Title: Update from The Pond
1Update from The Pond
Founded By The Business Roundtable with Support
From the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Greg Belden, Senior Program Associate
gbelden_at_leapfroggroup.org June 18, 2004
2Populating the Pond
- Leapfrog represents..
- More than 155 large health care purchasers
- More than 34 million Americans
- More than 62 billion in health care expenditures
3Leapfrog Members to Date
- Ford Motor Company
- Gateway Purchasers for Health
- General Electric Company
- General Mills, Inc.
- General Motors Corporation
- Georgia Health Care Leadership Council
- Georgia-Pacific Corporation
- GlaxoSmithKline
- Greater Milwaukee Business Group on Health
and the Health Care Network of Wisconsin - Hampton Roads Health Coalition
- Hannaford Bros. Co.
- Healthcare21 Business Coalition
- HealthPartners
- HealthPlus of Michigan
- The Health Action Council of Northeast Ohio
- Health Alliance Plan (HAP)
- Health Care Payers Coalition of New Jersey
- Health Language
- Health Net Inc.
ATT Aetna Inc. Allscripts Healthcare
Solutions American Century Services Corporation
American Federation of Teachers American Medical
Systems American Re-Insurance Company AmerisourceB
ergen Corporation ArvinMeritor,
Inc. AstraZeneca The Auto Club Group Aventis
Pharmaceuticals Inc. Barry-Wehmiller Group,
Inc. Bath Iron Works Corporation Becton,
Dickinson and Company (BD) Bemis Company,
Inc. Bethlehem Steel Corporation Board of
Pensions of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) The Boeing Company Brown Shoes Buyers
Health Care Action Group Cargill, Inc. Carlson
Companies Caterpillar Inc. Ceridian
Corporation Cerner Corporation Charter
Communications Chicago Business Group on
Health CIGNA Corporation CITIGROUP INC. Cleveland
State University Colorado Business Group on
Health Comerica The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Group Insurance Commission Coors Brewing
Company Cummins Inc. DaimlerChrysler
Corporation Dallas-Fort Worth Business Group on
Health Delta Airlines, Inc. The Department of
Employee Trust Funds and State of Wisconsin
Group Insurance Board The Doe Run
Company The Dow Chemical Company Eastman Kodak
Company Eclipsys Corporation Electronic Data
Systems Eli Lilly and Company Empire Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Employer Health Care Alliance
Cooperative (The Alliance) Employers Health
Coalition ESCO Technologies, Inc. Excellus
Inc. Exxon Mobil Corporation FedEx
Corporation Fidelity Investments Fisher
Scientific International Flint Ink Fleet Boston
Financial
National Rural Electric Cooperative
Association Nevada Health Care Coalition New
Jersey State Health Benefits Program New York
Business Group on Health North Carolina Business
Group o Health, Inc. North Carolina Teachers and
State Employees Comprehensive Major Medical
Plan Northwest Airlines, Inc. Olin Corporation,
Brass Winchester Divisions Oxford Health Plans,
Inc. Pacific Business Group on Health Pediatrix
Medical Group Inc. PepsiCo Pillsbury
Company Pitney Bowes Inc. The Procter Gamble
Company Promina Health System, Inc. Quality
Systems Inc. Quest Diagnostics Qwest
Communications International Inc. Ramsey
County Reliant Energy, Incorporated Robert Wood
Johnson University Hospital Robert Wood Johnson
University Hospital at Hamilton Ryder
System, Inc. Savannah Business Group Schering-Plou
gh Corporation Siemens Corporation Solutia,
Inc. South Central Michigan Health
Alliance Southern California Schools Voluntary
Employees Benefits Association Sprint
Corporation State of Kansas Division of Personnel
Services SUPERVALU INC. TCF Financial
Corporation TI Automotive TRW Inc. Target
Corporation Tennant Company Textron Inc. Trinity
Health Plans Tri-State Business Group on
Health Tufts Health Plan Union Pacific
Railroad Union Pacific Railroad Employees Health
Systems UnitedHealth Group United Parcel
Service University of Maine System Verizon
Communications WEA Trust Washington Mutual
Bank Washington State Health Care
Authority Wausau Benefits, Inc. Wells
Fargo Wiseman and Associates Financial Services,
LTD Xcel Energy Xerox Corporation The U.S.
Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) the
Department of Defense and Minnesota Departments
of Human Services and Employee Relations also
participate as liaison members.
4Why Isnt Quality Better?
