Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

17
Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force

description

and Medicaid computer systems grew accordingly. Assigning provider ID numbers Checking claims against various edits. E.g., : Person eligible at time of service? Provider eligible at time of service? Does third-party coverage exist for service? Reporting aggregate data to HCFA/CMS on services and expenditures by eligibility group, and service Little to no tracking of quality: At an individual level Against clinical guidelines Based on diagnoses On a case-mix adjusted basis to evaluate providers

Transcript of Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

Page 1: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

QualityDecember 7, 2005

Charles Milligan, JD, MPH

Adequate Health Care Task Force

Page 2: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-2-

Very little attention is paid to health care quality “management” in pure fee-for-service . . . Medicaid fee-for-service (FFS) was built on

other metrics: Eligibility determination processing time Number of enrolled providers Speed of processing claims Units of various services provided to a

population

Page 3: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-3-

. . . and Medicaid computer systems grew accordingly. Assigning provider ID numbers Checking claims against various edits. E.g., :

Person eligible at time of service? Provider eligible at time of service? Does third-party coverage exist for service?

Reporting aggregate data to HCFA/CMS on services and expenditures by eligibility group, and service

Little to no tracking of quality: At an individual level Against clinical guidelines Based on diagnoses On a case-mix adjusted basis to evaluate providers

Page 4: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-4-

The introduction of managed care in Medicaid brought commercial tools to measure quality and population health HEDIS®

“Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set”

CAHPS®

“Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems”

NCQA Accreditation “National Committee for Quality Assurance”

Page 5: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-5-

Many states with managed care rely on HEDIS® measures . . . Performance measures Rigorous development and auditing process Used by commercial, Medicare, and

Medicaid programs Nationally recognized and generally

accepted

Page 6: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-6-

. . . and these are commonly-used HEDIS® measures. Childhood immunization rates Cervical cancer screening rates Breast cancer screening rates Follow-up care post-hospitalization

Page 7: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-7-

Other standardized national measures include CAHPS®… This is a survey of member satisfaction Evaluates members’ experience with their

managed care organization (MCO) Used by commercial, Medicare, and

Medicaid programs

Page 8: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-8-

…and NCQA Accreditation Evaluates MCO operations on a number of

determinants of quality: Structural measures Process measures Outcomes measures

Used by commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid programs

Page 9: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-9-

States encourage performance improvement through financial incentives . . .

Financial bonuses are paid to MCOs that perform above target levels on a set of standard measures

Also called “Pay for Performance”

Page 10: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-10-

. . . and non-financial incentives. Public reporting (“Report Cards”)

Preference for auto-assigned enrollees (who are usually lower cost enrollees)

Page 11: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-11-

MCO performances against care standards may be measured . . .

Source: The State of Health Care Quality 2005, NCQA

Page 12: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-12-

. . . and improved performance is known to save lives . . .

Source: The State of Health Care Quality, 2005, NCQA

Page 13: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-13-

. . . and reduce unnecessary utilization, therefore saving health care costs.

Source: The State of Health Care Quality, 2005, NCQA

Page 14: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-14-

Public reporting makes a difference

Source: The State of Health Care Quality 2005, NCQA

Page 15: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-15-

Other “aggregated” quality initiatives include disease management . . .

Disease management models: Prevalent diseases (e.g. asthma, diabetes)

• Many beneficiaries affected• Yet effective DM involves engaging many

“generalist” primary care providers Less prevalent diseases (e.g. AIDS/HIV)

• Fewer beneficiaries affected• Yet effective DM often involves engaging a limited

number of “specialty” PCPs

Page 16: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

-16-

. . . and “primary care case management” models. In “first generation” PCCM, little done in

quality interventions by Medicaid agencies Creation of medical home perceived as a good

in itself In “second generation” PCCM, states

assume the role of an “MCO” Asthma and diabetes measures Incentives

Page 17: Quality December 7, 2005 Charles Milligan, JD, MPH Adequate Health Care Task Force.

Questions

Charles MilliganExecutive Director, UMBC/CHPDM

[email protected]

www.chpdm.org