+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor...

Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor...

Date post: 26-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: berenice-grant
View: 218 times
Download: 4 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
26
Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable Care Act and the Business Case for Reducing Health Care Disparities American Medical Association (AMA) September 28-29, 2012 | Chicago, Illinois
Transcript
Page 1: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPHSenior Research Scientist

Texas Health Institute&

Associate ProfessorUniversity of Texas School of Public Health

Affordable Care Act and the Business Case for Reducing Health Care Disparities

American Medical Association (AMA)September 28-29, 2012 | Chicago, Illinois

Page 2: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

ACA’s Vision, Promise and Background Design to Monitor ACA through an Equity

Lens Status of Diversity & Equity Provisions

▪ Health Insurance & Exchanges▪ Health Care Safety Net▪ Workforce Support & Diversity▪ Research, Data and Quality▪ Public Health & Prevention

Priorities for Advancing Equity through ACA

Page 3: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Working to eliminate health disparities and advance health equity is central to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010.

Over three dozen provisions directly advance racial/ethnic health equity, diversity and cultural/linguistic competence.

Dozens of other general provisions with major implications for racially/ethnically diverse populations.

Page 4: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Tracking will continue through 2013.

Page 5: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Tracking 62 provisions specific to race, ethnicity, language and diversity & general

provisions with major implications for diverse populations across 5 major areas:

Page 6: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

For each provision, we are reviewing:▪ Legislative language in ACA▪ Federal registry, policy reports, peer-review literature▪ Related national, state, local models & best-practices▪ Early successes and lessons learned▪ Opportunities and challenges

Additionally, we are conducting interviews with:▪ National experts and advocates▪ Representatives from federal and state government▪ Representatives from organizations representing diverse

communities▪ Health plans, hospitals, health centers and other grantees

Page 7: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Provisions:▪ State Exchanges

▪ Navigator Program & C/L Information▪ C/L Summary of Benefits▪ C/L Claims Appeals Process

▪ Use of Plain Language in Health Plans▪ Non-discrimination in Federal Programs▪ Remove cost-sharing for AI/AN▪ Market incentives for Reducing Disparities

Page 8: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

15 States + DC with State Exchanges, as of July 2012

Exchange prior to ACA (2)

Exchange thru legislation (12)

Exchange thru E.O. (3)

Pending legislation (2)

Level 1 Planning Grant (24)

Will not establish State Exchange

Source: Adapted from Commonwealth Fund Health Insurance Exchanges by State Interactive Map, July 2012.

Page 9: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Uncertainty of attention and priority given to equity in exchange planning across states.

However...some states such as California, Maryland and Washington are working to actively integrate racial/ethnic equity into their exchange planning by, for example:

Page 10: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

C/L Information, Outreach and Navigators Issued Final Rules with emphasis on:

▪ Plain language standards for information, education and outreach;▪ Ensure availability of language services in translated taglines; ▪ Cultural competence of navigators in enrollment, providing referrals,

handling complaints, conducting outreach and other functions.

Forthcoming Rules: ▪ Standards for C/L competency of navigators.

Models:▪ California State Exchange is planning outreach campaigns targeting

Latinos, African Americans and other racial/ethnic minorities along with a statewide C/L competent Consumer Assistance Program

Page 11: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

C/L Summary of Benefits & Uniform Glossary Final Rules & Guidance:

▪ C/L summaries when >10% of population in county literate in same non-English language

▪ Existing template & glossary in English, Spanish, Tagalog, Chinese and Navajo

Models: ▪ Kaiser Permanente and its Virtual Translation Center; ▪ NY’s Medicaid Managed Care Plan provides translated documents if >5% of county’s

population speak the same foreign language.

C/L Internal & External Claims Appeals Processes Interim Final Rules:

▪ 10% threshold for C/L; ▪ Oral interpretation requirement for assistance in filing claims and appeals.

Models: ▪ LA Care which has an online repository of translated claims & appeals documents.

Page 12: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

* Comprised of Nursed-Managed Centers, School-Based Health Centers, Teaching Health Centers

Provisions: Medicaid income eligibility expansion Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH)

payment reductions Community Health Center support Support for other health centers/clinics* Nonprofit Community Benefit

Page 13: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.
Page 14: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Potentially very significant adverse effect on diverse communities in states not choosing to expand Medicaid per ACA

This will be compounded by the $18 billion reduction in Medicaid disproportionate share hospital program which will be phased in 2014-2020 (The program finances 22% of unreimbursed care at public hospitals.)

Financial pressures on safety-net hospitals in caring for 52 million uninsured between now and 2014, given growth in uncompensated care, low profit margins, and location of many in high-poverty areas

Risks to safety net’s ability to compete for newly insured patients and participate in systems innovation

Page 15: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Evaluate current formula for distributing DSH funds

Allocate DSH funds to hospitals providing most care to uninsured

Improve transparency by requiring hospitals to disclose how they use DSH funds

Impose accountability standards for hospitals receiving DSH funds

Require hospitals receiving DSH dollars to adopt more community-based, consumer-friendly procedures particularly for low income, diverse communities

Page 16: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Medicaid Section 1115 Waiver Programs

California “Bridge to Reform”: $2 bil. in support each year for 2010-2014 ▪ Provide comprehensive care to ~ 500,000 low-income adults ineligible for Medi-Cal. ▪ Expand Safety Net Care Pool for uncompensated care & support safety net

hospitals.▪ Improve managed care services, care coordination & outcomes for seniors &

disabled.