Providers Not Seeing Case for Reengineering
Insurers Not Letting Provider Value Show Through
Purchasers Not Buying Right, Toxic Payment System
Consumers Not In the Quality Game
Gridlock in the Health Care System Everyone
Responsible, No One Accountable
New Thinking Needed to Leapfrog Gridlock
5The Silent Calamity
- Needless mortality and morbidity
- 44,000-98,000 plus deaths each year from medical
errors during hospitalizations (IOM, 1999) - 7,000 deaths from medication errors alone
- 17-29 million in added costs
- Number of avoidable deaths in ambulatory care
unknown
6Preventable Deaths Personalized The General
Motors Example
- US Population 250,000,000
- Preventable deaths per year 98,000
- Preventable deaths per 100,000
- Americans per year 39
- GMs covered lives 1,250,000
- GMs preventable deaths
- Per year 488!
- Per day 1.3!
-
7The Costs of Poor Quality Care
- Patients, on average, receive recommended health
care only 55 percent of the time (McGlynn et al.
2003) - 30 percent of all direct health care outlays are
the result of poor care (misuse, underuse,
overuse, and waste) (Juran Institute/MBGH 2003)
Employers Fund U. S. Health Care System The
Buck Starts Here
8How Are Employers Responding to Rising Costs?
Source Hewitt Associates, 2002 Kaiser/HRET
Survey, 2003
Less than 15 of employers think these changes
will be very effective.
9The Leapfrog Groups Mission
- Trigger giant leaps forward in the safety,
quality and affordability of health care by - Supporting informed health care decisions by
those who use and pay for health care  - Promoting high-value health care through
incentives and rewards
10Leapfrogs Mission and Vision Aligned with IOM
- Pursuit of Comparative Excellence
- Measuring both hospital and physician
performance across all 6 IOM Health Care Aims - Timeliness
- Efficiency
- Safety
- Effectiveness
- Equity
- Patient-centeredness
11Purchasing Principles
- Educate and inform enrollees
- Compare at the provider level
- Reward superior provider value
- Patient volume (select/deselect/freeze,consumer
incentives, consumer decision support) - Unit price (pay for performance)
- Public recognition
- Highlight tangible, evidence-based quality and
safety practices (Leaps)
12Criteria for Safety Leaps
- Whats the Difference? Leap will produce big
improvement in safety - Value Self-Evident Leap can be appreciated by
consumers - Feasible Now Implementation steps are doable
- Easily Ascertainable Purchaser or health plan
can see if Leap is in place - Keep the List Short Leaps can be remembered
13Initial Quality and Safety Leap Summary
- An Rx for Rx
- Computer Physician Order Entry (CPOE)
- Up to 8 in 10 serious drug errors prevented
- Sick People Need Special Care
- ICU Daytime Staffing with CCM Trained M.D. live
or via tele-monitoring, or risk-adjusted outcomes
comparison - 29 mortality reduction (JAMA, 11/02)
- The Best of the Best
- Evidence-based Hospital Referral (EHR) or
risk-adjusted outcomes comparison - gt 30 mortality reduction for 7 complex
treatments - New! Overall Safety (See Appendix)
- Rolled-up score of the remaining 27 of the 30 NQF
Safe Practices (CPOE, IPS and EHR are the other 3
of the 30 NQF Safe Practices)
14What We Stand to Gain from Initial 3 Leaps Alone?
- Annual Gain Projected by Dartmouth
- ? 560,000-907,000 serious medication errors
- ? 61,700 deaths
- ? 61,700 X 5 disabilities
- Potential savings 9.7 billion / year
- (if fully implemented in U.S. urban hospitals)
15Leap Refinement Creating More Sophisticated
Measures
- CPOE Online evaluation tool developed by First
Consulting Group - ICU Staffing Joint project with JCAHO to
develop risk-adjustment methodologies and
reporting program e-ICU (telemedicine) now
applicable - Evidence Based Hospital Referral Seeking
additional sources for outcomes reporting
16Our Approach to Measure Development
Implementation
- Collaborate with measure developers
- CMS, AHA, AHRQ, NCQA, JCAHO, others
- Seek consensus on breadth and content of
measurement set - Advance measures through NQF for consensus
approval - Develop rapid implementation strategy with key
partners
17Leapfrog Leaps, Today and Tomorrow
- Today Hospitals
- CPOE, IPS, EHR, NQF Safe Practices
- Tomorrow Hospitals and Physician Offices
- Physician Office Clinical Decision Support (See
Appendix) - Initial development coordinated with HHS,
awaiting outcome of HHS-led push toward
nationwide EMR implementation - Minimum standards E-prescribing, E-lab results
management, and E-care reminders - Already in practice- CMS DOQ-IT, Bridges to
Excellence Physician Office Link
18Leapfrogs Position on EMRs
- Leapfrog supports the promotion and use of
electronic data to protect patient safety and
quality and recommends that hospitals implement
CPOE systems. - An effective CPOE system rests on a broad array
of patient information and an electronic medical
record is one of the first steps to achieving
this.
