Building a Medical Home - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 35
About This Presentation
Title:

Building a Medical Home

Description:

NC is mainly a rural state not well suited for traditional managed care ... Pharmacy Management (PAL, Nursing Home Polypharmacy) Dental Screening and Fluoride Varnish ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:65
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 36
Provided by: unkn925
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Building a Medical Home


1
Building a Medical Home The Case for Medical
Homes and Community Networks Pediatric Medical
Home Summit in Michigan February 13th,
2009 Denise Levis Hewson, RN, BSN, MSPH
2
First - Background
  • NC is mainly a rural state not well suited for
    traditional managed care
  • NC is dominated by small practices and loosely
    organized medical systems
  • The county system remains very strong
  • Since early 1990s, NC has had in place across
    the state, Carolina Access, a medical home
    program for Medicaid recipients

3
Primary Goals
  • Improve the care of the Medicaid population while
    controlling costs
  • Develop Community Networks capable of managing
    recipient care
  • Develop the systems needed to improve chronic
    illness and support PCPs / Medical Home
  • Fully develop the Medical Home

4
Key Visions
  • Managed not regulated
  • CCNC is a clinical program not a financing
    mechanism
  • Public-private partnership
  • The medical home is key for success
  • Community-based, physician led
  • Quality and system oriented
  • Economizing through raising quality rather than
    lowering fees

5
Basic Operating Premise
  • Regardless of who manages Medicaid, North
    Carolinas physicians, hospitals, health
    departments, and other safety net providers will
    be serving the patients
  • Ownership of the improvement process must be
    vested in those who have to make it work
  • Providers who care for patients must work
    together
  • The State should partner with and support our
    community providers who are willing to build the
    care systems that are needed
  • Focus on quality improvement
  • Information and feedback are key

6
Community Care of North Carolina
  • Joins other community providers (hospitals,
    health departments and departments of social
    services) with primary care physicians
  • Designated primary care medical home
  • Creates community networks that assume
    responsibility for managing recipient care

7
THEN
8
Community Care of North Carolina Now in 2008
  • Focuses on improved quality, utilization and cost
    effectiveness of chronic illness care
  • 14 Networks with more than 4000 Primary Care
    Physicians (1300 medical homes)
  • Over 825,000 enrollees
  • Now mandated inclusion of Aged, Blind and
    Disabled
  • and SCHIP by General Assembly

9
NOW
February 2009 Enrollment 884,097
10
Community Care Networks
  • Non-profit organizations
  • Includes all providers including safety net
    providers
  • Medical management committee
  • Receive 3.00 pm/pm from the State (5.00 for
    A,B,D)
  • Hire care managers/medical management staff to
    work with PCPs
  • PCP also get 2.50 pmpm to serve as medical home
    and to participate in Disease Management and
    Quality Improvement (5.00 for Aged, Blind and
    Disabled)
  • NC Medicaid pays 95 of Medicare FFS

11
Each Network Now Has
  • Part-time paid Medical Director role is
    oversight of quality efforts, meets with
    practices and serves on Sate Clinical Directors
    Committee
  • Clinical Coordinator oversees the overall
    network operations
  • Care Managers small practices share/large
    practices may have their own assigned
  • Now all networks have a PharmD to assist with
    medication management of high cost patients

12
Key Attributes of Our Medicaid Medical Home
  • Provide 24 hour access
  • Provide or arrange for hospitalization
  • Coordinated and facilitate care for patients
  • Collaborate with other community providers
  • Participate in disease management/prevention/quali
    ty projects
  • Serve as single access point for patients

13
Key Innovations
  • Provider networks organized by local providers
    and are physician led
  • Evidenced based guidelines are adopted by
    consensus rather than dictated by the state
  • Medical Homes are given the resources for care
    coordination and get timely feedback on results
  • Inclusion of other safety net providers and human
    service agencies
  • We are about building local systems of
    care rather
  • than changing how we pay for services

