Transcript PPT
Federal Initiatives to Support
State/Community-Based Approaches
to Coordinated Care
ASA-N3C-NYAM Symposium
April 27, 2011
Julianne R. Howell, Ph.D.
Senior Advisor
State HIE Programs
Overview
Alignment through implementation of the Affordable Care Act
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Strategic Framework on Multiple Chronic Conditions
National Quality Strategy
Federal HIT Strategic Plan
Partnership for Patients
Themes recurring across multiple initiatives:
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Importance of care coordination
Focus on care transitions
Role of community-based services
Focus on the patient and family caregivers
Triple Aim: Better care, better health, lower cost
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Multiple Chronic Conditions: A Strategic
Framework December 2010
Source
HHS Interagency Workgroup with input from public and stakeholders
Overarching Goals:
#1 Foster health care and public health system changes to improve
the health of individuals with multiple chronic conditions.
#2 Maximize the use of proven self-care management and other
services by individuals with multiple chronic conditions.
#3 Provide better tools and information to health care, public health,
and social services workers who deliver care to individuals with
multiple chronic conditions.
#4 Facilitate research to fill knowledge gaps about, and interventions
and systems to benefit, individuals with multiple chronic conditions.
Multiple Chronic Conditions: A Strategic Framework
http://www.hhs.gov/ash/initiatives/mcc/mcc_framework.pdf
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National Quality Strategy March 2011
Aims
Better Care: Improve quality, by making health care more patientcentered, reliable, accessible, and safe
Healthy People and Communities: Improve health of population
Affordable Care: Reduce cost of quality health care
Six Priorities and Goals to help focus public and private efforts:
Safer Care: eliminate preventable health care-acquired conditions
Effective Care Coordination
Person- and Family-Centered Care
Prevention and Treatment of Leading Causes of Mortality: prevent
and reduce harm caused by cardiovascular disease
Support Better Health in Communities
Make Care More Affordable
National Quality Strategy
http://www.healthcare.gov/center/reports/quality03212011a.html#append
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Partnership for Patients April 2011
Public-Private Partnership to make care safer, potentially save
up to $50 billion
Two Goals of the Partnership:
Keep hospital patients from getting injured or sicker: decrease
preventable hospital-acquired conditions 40% by 2013 cf. 2010
– Up to $500M from CMS Innovation Center
Help patients heal without complication: decrease preventable
complications during transition from one care setting to another so
that hospital readmissions will be reduced 20% by 2013 cf. 2010
– Up to $500M available through Community-Based Care Transitions
Program authorized by Section 3026 of ACA
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Illustrative Federal Programs to
Support State/Community Initiatives
Multi-Payer Advanced Primary Care Practice (MAPCP)
Demonstration
HITECH
– Beacon Communities
– State HIE Challenge Grants
Partnership for Patients
– Community-Based Care Transitions Program ACA Section 3026
State Demonstrations to Integrate Care for Dual Eligible
Individuals
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MAPCP Demonstration Overview
3-year demonstration open to states
Medicare will join Medicaid and private insurers in state
health reform initiatives aimed at improving delivery of
primary care
A multi-payer effort
– Aligns economic incentives
– Reduces administrative burdens
– Provides resources that can be shared across practices
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MAPCP Goals
Goals include…
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Improve safety, timeliness, effectiveness, and efficiency
Reduce unjustified variation in utilization and expenditure
Increase patient participation in decision making
Increase access to evidence-based care in underserved areas
Contribute to ‘bending the curve’ in health expenditures
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Application Requirements
Applicant had to be a State agency
Program operational prior to Medicare participation
Multi-payer participation
– Medicaid FFS & managed care
– Medicare Advantage
– “Significant” private payer participation
Specifications to be an Advanced Primary Care Practice
(APCP)
Evidence of physician support & participation
Community-based support
Coordination with state wellness/disease prevention efforts
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Program Attributes
8 States: ME, VT, RI, NY, PA, NC, MI, MN
– Some projects state-wide; others limited in geographic scope or #
of practices
– APCP requirements vary by state
– Monthly payment to the practice for beneficiaries “assigned” using
a state-specific algorithm
– Some projects involve community health teams
– Some projects include additional payment to state for
administrative/evaluation services
Some states will launch July 2011; some October 2011
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Eligible Practices
Geographic range/size of project determined by state
– Regional vs. state-wide
– Planned expansion
Definition of APCP
– Determined by state
– NCQA-PCMH commonly used (often supplemented by additional
requirements)
FQHCs participating in some states
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Eligible Beneficiaries
Reside in the state
– Some states have county restrictions
– Excludes beneficiaries who cross state lines (operational
limitations/impacts)
Have Medicare A & B
Covered under traditional FFS Medicare
– Not enrolled in MA or other Medicare health plan
– No restrictions on other categories such as disabled, ESRD,
hospice, etc.