19How Leapfrog Happens Leaping in Unison
Purchasers
Consumers
Health Plans (MD Leadership Governance)
Health Care Delivery System (hospitals,
physicians, nurses pharmacy...)
20Leapfrogs Regional Roll-Outs
Leapfrog is a national movement using targeted
regions (Regional Roll-Outs) to develop best
practices, creating early successes and learning
from all stakeholders.
- 23 Regional Roll-Out areas reach 50 of
Americans. - Regions must have
- Effective leadership
- Competitive health care market
- High concentration of Leapfrog lives
LF Regions in Green w/ exception of NV and NC
2123 Roll-Out Regions
On Hold for 2004
22Collecting Hospital Level Data
- Hospital survey available via The MEDSTAT Group
- Ongoing voluntary Web survey
- Outreach to hospitals in 23 Roll-Out areas to
date, but nationally available - Survey captures hospitals on the path
- Data publicly reported, format based on feedback
from consumers and hospitals (survey and results
www.leapfroggroup.org -
23Leap Applicability to Urban/Rural Hospitals
- 2001-2003- Leaps Apply to Only Urban Hospitals
- Areas where consumers have a choice of hospitals
- Do not want to raise public expectation that
rural hospitals should prioritize the leaps - 2004 and Beyond- Leaps Apply to Urban and Rural
- 4th Leap (NQF Safe Practices) applies to Rural
Hospitals - Rural task force working to apply initial 3 leaps
to rural hospitals
24Hospitals Are Reporting from All Over the Country
VT
MT
SD
WY
RI
NM
No Participation Participation inRoll-Out
Regions Participation inNon Roll-Out Regions
25Progress 2nd Quarter 2004 (contd)Hospital
Survey Results - Regions
26Hospital Survey Results Regions
- CPOE
- Final Version 2.0
- 5 (34) of the responding hospitals have fully
implemented CPOE - another 17 (118) will
implement by 2005 - Final Version 1.0
- 5 of the responding hospitals had fully
implemented CPOE - another 22 said would
implement by 2005
27Hospital Survey Results Regions
- IPS
- Final Version 2.0
- 24 of responding hospitals have fully
implemented IPS - Final Version 1.0
- 21 of responding hospitals had fully implemented
IPS - another 15 said would implement by 2004
28Hospital Survey Results Regions (cont.)
- EHR of responding hospitals meeting Leapfrogs
standard
29Consumers as Drivers
- Preventable mistakes are frequent and serious
- Provider differences can be significant
- Enrollee Communications Toolkit by FACCT(NEW
version available)
30Engage Consumers
31Engage Consumers
- Heart
- Leapfrog Toolkit
- NEJM survey results
- Mind
- Web Hits
32Engage Consumers
- Heart
- FACCT Toolkit
- NEJM survey results
- Mind
- Web Hits
- Wallet
- Co-pays, co-insurance
DRAFT
33The Leap Over the Gridlock Has Begun
- Rapid growth in purchasers signing on to
Leapfrogs approach - Rapid growth in hospitals disclosing status to
their communities - Active health plan support
- 80 of Americans have access to information for
at least one hospital in their community - Massive education of consumers through purchasers
- Market reinforcement beginning through different
channels
34Market Reinforcement The Multiplier Effect
Inform Educate Enrollees
Multipliers Health Plan Products
Member Support Activation
Improved Value (Quality Efficiency)
Compare Providers
Federal state purchasers
Rewarding Creating Incentives for Quality
Efficiency
Other distribution channels partners
35Where We are Beginning to Make Progress
- Transparency
- Movement towards standardization of measures
- The National Quality Forum
- Medicare Modernization Act 2003 IOM to evaluate
leading health care performance measures - Education
- Creation of consumer demand for good quality care
- 80 of Leapfrog members communicate to their
employees about medical errors and 70 about
Leapfrog
36Putting the Money Where Our Mouth Is- Working
Markets Must Reward Quality
- Current reimbursement system does little to
encourage quality improvement - 80 of Leapfrog members publicly recognize
providers but only 30 are working to reward
providers - Optimal Incentive and Reward systems
- Pay-for-Performance/Direct Financial Reward (DFR)
models - Bonus payments/Financial awards
- Volume/Market-share Shift/Direct-to-Consumer
(DTC) models - Tiering, Payment differentials
37Lily Pads Opportunities to Shape the Movement
HEALTH PLANS
INCENTIVES REWARDS
CLINICIAN
BENEFITS CONSULTANTS
REGIONAL LEADERS
BOARD MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
ENROLLEE COMMUNICATIONS
LEAPS MEASURES
38Paying for Performance (DFR)
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan
- Blue Cross of California
- Bridges to Excellence
- Excellus
- Pay for Performance - Integrated Healthcare
Association (IHA) - Medi-Cal/Healthy Families - Integrated Healthcare
