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Achieving Quality and Affordability

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'Exhaustive research documents that today, in America, there ... EHRs. e-Rx, e-Lab, e-Reminder systems. Promote Redesign of Care Processes. Chronic care model ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Achieving Quality and Affordability


1
Achieving Quality and Affordability
  • William Rollow, MD MPH
  • Deputy Director, Quality Improvement Group
  • Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
  • May 15, 2003

2
1970s View of US Healthcare Issues
  • Excellent care, but
  • Costly
  • Treatment- rather than prevention- oriented
  • Inequitably distributed

3
Todays View of Quality
  • Exhaustive research documents that today, in
    America, there is no guarantee that any
    individual will receive high-quality care for any
    particular health problem.
  • Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and
    Quality, 1998

4
More
  • Americans should be able to count on receiving
    care that meets their needs and is based on the
    best scientific knowledge. Yet there is strong
    evidence that this is frequently not the case.
  • Institute of Medicine, 2001

5
1990s Strategies For Managing Cost
  • Capitation/alternate payment models
  • Price control
  • Utilization management

6
Managed Care Premium/Cost Increases
Figure 1 Premium versus Cost Increases   Source
Salomon Smith Barney Research estimates based on
data from CMS, Milliman USA, AAHP, and KPMG. As
of February 27, 2003.  
Source Salomon Smith Barney Research estimates
based on data from CMS, Milliman USA, AAHP, and
KPMG. As of February 27, 2003.
7
2000s Strategies For Managing Cost
  • Improve effectiveness/efficiency
  • Disease management
  • Quality Improvement
  • Mitigate technology and preference drivers
  • Evidence-based coverage decisions and payment
    determinations
  • Shared cost responsibility
  • Shared decision-making

8
Disease Management Strategies
  • Identify patients with chronic illness
  • Make disease-specific information available to
    the patient
  • Interactively support patients in self-management
  • Prompt patients to obtain services based on a
    regular schedule or as needed in relation to
    outcomes
  • Prompt physicians to implement a medical regimen
    which is consistent with best practice

9
Approaches to Disease Management
  • Vendor-based
  • Physician-based
  • Mixed

10
Typical Vendor-Based Approach
  • Analysis of medical and pharmacy claims, often
    supplemented with information requested from a
    physician office or from the patient, to identify
    and risk-stratify patients with chronic illness
  • Provision of newsletters, brochures, etc via
    regular mail or email with disease information
  • Provision of reminders regarding services needed
    to a physician office or to the patient, via
    written or telephonic communication
  • Telephonic, or sometimes internet-based,
    interaction with a patient on how to better
    self-manage diet, exercise, meds, etc
  • Written or telephonic communication with a
    physician regarding medical regimen when there
    are opportunities for improvement

11
Disadvantages
  • Cost reduction
  • Still a research question
  • Selected diseases
  • Savings largely offset by vendor cost
  • One-time impact on trend no long term creation
    of ongoing efficiencies
  • Impact on physician office
  • Additional work without reward
  • Multiple vendors, each with a different approach
  • Does not improve care process
  • Impact on patients
  • Generally look to the physician for direction
  • Multiple sources of information conflicting
    vendor messages and external sources

12
Physician-Based Approach
  • The office builds its own database (through
    registry or EHR) for identification and
    management of patients
  • The database offers decision support (reminders,
    evidence-based options, etc) available to the
    practitioner during the office visit and which
    also generates reminders which are pushed out via
    regular or email
  • Interactive support is provided by a member of
    the physician office staff, by referral to
    specialists or community resources, or online
  • Performance is assessed systematically by reports
    generated by the database for use in improvement
    and external reporting

13
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14
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15
Mixed Approach
  • Recruit as many physicians as possible to
    implement systems and redesign care process to
    improve quality/efficiency and provide disease
    management
  • Seek to improve physician office care by
    providing feedback to the physician on how well
    care corresponds to guidelines, and offering
    assistance in improvement
  • Supplement physician office-based disease
    management as needed with vendor-based activity
  • Reduce as much as possible the complexity of
    multiple vendors and sources of information
  • Engage patients in disease management through
    invitation by the physician office and route
    communications to the patient as much as possible
    through the physician office
  • Reimburse physicians for participation in such
    programs

16
Disease Management Demonstration Projects
  • BIPA determine impact of dm/drugs vendor and
    provider/etc -based in 3 geographic areas
  • Case Management impact in N Mexico
  • Coordinated care 15 sites, provider- and
    vendor- based
  • PGP 6 physician groups will be selected

17
Quality Improvement
  • Improve process
  • Better clinical outcomes
  • Better patient experience
  • Efficiency through elimination of non-value-added
    process and rework

18
Medicares Quality Improvement Organizations
  • Previously known as the Peer Review Organizations
    (PROs)
  • Mission to improve quality of care for Medicare
    beneficiaries
  • 1 billion budget for current 3-year contract
  • 53 QIOs 1 in each state
  • Confidentiality of information assured by statute

19
QIO Program 7th SOW
  • Clinical quality improvement/information
    promotion
  • Nursing homes publicly reported measures
  • Home health publicly reported measures
  • Hospitals measures in voluntary public
    reporting pilot
  • Physician offices
  • Disparities
  • Beneficiary protection
  • Complaints
  • Hospital payment monitoring
  • Appeals/EMTALA

