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Carole R' Myers, PhD, RNAssistant Professor

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Manny Martins-McWherter's Director of the Medicaid Bureau and then TennCare ... Dick Blackburn and Kelly Lang-Ramirez-Executive Director and Associate Director ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carole R' Myers, PhD, RNAssistant Professor


1
TennCare A Critical Case Study
Carole R. Myers, PhD, RN-Assistant Professor The
University of Tennessee (Knoxville)-College of
Nursing
  • Study background In the span of only 15 years,
    the introduction of managed care and other
    market-based strategies from the private sector
    precipitated a transformation of the delivery of
    Medicaid services in the United States. These
    monumental changes remain poorly understood. The
    implementation of managed care in Tennessees
    Medicaid program is an excellent public policy
    exemplar because of the far-reaching scope of the
    program and the ongoing development of the
    program.
  • Study purpose The purpose of this study was to
    evaluate the fidelity of Tennessees Medicaid
    managed care program (TennCare) to selected
    strategic aims.
  • Fidelity implies a strict and continuing
    faithfulness to an obligation, trust or duty
    (Merriam-Webster, 2000).
  • Program fidelity is a broad measurement of how
    true the implemented program is to the intended
    program (Heflinger Northrup, 2000).
  • Methods A single case study design was used.
    The retrospective recollections of 26 informants,
    captured in recorded interviews were triangulated
    with time-stable documents to reveal an intricate
    web of people and circumstances that have shaped
    the program.
  • The study examined the complex contextual factors
    that influenced the TennCare program, by
    providing a multi-perspective view and
    examination of expected and unanticipated program
    results.
  • Key informants included
  • Governor Ned Ray McWherter-Democratic Governor of
    Tennessee from 1987-1995 creator of TennCare
  • Gordon Bonnyman-A prominent advocate, co-founder
    of the Tennessee Justice Center and key figure in
    the development of TennCare
  • David Manning-Commissioner for Finance and
    Administration during the entire McWherter
    administration
  • Manny Martins-McWherters Director of the
    Medicaid Bureau and then TennCare Director under
    three Tennessee governors (McWherter, Sundquist
    and Bredesen)
  • Governor Don Sundquist-Republican Governor of
    Tennessee 1995-2003
  • Dr. Bruce Vladeck-Administrator for the Health
    Care Financing Administration from 1993-1997
  • Governor Ned Ray McWherter made a deliberate
    decision about who would be included in the
    development of TennCare he made the unorthodox
    decision to include the advocates, such as Gordon
    Bonnyman and Tony Garr, and exclude the
    providers.
  • David Manning came to the point where he said,
    I cant beat Gordon Bonnyman , and so Ive got
    to figure out a way to work with Gordon. (T.
    Garr) .
  • It was apparent that the providers were
    opposed to managed careIt seemed to us that we
    had to implement this thing rapidly There
    would have a long drawn out debate process and it
    would never have gotten us to the point we got
    to (M. Martins).
  • The implementation of TennCare was influenced by
    several key factors
  • The capstone of a political career-Governor
    McWherter served two terms as Governor from
    1987-1995. It was during the waning days of his
    administration that he turned his attention to
    access to health care for the states most needy.
  • An imminent state budget disaster-Medicaid
    expenditures nearly tripled between FY 1987 and
    FY 1993. A strategy used by Tennessee and other
    states to finance hospital payments for indigent
    care was curtailed by the federal government. In
    turn, the state levied a 6.75 gross receipts tax
    on hospital and professional services. Legal
    action was threatened by the Tennessee Hospital
    Association and others, essentially closing of
    this funding avenue.
  • The triumvirate-Governor McWherter had an
    excellent team, most prominent were David Manning
    and Manny Martins. All three shared a similar
    social and political philosophy and commitment,
    as well as a complementary skill set.
  • The failure of national health reform-Bill
    Clinton came to office in 1993. In November
    1993, he proposed the Health Security Act of
    1993. TennCare then was created during the same
    time that a national health reform plan was being
    created. McWherter saw his efforts as compatible
    (but better!) than what was being developed at
    the national level. TennCare was implemented
    January 1,1994 and by October of 1994 the Health
    Security Act was dead.
  • Presidential perspective, power and
    persuasion-President Clinton came to us as a
    former governor who had been very frustrated
    about Medicaid and very frustrated with what he
    perceived as bureaucratic rigidity at HCFA. We
    had very clear marching orders to make
    encouragement of state flexibility and state
    waivers a priority and to be as responsive and
    supportive to the states as we could (B.
    Vladeck).
  • TennCare was approved and implemented in less
    than one year.
  • Governor McWherters personal and political
    collateral and prowess were key factors in the
    creation of TennCare
  • Governor McWherter established a strong executive
    authority to create and implement TennCare
  • Management
  • Management is key to envisioning and
    operationalizing program components. Management
    conveys the judicious use of means to accomplish
    an end.
  • The management of the creation and implementation
    of TennCare was purposeful and proactive.
    Management of the operational phase of TennCare
    has largely been reactionary and politicized and,
    in many instances, inappropriately abdicated or
    conferred upon the wrong or unprepared people or
    entities.
  • The management of the delivery of health care
    services is complex and specialized. The state
    employed managed care organizations (MCOs) and
    behavioral health organizations (BHOs) to manage
    the utilization, costs and quality of services.
    It was incumbent upon the state to hold these
    vendors accountable for performance.
  • The MCOs that the state contracted with had
    little managed care experience or
    capabilities-The MCOs and BHOs have generally
    been a weak link. When TennCare launched, 12
    MCOs under contract most created after April 1,
    1993. Only one had prior Medicaid experience and
    this was on limited scale.
  • One of our failures was that some managed care
    organizations did come in that were homegrown.
    And those managed care organizations were not
    good managed care organizations. That hurt us,
    and it hurt TennCare, I think (M. Martins)
  • The MCOs and BHOs were not selected through a
    competitive bid process.
  • There really was not a round of bids.There was
    an offer to consider proposals (D. Manning).
  • I think there were a lot of political decisions
    made as to who the MCOs were. They were not
    always good business decisions, but they were
    political decisions as to who would operate the
    MCOs geographically, racially, and in other
    ways. (D. Sundquist)
  • After a bid process, the state signed risk
    contracts in March of 1996 with five for-profit
    BHOs, four of which were based out-of-state. Two
    months later, at the states urging, the five
    consolidated into two for the TennCare Partners
    business. Eventually these two BHOs became arms
    of a single entity.
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