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Healthcare Crisis From 3 Points of View

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Title: Healthcare Crisis From 3 Points of View


1
Healthcare Crisis From 3 Points of View
2
HealthCare 21 Business Coalition
  • Founded in 1997 by ten Knoxville employers
  • 501 (c) 3 Tax-Exempt Non Profit
  • Chattanooga, Cleveland, Knoxville, Nashville
  • Multi-stakeholder Membership Group
  • 90 Plus Corporate Members
  • 200,000 Covered Lives
  • Member of the National Business Coalition on
    Health

3
Connect to Mission
  • HealthCare 21 Business Coalition is a
    non-profit, member driven organization committed
    to improving the quality and cost of healthcare.
    HealthCare 21 believes only cooperative
    relationships between employers, health plans,
    hospitals and providers can produce positive and
    progressive changes in healthcare. Our mission is
    implemented through the following strategies

4
HC21 Strategies
  • Improve the purchasing process (employers and
    employees)
  • Improve the health system (health plans,
    hospitals, providers)
  • Improve the health of the community (employees,
    consumers, public)

5
A Short History of Medicine
  • I have a pain.
  • 2000 B.C. Here, eat this root.
  • 1000 A.D. That root is heathen, say this
    prayer.
  • 1850 A.D. That prayer is superstition, drink
    this potion.
  • 1920 A.D. That potion is snake oil, swallow
    this pill.
  • 1999 A.D. That pill is ineffective, take this
    FDA approved COX-2.
  • 2005 A.D. That COX-2 inhibitor is dangerous.
    Here, eat this root.

Source Jeanne Scott
6
Top 10 Issues of Concern HR
  • Retention of professional employees
  • Escalation/control of health benefit costs
  • Employee morale
  • Recruiting and retaining skilled technical
    employees.
  • Competitiveness of total compensation package
  • Availability of qualified workers
  • Strengthening the relationship between
    performance and pay.
  • Competitiveness of benefits package
  • Accuracy of market pricing data
  • Productivity of workforce

Source Employee Benefits Journal, Volume 27,
Number 1 March 2002.
7
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8
Health Care in 2010
The future comes out of the present and is more
than a projection of the past! What if by 2010 .
. . energy prices continue at an all time high,
the war on terror (Iraq and Homeland Security)
continues to drain the U.S. budget, the federal
deficits continue to swell, Medicare Rx is more
than projected, Medicare benefits are not
curtailed, healthcare policy takes a backseat,
private sector initiatives are showing an ROI but
only in isolated cases (disease management, CDHP,
P4P, data warehousing, worksite clinics) and cost
shifting to employees bottoms out. Then . . .
there is nothing to prevent another doubling of
the health benefit budget!
9
Health Care in 2010
  • Givens
  • The government is not going to lead.
  • The private benefit sector will continue to offer
    health benefits.
  • The government will continue to expand access to
    the marginalized increasing federal deficits.
  • Employers will increase the intensity of their
    search for a solution.
  • Consumers will become aware of their role.
  • Employers will become the brokers of health
    information.
  • Employers will deliver health promotion, primary
    care and disease management at the work site.

10
Health Care in 2010
  • Tort reform will occur.
  • Allied health workers will be given an expanded
    role (nurse practitioners, pharmacists).
  • Employers will steer employees to higher quality
    providers.
  • The health system will become more transparent.
  • IT and connectivity within the health system will
    make a giant leap forward.
  • The numbers of the uninsured will continue to
    rise.
  • A national index of drugs within a category will
    develop.

11
Total Health Benefit Cost Increase Slows for the
Third Straight Year All Employers
12
Total Health Benefit Cost for Active Employees Up
6.7Large Employers
7.2
6.7
9.0
10.2
11.5
12.1
6.6
7.0
5.7
Average increase projected for 2006 after
changes increase of 9.9 predicted before changes
13
Employee Entitlement
  • Consumer Out-of-Pocket Costs as a Percentage of
    National Healthcare Expenditures

14
Quality Crisis
  • IOM Report
  • Rand Studies
  • Dartmouth Atlas

15
Americas Healthcare Roadmap
  • 30 40 Eliminate senseless waste
  • ?
  • Re-engineering
  • Electronic Medical Record
  • ?
  • GDP 15 Target
  • 2½ productivity gain per year

