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ValueBased Insurance Design

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Source: Kaiser Family Foundation and Health Research and Education Trust ... All UM employees & dependants with diabetes will receive of co-pay reductions for: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ValueBased Insurance Design


1
  • Value-Based Insurance Design
  • A Clinically Sensitive Approach to Preserve
    Quality of Care and Contain Cost

2
Moderation in Health Care Cost Growth Acknowledge
the Cost / Quality Divide
  • Recent cost growth less than 10 in most sectors
  • Price increases have moderated, especially in
    pharmaceuticals
  • Still substantially higher than inflation
  • Number and level of insurance decreasing
  • Patient contributions continues to grow

3
Moderation in Health Care Cost Growth Acknowledge
the Cost / Quality Divide
  • Substantial underutilization of essential medical
    services
  • Impact on health outcomes must be measured before
    we can determine whether moderation of cost
    growth is considered a good thing
  • Motivation for health insurance must be revisited

4
Moderation in Health Care Cost Growth Acknowledge
the Cost / Quality Divide
  • The tradeoffs between access to medical
    innovation and the how to pay for it is a complex
    and extremely political issue

5
Dealing with the Health Care Cost Crisis
Interventions to Control Costs
  • Denial
  • Prior authorization
  • 1-800-NO-WAY
  • Drive to Canada
  • Disease Management

6
Benefit Design TrendsDisease Management
  • Manage the most costly patients
  • Improves outcomes
  • May reduce costs - probably not
  • Lack of reduction in copays for recommended
    services do not reflect investment in disease
    management

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8
Dealing with the Health Care Cost Crisis
Interventions to Control Costs
  • Denial
  • Prior authorization
  • 1-800-NO-WAY
  • Drive to Canada
  • Disease Management
  • Cost Sharing

9
Benefit Design Trends Cost Sharing Tiered
Formularies
  • Copay set on drug price, not value
  • Generic drugs - lowest copay
  • Preferred brand - middle
  • Non-preferred brand - highest

10
Different Cost-Sharing Formulas for Prescription
Drugs, 2000-2005
Average Co-Pay in 2005 Tier 1 10 Tier 2 22 Tier
3 35 Tier 4 74
Source Kaiser Family Foundation and Health
Research and Education Trust
11
Impact of Increased Cost Sharing on Utilization
  • A growing body of evidence demonstrates that cost
    shifting leads to decreases in essential and
    non-essential care

12
Compliance with Statin Therapy Stratified by Mean
Prescription Copayment
0 to lt10
10 to lt20
gt20
Ellis JJ. J Gen Intern Med 200419639-646.
13
Benefit Design Trends Cost Sharing Consumer
Driven Health Plans
  • Centerpiece of competitive market based reform
    proposals
  • Charge consumers high out-of-pocket fees
  • Will likely reduce costs
  • No evidence whether CDHPs reduce cost growth
  • Likely will lead to worse clinical outcomes
  • Assumption that consumer is informed

14
Getting Services to People Who Need Them Should
the Patient Decide?
  • If the patient is not the appropriate decision
    maker, the system should provide guidance and
    incentives to promote better decisions

15
Getting Services to People Who Need Them Who
Gets the Essential Care?
  • Everybody
  • Those who demand it
  • Those who can afford it
  • Those who need it

16
Number Needed to Treat to Prevent a Cardiac Event
with Statins, by Prevention Category
NNT to prevent CV event
Ellis JJ. J Gen Intern Med 200419639-646.
17
No Difference in Statin Compliance Stratified by
Prevention Category
Secondary prevention cohort
Primary prevention cohort
Ellis JJ. J Gen Intern Med 200419639-646.
18
Impact of Increased Cost Sharing on Utilization
  • A strategy to offset the undesirable decrease use
    of essential services due to cost shifting is
    warranted

19
From One Size Fits All Cost Sharing to
Clinically Sensitive Benefit Design
  • Cost sharing set on value, not price
  • Highly valued services - lowest copay
  • Effective yet expensive - middle
  • Unproven or marginal benefit - highest

