Cooperating for better care.

Robert Whitcomb

Author Archives

15 core metrics for health

 

  • Life expectancy.

  • Well-being—measure of self-reported health status, as a general indicator of elements shaping quality of life.

  • Overweight and obesity.

  • Addictive behavior.

  • Unintended pregnancy.

  • Healthy communities—index of a community’s profile on health-related social and environmental dimensions, eg, education, housing, income, parks, and air and water quality.

  • Preventive services.

  • Care access.

  • Patient safety.

  • Evidence-based care.

  • Care match with patient goals—measure of the extent to which patient and family goals have been ascertained, discussed, and embedded in the care process.

  • Personal spending burden.

  • Population spending burden—measure of aggregate healthcare expenditures for a population relative to that population’s income.

  • Individual engagement—index of personal involvement in health-related behaviors, self-care, caregiving, and social activities that reflect a personal health orientation.

  • Community engagement.


Search tool identifies appropriate physicians

 

MD Insider, a health IT company, is  providing a search tool  for patients to identify appropriate physicians for procedures and check-ups based on experience, cost and outcomes.  MedCity News reports that MD Insider is one of a group of companies “making it easier for patients to understand how much procedures cost and which physicians in their region have the most experience for procedures they need.”


Transforming a Michigan system

 

Hospitals & Health Neworks reports:

“The term transformation’ is batted around a lot in healthcare these days. But leaders at the North Ottawa Community Health System in Grand Haven, Mich., believed their plans to redesign emergency department services could be truly transformational. The 81-bed hospital not only is revamping services in its ED, but also changing how the hospital and other community organizations are collaborating and coordinating services. With these changes, patients can better navigate follow-up care after they are discharged and more effectively manage their chronic diseases.”

 

 

 

 

 


Poor neighborhoods need more or bigger health centers

 

We at Cambridge Management Group see the vast health problems in an impoverished west Baltimore neighborhood  as showing the need for more and/or bigger health co-operatives and Federally Qualified Health Centers in such distressed places.

 


Don’t give up on health co-ops

 

A Commonwealth Fund article says  that despite gloomy forecasts, there are reasons to believe that  of the health co-operatives established by the Affordable Care Act will thrive.

“First, several plans are already heading in the right direction. For example, Maine’s CO-OP has both high enrollment—it enrolled over 80 percent of marketplace enrollees in 2014—and favorable net income. These initial successes allowed the company to expand into New Hampshire and drop its rates slightly for 2015. Others, in spite of initial setbacks, are proving nimble in response to market pressures by cutting premiums, signing small-business customers outside of the marketplaces, and emphasizing new care delivery models such as patient-centered medical homes.

“Second, as start-ups, it shouldn’t be surprising that many will run at a loss initially. Some may only need bridge loans to overcome temporary cash flow problems.”

 


Building health into community design

 

A look at the toolkit of a community health project promoted by the Colorado Health Foundation in partnership with the real estate development industry.

Among the suggestions, says Khanh Nguyen of the foundation: “Provide sidewalks and enticing, pedestrian-oriented streetscape.

  •  “Build infrastructure to support biking.
  •  “Build infrastructure to support biking.
  • “Design visible, enticing stairs to encourage everyday use.
  • “Provide high-quality places for multigenerational play and recreation.
  • “Accommodate a grocery store in the development.
  • “Enhance access to drinking water.
  • “Ban smoking.
  • “Use materials and products that support healthy indoor air quality.
  • “Facilitate social engagement through the built environment.”

Living with piecemeal coverage in Florida

 

A look at how patients and the healthcare system are doing in Florida’s governor and legislator continue to refuse to expand Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, leaving 850,000 Floridians with piecemeal coverage.

 


Crafting patient portals

 

 

Here’s part of  an update in Medical Economics 0n patient portals:

“To get patients to enroll in your portal, advises Michelle Holmes, a principal with ECG Management Consultants in Seattle, “you should use the parts of portals that will result in higher levels of customer service. That includes appointment and refill requests, lab results, health maintenance reminders, visit summaries, tracking and graphing vital signs, and secure messaging.”

“Doug Hires, executive vice president of Santa Rosa Consulting, believes that consumers care more about portal features such as appointment and refill requests than they do about viewing their records. ‘Some vendors have built in the ability to do an online consult that physicians could be paid for,’ he notes. ‘There are some really nice and robust features about access that patients respond more to than seeing their records. If physicians are myopic and just respond to view-download-transmit, they’re not going to get as much excitement out of their patient base.’”

“In a fee-for-service environment, however, the use of portals for communicating with patients, delivering results and refilling prescriptions online can reduce visit volume. Thus it is not surprising that portals tend to interest physicians more in markets where value-based reimbursement is growing faster than they do in mainly fee-for-service markets, Holmes says.”


A farewell visit in the outpatient world

 

Fred N. Pelzman, M.D., tells of a resident growing teary-eyed over a long-time patient farewell visit.

“Out here in the outpatient world — in the ‘real world’ as we like to call it — the relationships may start out smaller {than in a hospital}, but they have great potential to grow. We may be fine-tuning or wholesale changing medicines, learning about barriers to medical literacy, overcoming patients’ fears of undergoing certain tests or procedures, or adapting our preset notions of what is right and best for our patients to a patient’s own set of personal and cultural beliefs. This builds connections, and it only matures with time.”


An ACA payment reform success story

By JAY HANCOCK for Kaiser Health News

 

To understand how the health law is supposed to fix the mediocre, overpriced, absurd medical system, you could read wonky research papers on bundled payments and accountable care organizations.

Or you could look at what’s going on at Baptist Health System in San Antonio.

Under the potent lure of profit, doctors, nurses and managers at Baptist’s five hospitals have joined forces to cut costs for hip and knee replacements, getting patients on their feet sooner and saving taxpayers money.

