The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project 2013 Annual Summit Stewardship of our...
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Transcript of The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project 2013 Annual Summit Stewardship of our...
The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project
2013 Annual SummitStewardship of our Health Care Resources
Kevin Taylor MD, MS
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Why stewardship? Why now?• Health care expenditures are increasing at
unsustainable rates• Commonwealth Fund National Scorecard on U.S. Health System Performance, 2011
• There is waste in the health care system—some say as much as 30%
Jack Wennberg, Dartmouth Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences.
• One third of all physicians acquiesce to patient requests for tests and procedures—even when they know they are not necessary
Campbell EG, et al. Professionalism in medicine: results of a national survey of physicians. Ann Intern Med. 2007; 147(11):795-802
• Physician decisions account for 80% of all health care expenditures
Crosson FJ. Change the microenvironment. Modern Healthcare and The Commonwealth Fund [Internet]. 2009; Apr 27
Cost of Health Care
CMS, Office of the Actuary, National Health Statistics Group
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Data on regional performanceMarked variations highlight opportunities to improve
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Everett, WASacramento, CALa Crosse, WICedar Rapids, IATemple, TX
Portland, MESayre, PARichmond, VAAsheville, NCTallahassee, FL
Lighter colors = lower spending
Partici-pants
Qualifying Regions
All Others
Medicare Spending
$6,773 $7,098 $8,562
Hospital Days
1.52 1.56 1.90
Spending for Imaging(last 2 yrs)
$633 $662 $843
Hospital Quality Score
95% 95% 93%
Benchmarks of efficiencyPotential savings from achieving high performance
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Everett, WASacramento, CALa Crosse, WICedar Rapids, IATemple, TX
Portland, MESayre, PARichmond, VAAsheville, NCTallahassee, FL
Category of Care
Potential Savings
Medicare spending
16%
Hospital days 17%
Specialist visits 36%
Lighter colors = lower spending
Health Policy Recommendations for transforming health care
• More process standardization with customization for selected patients
• Increased emphasis on keeping patients healthy rather than treating acute exacerbations of chronic illness
• A move toward team-based care delivery and away from individual practitioners
• Greater price and quality transparency
• More Cost (or value) consciousness in medical decisions
• Approximately 10% of the population consumes 64% of health care expenditures
• >75% of high cost beneficiaries had one or more chronic condition
• 22% ($570 B)of health care expenditures is related to potentially avoidable complications (ACS Hospitalizations, Re-admits, PCS ED visits)
E. Emmanuel JAMA Jan 4th 2012JAMA July 24/31 2013
Excess Cost Domain Estimates
IOM. The Healthcare Imperative, 2010.
Overriding Issues in Health Care
•Issue of the decade starting in 2000: quality of care and patient safety
•Issue of the decade starting in 2010: decreasing the cost of care
• Recent initiatives have called on physicians to reduce waste and exercise wise stewardship of resources.▫ ABIM Foundation. Choosing wisely▫ American College of Physicians.
High value care▫ AMA Council on Ethical and
Judicial Affairs. Physician stewardship of health care resources
▫ Joint Commission & AMA. Two leading health care quality organizations hold national summit to build consensus around ways to minimize overuse of five treatments.
Are We Willing (and Able) to Address the Problem?
Views of US Physicians about controlling health care costs. •Who bears major responsibility to control
health care costs?▫Lawyers 60%▫Insurance Companies 59%▫Patients 52%▫Physicians 36%▫Physician professional societies 27%▫Employers 19%
▫2556 Physicians surveyed
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Tilburt JC, et al. JAMA, July 24/31,2013.
Attention to and role in addressing health care cost
• I am aware of the costs of the tests/treatments I recommend—76% Agree
• Physicians should adhere to clinical guidelines that discourage the use of interventions with small proven advantage over standard interventions but cost much more—79% Agree
• Trying to contain costs is the responsibility of every physician—85% Agree
• Doctors need to take a more prominent role in limiting use of unnecessary tests and procedures —89% Agree
• I should sometimes deny beneficial but costly services to certain patients because resources should go to other patients that need them more —15% Agree
• I should be solely devoted to my individual patients’ best interest, even if that is expensive —78% Agree
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Tilburt JC, et al. JAMA, July 24/31,2013.