Medicare must be primary payer
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Payment Rates and Policy
Monthly payments to APCP generally < $10 per
beneficiary per month (pbpm)
– Exception: Minnesota, which uses clinically risk-adjusted tiers
(range: $0 - $60.81 pbpm; average: $14.43 pbpm estimated
based on historic ACGs)
Variables determining APCP payment rate:
– Age of beneficiary
– NCQA-PCMH certification status of practice
– Use of independent community teams vs. expecting practice to
provide/contract for community-based care coordination services
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HITECH Act (Health Information
Technology for Economic and Clinical Health)
Section of the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act
(ARRA) signed into law in February 2009
Key components of the legislation
– Codifies the Office of the National Coordinator for HIT
– Creates Federal Advisory Committees on HIT Policy & Standards
– Creates Medicare & Medicaid “Meaningful Use” (MU) incentives for
physicians and hospitals to adopt EHRs
– Creates new HIT and HIE (Health Information Exchange) Programs
State HIE Planning and Implementation grants
Regional Extension Center (RECs) grants
Workforce Training grants
New technology research & development grants
– Increases privacy protections
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HITECH Programs Address Barriers to
Adoption, Meaningful Use, Exchange
Intervention
Barriers
Funds Allocated
Cost of EHR Adoption
MU Incentives
$27.3 B*
Meaningful Use difficult to
achieve for small providers
REC and HITRC
$643M
$50M
Barriers to health information
exchange
HIE Program
Standards & Interoperability
$548M
$64.3M
Lack of trained workforce
Workforce
$118M
Lack of trust, policy framework
Privacy and Security
Need for “real world” examples
of HIT contribution to Health
Care Transformation
Beacon Communities
SHARP
*$27.3 B is high scenario
Addressed across
all Programs
$250M
$60M
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HITECH Programs and Goals: Where Are
We Today?
Regional Extension Centers
58,810 Enrolled Providers
Adoption of EHRs
Workforce Training
84 Community College Partners
Curriculum Available Summer 2011
Medicare & Medicaid incentives
Meaningful Use of
EHRs
21,000 Total providers
State HIE Grants
46 Approved States
10 Challenge Grants
Beacon Communities
Standards &
Interoperability
framework
Security &
Privacy
framework
• Improved individual and
population health
outcomes
• Increased transparency
and efficiency
• Improved ability to
study and improve care
delivery
Exchange of health
information
17 Communities
Research to enhance HIT
4 Awardees
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Key Objectives
Align HITECH programs and initiatives to accomplish
– Adoption of EHRs
– Meaningful Use of EHRs
– Exchange of information
Leverage HITECH programs to have a measurable
impact on health care, health, cost
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Improve transitions
Reduce readmissions
Reduce medication errors
Achieve better chronic care outcomes
Support health care transformation in each state
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Beacon Communities Program
17 communities selected to demonstrate feasibility and
health care delivery benefits of widespread HIT adoption
and exchange of health information.