Fendrick, Chernew. Am J Managed Care. 20061.
20
Value Based Insurance Design Implementation
  • Alter cost sharing for high valued services
  • All clinical indications
  • Target specific patient groups
  • Only certain clinical indications receive co-pay
    relief

21
Value Based Insurance Design Clinical Examples
  • Immunizations
  • Diabetes Mellitus

22
Value Based Insurance Design (VBID)Examples
Predictive Modeling
  • Diabetes Mellitus
  • Medicare first-dollar coverage (co-pays waived)
    of ACE inhibitors resulted in nearly one million
    life years gained and a net savings of 7.4
    billion over the cohort lifetime

Rosen AB, et al. Ann Intern Med. 200514389.
23
Value Based Insurance Design (VBID)Examples
Predictive Modeling
  • Lipid Lowering Agents
  • Eliminating co-pays for statin users at medium or
    high risk of CHD averted 110,000 hospitalizations
    or ER visits and saved 1 billion annually

Goldman DG, et al. Am J Manag Care. 20061221.
24
Implementing Value Based Insurance Design Other
Clinical Examples
  • Asthma
  • lower co-pay as disease severity increases
  • Cancer screening
  • lower co-pay if family history, tumor markers
    etc.
  • CHF, etc.

25
VBID for Diabetes MellitusThe Asheville Project
  • Intensive pharmacist management
  • Focus on coached self-management
  • Co-pays waived for participation
  • Five year outcomes included
  • Marked increases in medication adherence
  • Diabetes performance measures 2-3x higher
  • Overall costs 58 below expected trend
  • Average annual sick leave halved

Cranor et al. J Am Pharm Assoc, 2003.
26
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27
University of Michigan Intervention Needs
Assessment
  • 2,500 UM employees have diabetes mellitus
  • Numerous quality enhancement interventions in
    place
  • Guidelines, disease management, etc.
  • Substantial medication underutilization
  • Utilization and adherence of 40-60

28
University of Michigan Intervention Overview
  • All UM employees dependants with diabetes will
    receive of co-pay reductions for
  • ACE Inhibitors and ARBs
  • Other antihypertensives
  • Statins
  • Glycemic agents
  • Antidepressants

29
University of Michigan Intervention Outcome
Measures
  • Adherence
  • Based on pharmacy claims (MPR)
  • Outcomes
  • Medication spending
  • Total health care spending
  • Absenteeism

30
Implementing VBIDWhere to Start?
  • Identify partners and data
  • Care management and claims (ActiveHealth
    Management)
  • Pharmacy Benefit Manager
  • Built system to enable customized formulary
  • Develop custom formulary
  • Determine level of clinical targeting
  • Set co-pay reductions

31
Value Based Insurance Design Essential Partners
  • Information technology
  • Clinical effectiveness research
  • Disease management
  • Pay for Performance programs

32
Value Based Insurance Design Preserve Quality
and Contain Cost
  • Will increase value of medical expenditures
  • Not all care is subsidized, only valued care
  • Likely to slow rate of cost growth
  • Targeting will improve return on investment
  • Copay reductions can be funded by
  • Clinical events prevented downstream
  • Copay increases on non-essential or unproven
    services

33
Value Based Insurance Design Preserve Quality
and Contain Cost
  • Access to services should be driven by
    differences in benefit, risk of adverse events,
    and (but not exclusively) acquisition cost
  • Payers need to actively experiment with benefit
    designs to simultaneously maintain enrollee
    satisfaction and stem rising costs
  • VBID preserves use of valued services in
    atmosphere of increased cost shifting

34
Center for Value Based Insurance Design Preserve
Quality and Contain Cost
  • Engages in the development, evaluation and
    promotion of insurance products that encourage
    the efficient expenditures of health care dollars
    and optimize the benefits of care
  • www.vbidcenter.org

Fendrick and Chernew. Am J Managed Care.
2006118
35
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