Cost-Consciousness Patient Advocacy
It is unfair to ask physicians to be cost-conscious and still keep the welfare of the patient in their minds
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Tilburt JC, et al. JAMA, July 24/31,2013.
42% Agree
58% Disagre
e
Medicine's Ethical Responsibility for Health Care Reform — The Top Five List
“A Top 5 list has the advantage that if we restrict ourselves to the most egregious causes of waste, we can demonstrate to a skeptical public that we are genuinely protecting patients’ interests and not simply ‘rationing’ health care, regardless of the benefit, for cost-cutting purposes.”
Howard Brody, MD, PhDNEJM Jan 28, 2010
Conserving resources through rational care does not mean rationing!
•Rationing: decisions are made about the allocation of scarce medical resources and who receives them, leading to underuse of potentially appropriate care
•Rational care: assuring that care is clinically effective, thus avoiding overuse or misuse of care that is inappropriate
The “Top 5 Lists”
• Funded by an ABIM Foundation grant, the National Physicians Alliance conceived and piloted the concept through its Good Stewardship Working Group
• Developed lists of top five activities in family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics where the quality of care could be improved
• Published in Archives of Internal Medicine• Subsequent research published
in Archives found a cost savings of more than $5 billion could be realized if the recommendations were put in to practice.
Arch Intern Med 2011:171 (15);1385-1390
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Choosing Wisely is an initiative of the ABIM Foundation to help physicians and patients engage in conversations about the overuse of tests and procedures and support physician efforts to help patients make smart and effective care choices.
Consumer Reports leads consumer communication efforts for this campaign.
Choosing Wisely
What is the Physician’s Role in Choosing Wisely?
The Charter’s commitment to a just distribution of finite resources specifically calls on physicians to be responsible for the appropriate allocation of resources and to scrupulously avoid superfluous tests and procedures.
The Charter’s commitment to a just distribution of finite resources specifically calls on physicians to be responsible for the appropriate allocation of resources and to scrupulously avoid superfluous tests and procedures.
Choosing Wisely PartnersSocieties Released Lists in April 2012 • American Academy of Allergy Asthma & Immunology• American Academy of Family Physicians• American College of Cardiology• American College of Physicians• American College of Radiology• American Gastroenterological Association• American Society of Nephrology• American Society of Nuclear Cardiology• American Society of Clinical Oncology
Societies Releasing Lists in Feb 2013 • American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine• American Academy of Neurology• American Academy of Ophthalmology• American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck
Surgery• American Academy of Pediatrics• American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists• American College of Rheumatology• American Geriatrics Society• American Society for Clinical Pathology• American Society of Echocardiography• American Urological Association• Society of Hospital Medicine• Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging• Society of Thoracic Surgeons• Society of Vascular Medicine
Societies Releasing Lists in Sept 2013 AMDA – Dedicated to Long Term Care Medicine - 9/4 American College of Surgeons - 9/4 Commission on Cancer – a multidisciplinary program of the American College of Surgeons
- 9/4 American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons - 9/11 Society of General Internal Medicine - 9/12 American Psychiatric Association - 9/20 American Society for Radiation Oncology - 9/23 American Academy of Family Physicians** - 9/24 American College of Medical Toxicology and the
American Academy of Clinical Toxicology - 9/26
Societies Releasing Lists in Sept 2013 AMDA – Dedicated to Long Term Care Medicine - 9/4 American College of Surgeons - 9/4 Commission on Cancer – a multidisciplinary program of the American College of Surgeons
- 9/4 American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons - 9/11 Society of General Internal Medicine - 9/12 American Psychiatric Association - 9/20 American Society for Radiation Oncology - 9/23 American Academy of Family Physicians** - 9/24 American College of Medical Toxicology and the
American Academy of Clinical Toxicology - 9/26
Societies Releasing Lists in Oct 2013 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus
- 10/8 North American Spine Society - 10/9 American College of Emergency Physicians - 10/14 American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/
The Endocrine Society - 10/16 American College of Chest Physicians/
American Thoracic Society (Pulmonary) - 10/27 American College of Rheumatology* - 10/27 American Society of Dermatology - 10/29 American Society of Clinical Oncology* - 10/29 Society of Gynecologic Oncology - 10/31