14
Managing Clinical Care(Spreading Best Practice)
PRACTICE A
PRACTICE B
PRACTICE C
Care Managers and CCNC quality improvement staff
support clinical management activities
15
Patient Identification
  • Real time data / referrals
  • Hospitals
  • Primary Care Providers
  • Specialist
  • Members of the care team
  • Identify high risk and high cost through claims
    analysis
  • Provide audits State AHEC and/or local Network
    audits

16
Case Management Process
  • Comprehensive Assessment
  • Develop Individualized Care Plan
  • Care Coordination
  • Re-Assessment / Monitoring
  • Outcomes
  • Evaluation

17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
22
(No Transcript)
23
Current State-wide Disease and Care Management
Initiatives
  • Asthma
  • Diabetes
  • Pharmacy Management (PAL, Nursing Home
    Polypharmacy)
  • Dental Screening and Fluoride Varnish
  • Emergency Department Utilization Management
  • Case Management of High Cost-High Risk
  • Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) (2006)
  • Chronic Care (Aged, Blind and Disabled)
  • Rapid Cycle Quality Improvement

24
Network Specific Quality Improvement Initiatives
  • Assuring Better Child Development (ABCD)
  • ADD/ADHD
  • Childhood Obesity
  • Stroke Prevention
  • HealthNet/Coordinated care for the uninsured
  • Projects with Public Health (Low Birth Weight,
    open access diabetes self management)
  • Diabetes Disparities

25
New Network Pilots
  • Depression Screening and Treatment
  • Mental Health Integration
  • Mental Health Provider Co-Location
  • E-Rx
  • Partner with AHEC to support Improving
    Performance in Practice Initiative
  • Medical Group Visits
  • Dually Eligible Recipients

26
Results
27
(No Transcript)
28
Key Results
  • Asthma
  • 40 decrease in hospital admission rate
  • 16 lower ED rate
  • 93 received appropriate maintenance medications
  • Diabetes
  • 15 increase in quality measures
  • Source 2007 Asthma Disease Management Program
    Summary

29
Cost/Benefit Estimates
30
Community Care of North CarolinaJuly 1, 2002
June 30, 2003
  • Cost - 8.1 Million
  • (Cost of Community Care Operations)
  • Savings - 60,182,128 compared to FY02
  • Savings - 203,423,814 compared to FFS
  • (Mercer Cost Effectiveness Analysis AFDC only
    for Inpatient, Outpatient, ED, Physician
    Services, Pharmacy, Administrative Costs, Other)

31
Community Care of North CarolinaCost Savings for
SFY 2004July 1, 2003 June 30, 2004
  • Cost - 10.2 Million
  • (Cost of Community Care Operations)
  • Savings - 124 million compared to SFY03
  • Savings - 225 million compared to FFS
  • SFY 2005 and 2006 results 231 million saved

NC Medicaid Administrative costs only 6!
32
Community Care of North Carolina in the
news
  • October 3, 2007 Community Care of North
    Carolina wins the 2007 Annie E. Casey Innovations
    in American Government Award given by the Kennedy
    School of Government at Harvard University

33
Next Steps
  • Strengthen the ability of the medical home to
    manage chronic illness care
  • Enhance the ability of practices/networks to
    support patient self-management
  • Improve care planning/coordination across
    provider settings
  • Integrate specialist expertise into care
    improvement process
  • Strengthen communication and performance feedback
    to clinicians
  • Investing in improved Clinical Information System

34
Key Take Home Thoughts
  • Key attributes of CCNC are replicable in other
    states despite the idiosyncrasies of NC
  • Key principles may have role in non government
    programs
  • Many states have rural areas and undeveloped
    markets that may benefit from local system
    development
  • Operations vary by community CCNC principles
    allow local variability

The medical home and community system
development are the keys to success!
35
Want to Know More?
  • www.communitycarenc.com
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com