20
NHQI Quality Measures
21
HHQI Publicly Reported Measures
  • Acute Care Hospitalization
  • Improvement in Ambulation/Locomotion
  • Improvement in Bathing
  • Improvement in Management of Oral Medications
  • Improvement in Transferring
  • Improvement in Upper Body Dressing
  • Improvement in Toileting
  • Improvement in Pain Interfering with Activity
  • Stabilization in bathing
  • Improvement in Confusion Frequency
  • Any Emergent Care Provided

22
Improving Care in Hospitals 7th SOW MI Measures
23
HEDIS Quality CompassBeta Blocker/MI Rate
Commercial Plans
24
Improving Care in Hospitals7th SOW CHF Measures
25
Improving Care in Hospitals 7th SOW Pneumonia
Measures
26
Improving Care in Physician Offices 7th SOW
Preventive Measures
27
HEDIS Quality CompassMammography Rate
Commercial Plans
28
Improving Care in Physician Offices 7th SOW
Diabetes Measures
29
HEDIS Quality CompassDiabetic Eye Exam Rate -
Commercial Plans
30
HEDIS Quality CompassHbA1c Exam Rate -
Commercial Plans
31
How Successful Has QI Been?
  • Impact on quality
  • Menu of measures is limited and not
    patient-focused
  • At current rate of improvement, will be 2020
    before we reach 95 performance level for QIO
    measures
  • Most providers/practitioners only work on a
    limited number of measures/topics
  • Most practitioners are skeptical/resistant
  • Impact on cost

32
What Has Limited the Impact of QI?
  • On quality
  • Process changes have been largely within existing
    systems
  • Provider/practitioner buy-in has been limited
  • On cost
  • Effect overwhelmed by other cost drivers new
    technology, patient demand, practitioner
    preferences, supply

33
How Can Improvement Accelerate and Widen?
  • Promote adoption of transformative systems and
    care model, such as eRx, eLab, eCare reminders,
    EHR, PHR, health information exchange
  • Increase motivation of providers and
    practitioners to improve and adopt such systems
    and care models

34
Rationale E-Prescribing
  • Medication errors are common, affecting as many
    as 9 of prescriptions. E-prescribing systems
    have the potential to improve quality and safety
    by
  • Eliminating legibility problems
  • Reducing the occurrence of drug interactions,
    dosage errors, and other adverse effects by
    guiding prescribing based on patient age, weight,
    allergies, lab results, diagnoses and concurrent
    medications

35
Rationale E-Laboratory Mgmt
  • Lab results-related errors are common. E-lab
    results management systems have the potential to
    improve quality and safety by
  • Making a practitioner aware if lab test results
    which have been received have not been reviewed
  • Reducing unnecessary test ordering by giving a
    practitioner easier access to previous lab test
    results

36
Rationale E-Care Reminders
  • Preventive services, or services recommended for
    chronic conditions, are underutilized. E-care
    reminder systems have the potential to improve
    quality and safety by
  • Prompting a practitioner to remind a patient to
    make an office visit
  • Prompting a practitioner to remind a patient to
    obtain needed lab tests or other services
  • Identifying patients in need of special
    monitoring or services

37
How Can Improvement Accelerate and Widen?
  • Promote adoption of transformative systems and
    care model eRx, eLab, eCare reminders, EHR,
    PHR, health information exchange
  • Promote IT standards
  • Promote systems availability, affordability,
    functionality
  • Support redesign of care processes
  • Increase motivation of providers/practitioners to
    improve and adopt such systems and care models

38
Promote IT Standards
  • Need IT standards to assure that systems can
    exchange information and that newer systems can
    extract information from those they replace
  • Consolidated Health Informatics group (HHS, VA,
    DOD) is adopting standards for federal agencies
    and recommending their use in private sector
  • First set of standards has been adopted in the
    areas of lab test results, imaging,
    prescriptions, devices, and data transmission

39
Promote Systems Availability
  • Need availability of high quality, affordable
    systems
  • EHRs
  • e-Rx, e-Lab, e-Reminder systems

40
Promote Redesign of Care Processes
  • Chronic care model
  • Idealized design project

41
Increase Motivation of Providers/Practitioners
  • Confidential results reporting electronic data
  • Public reporting electronic data
  • CME
  • Malpractice premium reduction
  • Financial incentives - payor and patient
  • Billing/participation requirements burden
    reduction
  • QI projects inconsistency reduction

42
Opportunities for Improvement Payors/MCOs and
QIOs
  • Providers/practitioners want consistency in
    interventions
  • Performance measures should be consistent
    across payors and ideally should come from
    electronically available information generated by
    the provider/practitioner
  • Guidelines/tools/improvement assistance should be
    consistent across payors

43
Arizona Managed Care Quality Enhancement Program
  • 19 MCOs, the QIO, practice groups
  • Diabetes collaborative
  • Consistent measures at practice level
  • Aiming at unified data collection
  • Common interventions
  • Flowsheet
  • Member information

44
Doctors Office Quality (DOQ) Project
  • Topics Preventive care, DM, HTN, CAD, CHF,
    Osteoarthritis, Depression
  • Measures
  • Clinical developed with expert panel
  • Patient experience
  • Process improvements
  • Care reminders
  • Other

45
Achieving Quality and Affordability
  • Some cost is driven by rework (complications,
    unnecessary exacerbations) and inefficiency
  • Improve effectiveness/efficiency of care through
    QI/disease management
  • Enhance patient self-management
  • Get provider participation by public reporting
    and financial incentives (can be linked)

46
Achieving Quality and Affordability
  • Some cost is driven by supply, technology, and
    physician preference
  • Evidence based coverage decisions and payment
    rules
  • Enrollee cost-sharing and information which
    supports use of benefits
  • Shared decision-making
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