements

  12. Exciting Outcomes • High enrollment in underserved, diverse neighborhoods (SCOs hire residents to do marketing/customer service) • Initial resistance by Aging industry slowly shifting to new AAA-SCO business • MMA transition to SNP MA-PD option as fast track to formal Medicare status • Enthusiastic, high-profile bi-partisan support within state government

  13. Wisconsin Partnership Program Charting the Future for Special Needs Plans: 2005 Leadership Forum Fairfax, Virginia Nancy Crawford November 2005

  14. Outcomes

  15. Outcomes

  16. Results of Provider Satisfaction Survey

  17. Medi-Cal Redesign Revisited • Mandatory Medi-Cal Managed Care for Aged, Blind, and Disabled (ABDs) clients in all current managed care counties • Implement Acute and LTC Integration Projects in Contra Costa, Orange, and San Diego to test innovative approached for enabling more individuals to receive care in setting that maximize community integration.

  18. San Diego Stakeholder LTCIP Vision for Elderly & Disabled • Develop “system” that: • provides continuum of health, social and support services that “wrap around consumer” w/prevention & early intervention focus • pools associated (categorical) funding • is consumer driven and responsive • expands access to/options for care • Utilizes existing providers

  19. Stakeholder Vision (continued) • Fairly compensates all providers w/rate structure developed locally • Engages MD as pivotal team member • Decreases fragmentation/duplication w/single point of entry, single plan of care • Improves quality & is budget neutral • Implements Olmstead Decision locally • Maximizes federal and state funding

  20. ALTCI Building Blocks • Stakeholder Process • Community Education and Outreach • Care Coordination Improvement • Community Network Development • Community & Cultural Responsiveness • Personal Care Workforce Support • Integrated IT Development • Primary Care Teams/Physician support • Quality Monitoring and Measurement

  21. Health San Diego Plus • MediCal Aged, Blind, and Disabled offered voluntary enrollment in LTC Integrated Plan • Models of care integrated across the health, social, and supportive services continuum: • Private entity to contract with State through RFP with stakeholder support • Healthy San Diego Health Plus Plans to develop program details with consultant resources

  22. Community Feedback on Stakeholder Recommendations • Provider Network • Care Management • Community & Cultural Responsiveness

  23. Provider Network Development/ Member Service Recommendations • Add geriatric, disability, social service expertise • Define minimum access standards for health and social services, including personal care services • Define minimum standards for member services/training of providers across the continuum to meet the individual health and social service needs of aged and disabled members • Consultants: Scotti Kluess, Carol Zernial

  24. Care Management Recommendations • Finalize CM model, based on previous work and stakeholder input • Develop standards and performance measures with State, County & stakeholders for the RFSQ • Identify CM tools, such as assessment instrument and care plan format • Identify source and develop community-wide plan for comprehensive training/certification? • Staff: Brenda Schmitthenner

  25. Community & Cultural Responsiveness • Recommend plan to involve consumers/ caregivers in decision-making for self-direction, standards for new system of care • Identify issues of diversity (cultural, physical, cognitive+) in re: access, outreach, education • Develop minimum requirements and performance measures w/State, County, stakeholders •  Recommend HSD+ training plan and materials to be translated into threshold languages • Workgroup Facilitator: Jong Won Min, PH.D.

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