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Value Over Volume: Paying for Quality
March 28, 2012 Ellen Andrews, PhD CT Health Policy Project CSG/ERC
Health care spending
Sources: National Health Accounts, CMS, accessed 3/20/11, Fiscal Survey of States, NASBO, Fall 2010
Annual Growth Rates, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) And National Health Expenditures (NHE) Calendar Years 2009–20.
Keehan S P et al. Health Aff doi:10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0662 ©2011 by Project HOPE - The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.
Quality question
• Only 39% of American adults are confident that they can get safe, effective care when needed
• Americans get only 55% of recommended care on average
• One in three Americans reports getting unnecessary care or duplicate tests.
• Almost one in five Medicare patients discharged from the hospital are readmitted within 30 days
Current incentives
• Pay the same for high and low quality services• Consumers have no information and no incentive
to choose higher quality/higher efficiency services or providers
• Encourages overuse, misuse of services• Higher spending not correlated with higher
quality• Higher spending not correlated with better
patient satisfaction
Fee-for-service misaligned incentives
Fee for service encourages:• More services• Less coordination• Incentives for duplication• Few incentives for prevention• Stifles innovation• Only pays for selected services - not email, group
visits, phone calls• No link to quality• Incentives to increase high profit services/patients
and avoid low profit
• Rewards better outcomes• Payments based on value -- quality balanced with
cost• Data driven• Remove incentives for more services• Reward providing the right services to the right
patient at the right time in the most effective setting• Flexibility for providers to customize care• Reward patient satisfaction• Remove fragmentation and conflicting incentives• Align provider, payer and consumer incentives to
reward quality, effectiveness and efficiency
Quality-based purchasing
Consumers support quality-based purchasing• 96% of Americans feel it is important to have
information about the quality of care provided by different doctors and hospitals
• 89% feel it is important that they have information about the costs of care to them before they actually get care
• 85% want public and private payers to reward high quality doctors and hospitals
Why should states implement VBP?• State employee groups usually one of largest
groups in state – 42 states self-insure• Medicaid programs – covers one in five Americans• States regulate insurers, license providers, CON• Trusted source for consumer education, data
collection, research• Public health collaborations• Innovators – medical home, HIT, coverage
programs• Provider training – promote primary care,
emphasis on accountability, transparency• Convener – can get people to the table, anti-trust
protections
Options: Payment system overhaul
• Never events• Transparency• Pay for performance (P4P)• Market share – tier and steer• Shared savings• Episodes of care, bundled payments• Global capitation
Options: Transparency
• Data reporting, definitions are a challenge• Report cards evolving, mixed results
o Improving science of how to effectively convey information
• Coalitions with other payers, providers for joint reportingo All payer data aggregation
• State employee, Medicaid use in contracting• Moves providers to improve quality and/or re-
consider pricing
Options: P4P
• Widespread, but mixed results• Process vs. outcome measures• Benchmarks vs. improvement• Medicaid P4P in 28 states • Federal Medicaid limits on incentive payments in
risk-based systems• Target health plans and/or providers• Outcomes vs. process and teaching to the
test/cookbooks• Provider resistance, low Medicaid participation
rates• Coordinate and join with other payers to make
payments salient to providers
Options: bundled payments
• Also called episodes or buckets of care • One payment for full range of services associated
with a specific event, e.g. knee replacement• Common now for physicians in general surgery
and obstetrics, DRGs in Medicare• Similar to DRGs in Medicare• Places providers at some financial risk • Incentives to coordinate care, nontraditional
supports, reduce duplicate services• No incentive to prevent illness in the first place• ACA pilots for Medicare and Medicaid
Options: shared savings
• Allow providers to “share” some part of reductions in cost per patient
• To avoid incentives to deny care, tied to quality standards
• Medicare demonstration had mixed resultso Took five years to implement, with ten sophisticated groupso Quality improvements goodo Did not reach expected savings targets
• ACA includes more opportunities for Medicare and Medicaid
• Medicare ASOs
Options: Global payment rates
• Massachusetts a leader, 20% of commercial payments
• Pay one risk-adjusted rate for each patient to cover all their care – in and outpatient, LTC, rehab, drugs
• Linked to Pay for Performance to ensure quality of care maintained, up to 10% of budget