“Everybody was aligned on this,” said Michael Zucker, Baptist’s chief development officer. “What we’ve seen is just incredible from a cost savings standpoint.”

Baptist made money doing what used to be industry heresy: reducing patients’ use of the medical system.

The hospital group made a deal with Medicare as part of an ambitious array of experiments authorized by the Affordable Care Act.

Medicare let Baptist take responsibility for the whole process of replacing knees and hips, from admission to surgery to rehab and anything else that happened within a month. (Traditionally the system, essentially tied with Methodist Health System as the region’s biggest, managed only what happens within its doors.)

Then Medicare lowered the average amount of what it pays for all that care by 3 percent, giving Baptist a lump sum for each patient getting the procedures. If the system and its orthopedic surgeons reduced costs below that price, they could keep the difference and divvy it up so long as quality didn’t suffer. If costs went up, Baptist was on the hook.

This is a purified form of the health law’s recipe to save healthcare: Get hospitals, doctors and other providers to work together. Cap their costs. Offer incentives to save and penalties for breaking the budget. Repeat.

A preliminary study of the tests at Baptist and elsewhere, overseen by the health law’s Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation, found substantial savings along with shorter patient stays in the hospital and lower use of expensive nursing facilities afterward.

Experts caution that even the focused program at Baptist may be hard to reproduce elsewhere. Successfully applying the model to other diseases and the entire healthcare system is an even longer shot.

Even so, policymakers have bet heavily on such arrangements as the solution to the medical-cost spiral. Medicare aims to make half its reimbursements through such “alternative payment” methods by 2018, officials said this year.

At Baptist, which is owned by Tenet Healthcare, the first step was basic financial education. Doctors are famously clueless about what taxpayers, employers and consumers have to pay for the care they prescribe.

“The public is like, ‘Wow, you guys have no idea what that costs.’ We never really did,” admitted Dr. Sergio Viroslav, a participating orthopedic surgeon.

Baptist surgeons, who select which artificial joint to use, were shocked to find out how much more some devices cost than others. Once they had a stake in the total bill, they became more discriminating shoppers.

Metal hip and knee prices started plummeting “the second the flashlight got lit on the implant makers,” Viroslav said. No manufacturer wanted to be the most expensive.

Surgeons were also surprised to learn that almost half the expense of joint replacement can come from physical therapy, home nurse visits and temporary nursing home stays after the surgery.

Dr. David Fox never paid much notice to the birthday cards that rehab nursing homes sent him. Now that the knee-and-hip surgeon knows what they were making on his referrals, “it’s no damn wonder” they were so nice, he said.

These days, Baptist doctors are likely to order home therapy rather than a nursing home stay unless it’s clearly needed. For the nursing homes they do use, they’re more likely to stay in touch, coordinate care and reduce expensive readmissions, they say.

Simply getting independent surgeons to work with their own hospital system and give it financial control took some doing.

“Hospitals and doctors don’t trust each other,” said Fox. “There’s not an orthopedic surgeon out there that trusts his hospital. You can’t find one. If you do, he’s lying.”

But at Baptist the parties met, sometimes reluctantly, to discuss how to cut costs, help patients recover quickly and apply science-based rules to recuperation.

Is Warfarin the best blood thinner for a particular patient? How much? What kind of compression stockings should be ordered to stop swelling and clots? Is a cane needed? One rubber tip? Or four?

Doctors and nurses had always asked those questions but never in such a disciplined way.

Compensating diverse caregivers to work together on an episode of treatment such as knee replacement is called bundled payment. Baptist has been through two bundled-payment experiments with Medicare.

One began before the health law was passed and focused only on costs inside the hospital, not on what happened later. That saved $284 per patient.

Zucker declined to give detailed figures on the new test. But adding savings incentives for joint-replacement and post-hospital care saved more than $1 million the first year, he said. At the same time, patients recovered more quickly, with fewer complications and resulting readmissions to the hospital, he added.

Such results mean hospitals and doctors “are thinking much more holistically” about care, not just focusing on their own roles, said Rob Lazerow, a practice manager at the Advisory Board Company who consults with hospitals on payment reform.

Baptist keeps part of the savings and shares part with the orthopedic surgeons — a bonus of up to half their surgery fee if they maintain the highest quality measures and their patients do well. The loss to the nursing homes and other post-discharge providers was their gain.

A typical surgery fee is $1,200 per knee, so hitting all the goals could generate as much as $600 more for a doctor.

“If I do 35 patients a month, all of a sudden it’s real money to me,” said Fox — potentially $21,000 a month, although no doctor maxes out the incentive on every patient.

Such “shared savings” with medical providers who were once oblivious to costs are key, said Dr. David Nash, dean of Thomas Jefferson University’s School of Population Health.

“If you change the economic incentives you will change physicians’ practice behavior,” he said.

Knee and hip replacements are relatively easy to manage. They can be scheduled. Doctors have a pretty good idea of what will happen. A more ambitious attempt at reform is trying capped, bundled payments with heart attacks, pneumonia and other conditions that might come with more wild cards.

Even more aspiring is the accountable care organization. Providers in ACO’s receive incentives — from Medicare, commercial insurers or perhaps employers — to keep large populations healthy and reduce the cost of care for every kind of ailment.

That’s a much taller order, and results have been mixed.

But what’s going on at Baptist shows what might be possible, experts said.

Standardizing procedures, avoiding overpriced hardware and coordinating care always did make sense for hip and knee replacements. Now, four decades after such surgery became routine, some hospitals and doctors seem to agree.

“That was really good that we did that,” said Viroslav. “It really helps doctors get better. It kind of forced them to look at their practice.”


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