Source Dr. Arnie Milstein
16
In Summary
  • 8 - 10 premium increase persists
  • Higher and higher deductibles ? consumers getting
    activated
  • Healthy behavior incentives spreading quickly
  • Pooling purchase power and brain power ? back in
  • Brokers/consultants under the microscope
  • Insight requires data control and management
  • HPNs entering the vocabulary

17
Three Domains of Healthcare
Supplier
Consumer
HealthcareSystem
Consumer Health
HealthcareFinancing
Buyer
18
SEEING THE HEALTH IN HEALTHCARE COSTS
19
V C Q
Value Transaction
20
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21
CDHP
HPN
22
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23
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24
30 - 40 Savings
25
  • Knoxville Area Hospital
  • Community Project

26
ZAP VAP
27
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28
VAP2004 / 2005 Results
  • 36 decrease in VAP since project inception (Jul
    2004)
  • 73 lives and 5.4MM dollars saved in our
    community
  • Honorable mention TN Patient Safety Award
  • Numerous presentations and inquiries about project

29
Provider Behavior Change Programs-
H.E.R.E.I.U. (Culinary) Health Fund
  • 134,000 lives- Union members/ families
  • Hotel and restaurant workers- low pay, immigrants
  • 43 Latino 13 Asian 10 African-American
  • Rich benefit plan coverage
  • 2,000 healthcare providers
  • 36 primary care 64 specialists
  • 610,000 doctor visits/year
  • Uniform specialty fee schedules
  • 268 million annual spend for health benefits
  • Doctors, Hospitals, Drugs

30
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31
Medical Cost Increases(per Eligible Enrolled
Employee Includes Rx)2 year savings 69 million
Year 2 Savings 43 M
Predicted
Restructured physician network
Year 1 Savings 26 M
Projected at 13 trend
Actual
8
1
13
17
National HMO CY Premium Trends 03 14.6
04 12 05 8.8
Fiscal Year 2001 - 2005
32
Task Force Initiatives
  • As a result of these discussions, the committee
    decided to move forward with these goals for the
    next 12 months.
  • Generics
  • After determining baselines for each purchaser,
    we will target increasing generics by 4. 
  • Rule of Thumb every increase of 2 in generic
    utilization represent a 1 savings in plan cost
  • A 2 increase means over 350K for data coop
    benchmark, a 4 increase means over 700K. 
    Savings could more than pay cost of data coop.
  • Hypertension
  • Identifying, stratifying Hypertensives and
    joining the dialog with member health plans to
    improve health condition of hypertensive
    patients.
  • Hypertensive patients  11 of the population
    drives 30 of the cost.
  • Hypertensive costs  all costs associated with
    hypertensive patients hypertensives often have
    expensive co-morbidities (diabetes,
    hyperlipidemia, etc.)

33
  • One dollar cost in health benefit.
  • Another dollar cost in hidden loss of
    productivity through absenteeism/presenteeism.
  • (10M health benefit budget 10M low productivity
    20M cost of health)

34
  • Leaders of U.S. group practices believe that
    responsibility for resource stewardship and for
    providing high-quality, coordinated patient care
    is best met in the setting of multi-specialty
    group practice, particularly when financing
    mechanisms support the provision of efficient
    services.
  • (Source Health Affairs. Vol. 24 No. 6, 2005.)

35
Innovative Care Redesign for 2007 Testing
A-ICU Adapt a National Care Engineering Teams
3-Level Tri-Level Home for the Sickest 20 of
Members(Better, Faster 35 Leaner)
  • 35 Lower Net Spending
  • 13
  • - 20
  • - 5
  • - 23

Special Care Center
Level 3 BeanReferral to most
cost-effectivespecialists/hospitals
Level 2 DemingLean primary care MD visits
Level 1 NordstromEconomical relationship-based
self-management coaching
36
Putting Quality Into the Doctor Equation
  • Recognition (LeapFrog)
  • Pay for Performance (Bridges to Excellence)
  • Tier and Steer (Benefit Design)
  • High Performance Networks (Health Plans)

37
Next Step The Global HPN
After failing to obtain satisfactory discounts
from local providers, North Carolina based, Blue
Ridge Paper Products, is amending its
self-insured health benefit plan to allow its
employees and their dependants to seek medical
care in India, beginning in 2007.
Source Business Insurance
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