• Year One mixed resultso Quality up for some measures, not otherso All groups met savings targets and received rewardso Savings from reducing prices, shift to outpatient care, not reduced
utilizationo But total savings did not equal total bonuses
Supportive options
• Patient-Centered Medical Homes• Accountable care organizations• EMRs, health information exchange• Wellness programs with employee supports and
rewards• Workforce development, esp primary care• Comparative effectiveness research
Patient-Centered Medical Homes
• About half of Americans report poor coordination of care
• 93% believe it is important to have one place or doctor responsible for primary care and coordinating care
• 86% support providers working in teams to improve patient care
• Patients linked to a team of providers that are responsible for their primary care, coordination, prevention, and supports for self-management
• Evidence that the model improves care, reduces overall costs
• Preferred by primary care providers• More efficient use of scarce primary care resources• Accreditation by national organizations• Support for Medicaid PCMHs in ACA
Accountable Care Organizations• Networks of providers collectively rewarded to slow
cost growth for their patients while improving quality of care
• Patients can get care outside the network if they choose
• Quality standards must be met to get share of savings• Some in one corporate entity, some are contractual
networks• Medicare and private payers, some Medicaid programs
considering them• Patients cannot be in Medicare ACO and any other
state shared savings programo Providers may have incentives to guide patients
based on their bottom line• For dual eligibles, how will Medicare ensure that providers
are not shifting costs onto Medicaid
Comparative Effectiveness Research
• New treatments, drugs, devices, procedures largest driver of rising health costs
• Little information on which are worth the expense over current care
• Even the research that is available takes years to enter practice patterns
• Large federal investments in research• CEPAC – New England collaborative of clinicians,
researchers and patient advocates deep dive into CER, votes on whether evidence is sufficient to recommend treatmentso Medicare in our region changed authorization policy
on treatment resistant depression vote
Federal payment reform
• Strong feature in national reformo Innovation Center, waivers o ACOso Comparative effectiveness researcho Medicare and Medicaid bundled payment pilots
• Medicareo 23 programs – P4P, pay for reporting, never events,
medical home, gain sharing, removing regulatory barriers, e-prescribing, data aggregation
o Premiere Demonstration – hospital P4Po Physician Group Demonstrationo Implementing differential payments based on
readmission rates
Medicaid payment reform
• Most states risk adjust managed care plan capitation rateso 22 adjust for health status
• 19 states include pay for performance in health plan paymentso Withholds, bonuses, enhanced rates, shared savings, auto assignment,
data reporting incentives, performance pools
• 8 of 31 states with PCCM programs include P4P• Three-fourths of states with managed care plans
publicly report on their qualityo Some report on provider quality
• 16 states assess quality in their fee-for-service programs
Maine value-based purchasing
• State employee plan leadership in larger multi-payer collaborative – Maine Health Management Coalition
• 2005 adopted strategy to encourage consumers to make informed choices, incentives to access higher quality care, reward high quality providers, wellness programs with employee supports
• Hospital and physician tiering by quality, expanded program in steps over the yearso www.getbettermaine.org
• Messaging to members, web-based, became a trusted source of information
• Engaged providers in development of standards, QI plans• First year diabetes disease management participants
averaged $1300 less in health care costs• Transitioning from FFS to bundled payments
Vermont single payer reform
• Global budget for health care costs, new payment models
• Guaranteed coverage not linked to employment• Single system of provider payments and
administrative rules• Health care system will remain privately owned• Payment reform to link payment to quality• Delivery reforms, workforce development • Expect to save $500 million/year and operating in
2017• Planning through Green Mountain Care Board
o Can set rates, CON controls, review insurance rates, hospital budgets
Lessons from others• Collaborate first• Go slowly• Start small and with strongest partners• Coordinate across payers -- standardize• Fair and open process• Everyone on same page, all have same understanding• Be clear on goals, single-minded dedication• Strong consumer education piece necessary• Plan for transitions• Don’t underestimate the power of disclosure and
transparency, often stronger motivator than $$$• Be brave• The time is right for transforming delivery and
payment systems – the status quo is not sustainable
For more information:
• www.valueovervolume.org • www.csgeast.org [email protected]• www.cthealthpolicy.org [email protected]