Association (IHA) - Massachusetts Health Quality Partners
39Paying for Performance (DFR)
- Bridges to Excellence
- Physician Office Link
- Physicians can earn up to 50 per sponsored
patient - Must pass NCQA office practice performance
assessment program - http//www.ncqa.org/pol/
- IHA
- Paying for Performance
- Common measures
- Clinical quality (40 percent)
- Patient experience (40 percent)
- Investment in information technology (20 percent)
- Each plan comes up with own reward methodology
40Paying for Performance (DFR)
- Other Initiatives
- Empire Blue Cross, IBM, PepsiCo, Verizon, and
Xerox (NY) - Hospitals 4 bonus if meet Leapfrogs CPOE and
ICU standards - Group Insurance Commission (MA)
- Health plans 25-50K bonus if plans increase
admissions to Leapfrog-compliant hospitals - Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield (NH)
- Physicians 20 per enrollee for group practices
that finish in top quartile for quality scores
41Market-share/Volume Shift (DTC)
High
Consumer Resistance
Low
Minimum
Maximum
Provider Pressure
42Market-share/Volume Shift (DTC)
- Provider Tiering
- Pacificare (CA), HealthNet (CA), Blue Shield
(CA), Aetna (FL, TX, WA), Patient Choice Health
Care (MN, CO, OR, MA) - Co-pay, co-insurance, premium differentials
- Hannaford Brothers
- 250 co-pay difference for employee going to
hospital meeting the volume criteria for 5 of
LFs high risk procedures - General Motors
- Adjusts employee premium contribution based on
plans cost and quality performance
43Health Plans Using or Planning to Use Leapfrog
Criteria in Incentive Programs
44Purchasers Using or Planning to Use Leapfrog
Criteria in Incentive Programs
45Whats in the Pipeline?
AHRQ Incentive and Reward Pilots
46Market-share/Volume Shift (DTC)
- Creating Differential Hospital Insurance for
Employees The Boeing Company - Part of collective bargaining agreement with two
largest unions - Effective July 1, 2004, union employees and early
retirees will obtain 100 coverage after
deductible for services provided by a
Leapfrog-compliant hospital - Hourly employees hospitalized in facilities that
do not meet the Leapfrog safety practices will
obtain 95 coverage after deductible - This benefit design will remain in place until
July 1, 2006 when a new collective bargaining
agreement becomes effective
47Whats in the Pipeline?
- Leapfrogs E 2 (Effectiveness and Efficiency)
Hospital Rewards Program- Piggy-backing on
CMS-Premier Pay-for-Performance Demo - Actuarial analysis shows win for members
- Data collection method already in place
- No new measures
- Plans can implement quickly for self-insured or
fully-insured customers - Can implement nationally or at local level
- Can expand to other GPOs/Hospital groups
48Other Incentives and Rewards Initiatives/Leverage
Points
- IR Toolkit
- IR Compendium
- Health Plan User Groups
- Standard Health Plan Contract Language
- eValue8 Common RFI
- Update of Economic Implications of original
three leaps - Malpractice Study
- Found on Leapfrog Web site http//www.leapfrogg
roup.org
49Beginning to Leap Over Gridlock but Gaps Still
Exist
- Transparent Market- nationally standardized
measures of quality and efficiency - Market Reinforcement- reward quality and
efficiency and better demonstrate business case - Engage Consumers- aware of variation, mechanisms
for timely and effective delivery of information,
financial incentives - Engage Purchasers- including government-
sufficient tools and critical mass - New health plan products
50APPENDIX
51Appendix A NQF Safe Practices
- 27 Safe Practices from the National Quality Forum
Safe Practices Consensus Report (May 2003) The
report is available at www.qualityforum.org - Applicable to urban and rural hospitals
- Rolled up measure of patient safety for release
to public in August 2004
5227 Safe Practices
- 1. Create a healthcare culture of safety
- 2. Ensure an adequate level of nursing care
- 3. Pharmacists available for consultation with
prescribers on medication ordering,
interpretation, and overall medication use
process - 4. Read backs to the prescriber
- 5. Standardized abbreviations and dose
designations - 6. Patient care summaries or other similar
records should not be prepared from memory - 7. Care information, especially changes in orders
and new diagnostic information, is transmitted in
a timely and clearly understandable form
- 8. Patient or legal surrogate can recount
informed consent discussion - 9. Patient's preference for life-sustaining
treatments prominently displayed in record - 10. Standardized protocol used to prevent the
mislabeling of radiographs - 11. Standardized protocols used to prevent
wrong-site or wrong patient procedures - 12. Evaluate and provide prophylactic treatment