Texas “Transformation Waiver”: ▪ Allow the state to expand Medicaid managed care ▪ Preserve federal hospital funding historically received as Upper Payment Limit (UPL)

payments—supplemental payments to make up the difference between what Medicaid pays for a service and what Medicare would pay for the same service.  Replacing the UPL payment methodology are two funding pools – the Uncompensated Care and Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment (DSRIP) pools. 

▪ Require participation in a regional healthcare partnership

Page 17: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

1. Includes support for: primary care physicians; long term care providers; dentists; mental health providers; and nursing professions.

2. Includes: National Health Services Corps; loan repayment; & investments in AHECS & HBCUs.

3. Includes: cultural competence training for home care aides & pain care providers & other professions.

Provisions: Increasing Diversity Among Providers1

Health Professions Training for Diversity Redistribute Graduate Medical Education Slots Community Workforce Infrastructure Investments 2 Collect & Publicly Report Data on Workforce Diversity Cultural Competence Training in Health Professions3

Model Cultural Competence Curricula Support for Community Health Workers

Page 18: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

In FY 2010, Workforce initiatives received $503.3 mil (49% of the total ACA appropriations) Majority of dollars came through Prevention & Public Health Fund Half the monies ($250 mil) to boost supply of primary care

providers

In FY 2011, Workforce initiatives received $376.3 mil (15% of the total ACA appropriations) Majority of dollars directly appropriated for workforce initiatives $137 mil provided through the Fund & geared toward public health

workforce and mental health training

New law passed in Feb 2012 has cut the Fund by ~ $5 bil over 10 years – exact appropriations for FY2012 – 2014 are still uncertain.

Page 19: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

California, Texas, New York, Illinois, Florida Total ACA Funds Used - $1.26 Billion $32.6 M for health professions workforce demonstration

projects, which will help low income individuals receive training and enter health care professions that face shortages.

$7.2 M for the expansion of the Physician Assistant Training Program, a five-year initiative to increase the number of physician assistants in the primary care workforce.

$2.55 M to support teaching health centers, creating new residency slots in community health centers.

$1.4 M to support the National Health Service Corps, by assisting in repaying educational loans of health care professionals in return for their practice in health professional shortage areas.

Healthcare.gov – 3/15/2012

Page 20: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Provisions: Data in Federal Surveys by Race, Ethnicity & Language Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) NIMHHD & OMHs in HHS Agencies Hospital Value-Based Incentive Program National Quality Strategy & Interagency Group Centers of Excellence Health Impact Assessments Develop, Improve & Evaluate Quality Measures

Page 21: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Health Disparities is 1 of 5 PCORI Priorities – Draft Research Agenda includes a focus on comparative effective research to: Reduce disparities in health outcomes Assess benefits/risks of treatment Identify strategies to overcome barriers such as culture and

language Identify best practices for racial/ethnic sub-populations.

September 17, 2012: Release of Second Cycle of PCORI Funding Announcement related to Disparities Anticipate to fund 14 contracts totaling $12 million Awards for “studies that will inform the choice of strategies to

eliminate disparities” See: http://www.pcori.org/assets/FINAL-PFA-Addressing-Disparities-v3.pdf

Page 22: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Key provisions we are tracking: Community Transformation Grants Maternal & Child Home Visiting Personal Responsibility Education Reauthorization of Indian Health Care

Improvement Act National Prevention Strategy & Fund Obesity, Diabetes, Cancer Programs National Oral Health Campaign Culturally Appropriate Decision Aids

Page 23: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

61 Awards to 36 States

35 Implementation Grantees: All intend to address low-income populations > 50% intend to target African Americans & Hispanics/Latinos 1 in 3 will address health issues of American Indians/Alaska

Natives Nearly all target children & 1 in 5 will address older adults

26 Capacity-Building Grantees: Establish or strengthen community coalitions Conduct community health assessments, including diverse

populations Develop community-based solutions that also address disparities

Page 24: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.
Page 25: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Capacity of state/local government agencies and offices to take advantage of opportunities. 

Available public health and safety net infrastructure to address need. 

Reductions in state/local government personnel encourage supplementation of displaced staff rather than expansion.

Presence of well-placed or influential champions for ACA equity/diversity initiatives.

Sustainability of ACA supported initiatives.

Page 26: Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPH Senior Research Scientist Texas Health Institute & Associate Professor University of Texas School of Public Health Affordable.

Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPHSenior Research Scientist, Texas Health Institute

Associate Professor, University of Texas School of Public Health

Nadia J. Siddiqui, MPHSenior Health Policy Analyst, Texas Health Institute

Maria Rascati Cooper, MAHealth Policy Analyst, Texas Health Institute

Lauren Jahnke, MPAffConsultant, LRJ Research & Consulting

Ebbin Dotson, PhDExecutive Director, Adjunct Professor

University of Texas School of Public Health

For inquiries, please contact Dr. Andrulis ([email protected]) or Nadia Siddiqui

([email protected]).


Recommended