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An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

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An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health. David Grossman, MD, MPH Group Health Research Institute Seattle, Washington. Disclosures and Funding. PI is employee and shareholder, Group Health Permanente medical group - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health David Grossman, MD, MPH Group Health Research Institute Seattle, Washington
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Page 1: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

David Grossman, MD, MPH

Group Health Research Institute

Seattle, Washington

Page 2: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Disclosures and Funding

PI is employee and shareholder, Group Health Permanente medical group

Funding from AHRQ (R01 HS018913-01) and Group Health Cooperative

Page 3: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Improving Value of US Healthcare Expenditures

Increased purchaser focus on:

• Improving value of expenditures

• Reducing waste

• Improving health outcomes for beneficiaries

• Preventing chronic illness and complications

Two main levers

• Health plan design

• Delivery system design

Page 4: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Cost-Sharing and HealthImpact of larger cost-shares on chronic disease self-management

Chronic disease the major driver in health care costs

Re-consideration of indiscriminate cost-sharing

• Consumer holds the early short term risk

• Purchaser/health plan holds the longer term risk

Page 5: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Value-based Cost-Sharing

First iterations:

• Preventive service coverage

• Tiered pharmacy benefits

Generics

Brand-name

Non-preferred and non-formulary

Most recent efforts focused on pharmacy cost-sharing: reducing cost-shares

• Pitney Bowes

• University of Michigan employees

Page 6: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Science of Value-Based Design

Large body of evidence on impact of increased cost-shares

• Tends to be focused on discrete services

Much smaller literature on impact of reducing cost shares

Even smaller literature on impact of cost-sharing on health outcomes and productivity

Tiny literature using control group with multiple outcomes

Page 7: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Worksite WellnessAnother approach to reducing costs and improving health

• Focus on lifestyle change

Incenting health behavior

Healthy work environments

Change of work culture

• Outcomes of interest

Health status and utilization

Absenteeism and presenteeism

Productivity

• 77% of large employers offer these services

• Health risk assessments are entry portal for engagement

Page 8: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Group Health’s Total Health Plan for Employees

Employer Aims

• Improve productivity through

Better health of staff

Decreased absences

Improved on-the-job productivity

• Decrease health expenditure trend rate

Mechanism

• Incent healthy behaviors and improved chronic disease control through monetary incentives and value-based health benefit pricing

• Reinforce culture of self-awareness, accountability and reporting of health and health behaviors through monetary incentives and culture change

Page 9: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Specific AimsTo assess the impact of the new value-based insurance design on:

PRIMARY: changes over time in employee self-reported:

• health status

• absenteeism due to illness and disability

• presenteeism (i.e. lost productivity time at the workplace)

SECONDARY:

• clinical quality scores for chronic illness care and preventive screenings,

• lifestyle behavioral risk factors,

• employee satisfaction with health benefits,

• health services utilization by employees, and

• employer-paid health costs for the employee population.

Page 10: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Invitation to complete HRA

Feedback report with health risksIdentified

· Improved health status· Decreased absenteeism· Improved workplace productivity

Lifestyle & behavioral risk factors

Improved management of chronic illnessChronic

Illness self-management

needs

TotalHealth Program

Design and Incentives

Reduction in lifestyle and

behavioral risk factors

Figure 1: Conceptual Framework

Opt-out*

· Reduced unexpected healthcare utilization

· Decreased employer health costs

Page 11: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Total Health Design OverviewValue-based copayments

Preventive services (already 1st dollar): no change

Chronic disease cost-sharing decreased for

Selected Visits

Pharmacy

Worksite wellness and health promotion activities

• Engagement tied to premium stabilization for 3 years

Health risk assessment annually, AND

Achievement of point threshold

Points aimed at both healthy and chronically ill staff

Page 12: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Visit Cost-Sharing

Waiver of co-pay for 2 visits/year for chronic care

• Coronary Artery Disease

• Diabetes

• Hypertension

• Congestive Heart Failure

• Asthma

• Mental Health (first ten visits)

Waiver of copay for chemical dependency visits and lactation service visits

Page 13: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Pharmacy Co-payments

Copayments reduced to zero for:

• generic, mail dispensed meds for same diseases plus depression

Copayment reduced for brand name drugs for same diseases

Page 14: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Devices

Wavier of cost-sharing for:

• Home BP monitors

• Diabetic glucose monitors

• Spaces for inhaled asthma meds

Page 15: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Obesity Management Programs

50% discount for enrollment

100% coverage (50% rebate) for diabetics that lose five percent of body weight

Page 16: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Cost-Shares Increased

Outpatient surgery

High cost imaging procedures

• CT, MRI, PET

Page 17: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Total Health Website

Page 18: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Total Health Evaluation Design

Study Design

• Quasi-experimental 2 group before/after design

• Repeated measures

• Control group: Kaiser Permanente Colorado employees

Page 19: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

OutcomesPrimary

• Health status change: Survey

• Absenteeism due to illness: Survey +HR data

• Productivity at work: Survey

Secondary

• Care Quality scores

Chronic illness: HEDIS scores

Preventive services HEDIS scores

• Lifestyle behavioral risk factors Survey

E.g. smoking, activity

• Employee satisfaction Survey

• Costs and service utilization Claims data

Page 20: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Survey ToolSurvey invitation to employees

• Web survey tool

Paper survey on request

Domains: Instrument

Functional Status: (SF-12)

Workplace productivity: Work Health Interview

Health Risk Behaviors BRFSS, other

» Tobacco

» Alcohol

» BMI

» Physical Activity

» Satisfaction w/ plan

Page 21: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Administrative Data

Health utilization/cost/quality

• Group Health Research Institute data warehouse

Claims

Pharmacy

EMR data

Employee characteristics

• Human Resources administrative data

Page 22: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Data Collection

Sample of 5000 employees invited to take e-survey tool

• Active opt-out

• Implied consent with survey completion

• Separate permissions to link claims and HR data

• 3 follow-up emails

• No telephone follow-up

Page 23: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Statistical Power

Mean/

Percent SD

Minimum detectable difference

Presenteeism (hours) 5.2 7.5 0.57 Absenteeism (hours) 11.0 14.0 1.06 Lost productive time (hours) 15.3 14.4 1.09 Self-rated health (excellent/very good) 57% -- 3.8%

Page 24: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Total Health – participation• >80% of all staff and spouses/domestic partners on the TH medical plan have taken the HRA

•73% are earning points on the wellness website

Page 25: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Progress to Date

Baseline survey completed early 2010

• Group Health: 70% response rate

• KPCO: 60% response rate

Permissions to link survey data

• Approximately 60-64% agree to linkage with HR and/or medical data

Page 26: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

Challenges and Strengths

Privacy issues/concerns

• Employer is also provider of care

• Key engagement of organized labor units

Validity of self-reported data

Study design and potential for confounding

• Use of highly similar control group external to Group Health

Page 27: An Evaluation of a Value-Based Health Plan Design at Group Health

GHRI/UW KPCO

Paul Fishman Arne Beck

Nora Henrikson Debra Ritzwoller

Rebecca Hubbard Nancy Brace

Diane Martin

Rob Reid

Ellen Schartz

Aaron Scrol

Kay Theis

Research Team


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