Core Aims:
– Build and strengthen community/regional health IT foundation to
achieve long-term improvements in care quality, health
outcomes, and cost efficiencies;
– Demonstrate that health IT-enabled interventions and community
collaborations can achieve concrete cost/quality performance
improvements;
– Test innovations to improve health and health care
14 of 17 include a care transitions component
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Beacon Communities
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Beacon Communities’ Transitions
Aims
To reduce hospital utilization, especially that arising from
errors in transitions
To use HIT to improve care for individuals with high cost / high
risk chronic conditions (e.g., DM, CVD, etc.)
To connect local hospital associations with primary and
chronic care settings
To engineer electronic continuity and care plans, and to
incorporate them into EHRs and HIEs
To build on initial successes by ongoing learning with other
Beacon Communities and by seeking Community-Based Care
Transitions funding
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Beacon Communities Transitions
Interventions
Three tiers of IT focus
– Many Communities are using HIT systems to notify PCPs of
hospital and/or ER use
– Some are using HIT to provide hospital discharge information
(e.g., medications, lab values) to next providers (e.g., nursing
homes, FQHCs, PCPs)
– A few are using HIT to facilitate making appointments for quick
follow-up (e.g., PCPs to specialists)
IT tools are coupled with case management (e.g., selfmanagement coaching, medication reconciliation, care
coordination)
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State HIE Challenge Grants
Program Goal: provide additional funding to recipients
of State HIE Cooperative Agreements to spearhead
development of technology and approaches focused on
5 “Challenge Themes”:
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Achieving health goals through health information exchange
Improving long-term and post-acute care transitions
Encouraging consumer-mediated information exchange
Enabling enhanced query for patient care
Fostering distributed population-level analytics
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Challenge Theme 2: Improving Long-Term
and Post-Acute Care Transitions
Requirements
– Identify types of long-term and post-acute care providers to be
included
– Describe technology and policy to achieve timely electronic
exchange of clinical summaries, medication lists, advance
directives and other information most relevant to transitions
– Develop and monitor relevant quality measures
– Identify barriers to timely electronic exchange and how they will
be addressed
Grantees: Colorado, Maryland, Massachusetts, Oklahoma
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Partnership for Patients: CommunityBased Care Transitions Program
5 years beginning April 12, 2011; rolling application
process
Program Goals:
– Improve the quality of care transitions
– Reduce readmissions for high-risk Medicare beneficiaries
– Document measureable savings to the Medicare program by
reducing unnecessary readmissions
Creates source of funding for effectively managing
transitions from acute to community-based settings
Eligible entities paid on per-discharge basis for
Medicare benes at high risk of readmission, including
those with multiple chronic conditions, depression, or
cognitive impairment.
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Community-Based Care Transitions
Program: Selection Criteria
Preference given to Administration on Aging grantees that
– Provide care transition interventions in conjunction with multiple
hospitals and practitioners
– Provide services to medically-underserved populations, small
communities, and rural areas
Applicants must
– Identify root causes of readmissions and define target population and
strategies for identifying high-risk patients
– Specify transition interventions, including improving provider
communications and patient activation
– Indicate how community and social supports and resources will be
incorporated to enhance beneficiary post-hospitalization
management outcomes
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State Demonstrations to Integrate Care
for Dual Eligible Individuals
Partnership between Federal Office of Integrated Care and
the Innovation Center
– Testing delivery system and payment reform that improves the
quality, coordination, and cost-effectiveness of care for dual
eligible individuals.
On April 14, 2011, 15 states awarded contracts for up to
$1million to design new models for serving dual eligibles:
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West: California, Colorado, Oregon, Washington
Midwest: Oklahoma, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin
South: North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
East : Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, Vermont
Models will be person-centered and fully coordinate primary,
acute, behavioral and long-term supports and services.
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Further Information
Websites:
– General http://www.healthcare.gov/
– Innovation Center http://innovations.cms.gov/
– Office of the National Coordinator for HIT
http://healthit.hhs.gov/
For Questions:
[email protected]
202-205-8124
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