Societies Releasing Lists in Oct 2013 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus
- 10/8 North American Spine Society - 10/9 American College of Emergency Physicians - 10/14 American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists/
The Endocrine Society - 10/16 American College of Chest Physicians/
American Thoracic Society (Pulmonary) - 10/27 American College of Rheumatology* - 10/27 American Society of Dermatology - 10/29 American Society of Clinical Oncology* - 10/29 Society of Gynecologic Oncology - 10/31
Choosing Wisely Partners contd. • Consumer Groups Through Partnership with
Consumer Reports• AARP• Alliance Health Networks• Leapfrog Group• Midwest Business Group on Health• Minnesota Health Action Network• National Business Coalition on Health• National Business Group on Health• National Center for Farmworker Health• National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization• National Partnership for Women & Families• Pacific Business Group on Health• SEIU• Union Plus• Wikipedia
November 2013• American Headache Society - 11/21
December 2013• American Society of Hematology - 12/4January 2014• American Association of Critical-Care Nurses/American
College of Chest Physicians/American Thoracic Society/Society of Critical Care Medicine (Critical Care) - 1/11
• Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance - 1/16February 2014• Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine - 2/3 • Heart Rhythm Society - 2/10 • American College of Occupational and Environmental
Medicine - 2/24 • The American Geriatrics Society* - 2/27 • American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology - 2/28Release Date TBD• American Association of Blood Banks • American Association of Neurological Surgeons • American Society of Anesthesiologists • American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons • American Society of Plastic Surgeons
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How the Lists Were Created
• Societies were free to determine the process for creating their lists
• Each item was within the specialty’s purview and control
• Procedures should be used frequently and/or carry a significant cost
• Should be generally-accepted evidence to support each recommendation
• Process should be thoroughly documented and publicly available upon request
Actions
Dozens of 2-Page Brochures(in plain English & Spanish)
MiPCT Objectives
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The tie to budget neutrality and ROI
Reduction in Unnecessary and Non-Value-Added Costs
How do they do that?Some preliminary insights
• Common elements across regions▫ Shared aims; “accountable” to the
community; ▫ Physician engagement as leaders;
support for professional values▫ Strong primary care foundation▫ Use of data to support work;
professional feedback; peer review
• Data feedback – a critical component
▫ Organizational accountability – integrated systems to support feedback
▫ Data itself – actual performance of providers
Strategies for achieving…SHORT TERM SAVINGS
• High-risk patient intensive care management
• 24/7 clinical decision maker access to prevent unnecessary ED utilization and inpatient admissions
• Baseline data analysis for utilization outliers and focused root cause analysis (MDC and SPC)
• Educate on evidence-based approaches to care (e.g., Choosing Wisely Guidelines)
LONG TERM SAVINGS
• Moderate Care Management
• Incentives for Chronic care outcomes (BP in diabetes, etc.)
• From Patient Centered Care to Population Centered Health. Shortell JAMA March 2013
• Focus on all “tiers” of patient population
• Care delivery in home, workplace, school
• Expand providers to health educators, social workers, teachers, city planners, architects
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MiPCT Working to Improve Triple AIM Performance• Data Management and
Reporting▫ MDC ▫ Stewardship and
Performance Committee• Patient Engagement
▫ Patient Advisory Committee
• Payment Models▫ Incentive Payments
Quality Process Measures
Quality Outcome Measures
Utilization Metrics
• Team Development▫ Learning Collaboratives▫ Care Management
Webinars▫ PO and Practice Site
Visits• Physician Engagement
▫ Town Hall Meetings▫ PO Advisory Committee▫ Choosing Wisely Initiative
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•Uncertainty and the Challenge of Being an Informed Patient▫The following anecdote is by Erin Plute, a
medical student at Emory University from Marietta, Georgia, and a winner of the 2012 Costs of Care Essay Contest.
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The Moral Test
“This is the threshold we have now come to, but not yet crossed: the threshold from the care we have, to the care we need. We can do this– we who give care. And nobody else can … The buck has stopped; it has stopped with you.”
Don Berwick “The Moral Test”
2011 IHI National Forum keynote
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