for patients at high-risk of acute ischemic
cardiac event during surgery
5327 Safe Practices, cont
- 19. Reduce risk of renal injury based on the
patients kidney function evaluation using
standardized protocols - 20. Evaluate risk of malnutrition, at
admission and thereafter employ clinically
appropriate strategies to prevent malnutrition - 21. When utilizing pneumatic
tourniquet evaluate patient risk for an ischemic
and/or thrombotic complication, and utilize
appropriate prophylactic measures - 22. Decontaminate hands with either a hygienic
hand rub or by washing with a disinfectant soap
after contact with patient or patient objects - 23. Vaccinate healthcare workers against
influenza
- 13. Evaluate each patient upon admission, and
regularly thereafter, for the risk of developing
pressure ulcers - 14. Evaluate at admission (and treat), and
regularly thereafter, for risk of deep vein
thrombosis (DVT)/venous thromboembolism(VTE) - 15. Utilize dedicated anti-thrombotic
(anti-coagulation) services - 16. Assess at admission, and regularly
thereafter, patients for risk of aspiration. - 17. Use effective methods of preventing central
venous catheter-associated blood stream
infections - 18. Assess risk of surgical site infection
implement antibiotic prophylaxis and other
measures
5427 Safe Practices, cont
- 24. Keep workspaces where medications are
prepared clean, orderly, well lit - 25. Standardize the methods for labeling,
packaging, and storing medications - 26. Identify all "high alert" drugs (e.g.,
intravenous adrenergic agonists and antagonists,
chemotherapy agents, anticoagulants and
anti-thrombotics, concentrated parenteral
electrolytes, general anesthetics, neuromuscular
blockers, insulin and oral hypoglycemics,
narcotics and opiates)
- 27. Dispense medications in unit-dose or, when
appropriate, unit-of-use form, whenever possible
55Appendix B Physician Office Clinical Decision
SupportRationale E-Prescribing
- Medication errors 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 computerized
assessment of patient and medication information
56Specifications E-Prescribing
- Physician office adopts and uses an electronic
system which includes all of the following - Decision support based on drug reference
information - Patient-specific decision support database which
includes age, weight, medications prescribed by
that office, diagnoses, allergies, specified lab
results, and electronically-available formulary
information inclusion of medications prescribed
by other physicians is encouraged, but optional - Printing of a paper prescription or its
NCPDP-compliant electronic transmission to the
pharmacy
57Rationale E-Lab Results Management
- Errors in managing lab results 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
and/or shared with the patient - Reducing unnecessary test ordering by giving a
practitioner easier access to previous lab test
results
58Specifications E-Lab Results Management
- Physician office adopts and uses an electronic
system which includes all of the following - Tracking whether results have been reviewed by
the practice - Tracking whether results have been communicated
to the patient, either electronically or via
telephone or regular mail - Storage and retrieval of LOINC-compliant lab
results reports (excepting microbiology) in
database-structured format
59Rationale 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. Examples include - Increase vaccination rates
- Improved screening for breast cancer, colorectal
cancer, cervical cancer, and other diseases - Improved cardiovascular risk factor reduction
- Smoking assessment and counseling
60E-Care Reminders, cont.
- Dietary assessment and counseling
- Improved management of hypertension
- Improved management of diabetes
- Increased detection of medication errors and
adverse drug events
61Specifications E-Care Reminders
- Physician office adopts and uses an
electronic system which includes all of the
following - Patient-specific database which includes age,
gender, diagnoses, treatment codes, lab test
results, and medications documented by a
clinician, AND - Specified reminders for clinicians drawn from
current US Preventive Services Task Force and
other nationally recognized care guidelines
(Appendix B)
62Specifications E-Care Reminders (2)
- The electronic system enables all of the
following clinician reminders - Patients needing guidelines-based services at the
time of patient contact - Patient lists for outreach communications to
patients who require scheduling for
guideline-based services - Generation of periodic reports of
guideline-adherence rates for the physician
offices patient population as a whole