Title: LSUHCSD Health Care Effectiveness Quarterly Meeting
1LSU-HCSD Health Care Effectiveness Quarterly
Meeting July 15, 2008 Alan Levine Secretary,
Department of Health Hospitals
2Organizing principles
Our efforts to improve health outcomes are
organized around the following major principles Â
- Transparency
- Consumer choice
- Community leadership
- Aligned incentives for improved outcomes
- Changing consumer behavior
- Modernizing our safety-net
- Maximizing affordable coverage
- Portability of benefits
- Health planning evaluation of outcomes
3Reform background
Louisiana Health Care Redesign Collaborative
- The Collaborative process produced four major
recommendations - expand access to affordable health care coverage
- promote the use of health information technology
- implement a medical home system of care
- form the Louisiana Health Care Quality Forum.
4Reform background
Expanding access to affordable coverage Â
- Coverage expansion has not moved forward
to-date - Health care Reform Act of 2007.
- The Louisiana Health Care Redesign Collaborative
did not take-up the rebuilding of MCLNO, nor the
role of the safety-net system in general - Expanding coverage, rebuilding MCLNO, and
modernizing the safety-net must be part of an
integrated, comprehensive reform.
5Health system reform to-date
- Health system reform since Governor Jindal took
office has focused on - Behavioral health services
- MCLNO business plan
- Health Information Technology
- Transparency
6Behavioral health services
In response to the situation in New Orleans, and
as a catalyst to state-wide reform, the state
- Provided a transformation team led by Col. James
McDonough to Metropolitan Human Service
District implementing management reform,
personnel changes launching new services. - Passed legislation providing for expansion of
community led human service districts once new
readiness criteria have been met, and holding
these districts responsible for their outcomes. - Passed legislation providing for Crisis Receiving
Centers as single points of entry for persons in
behavioral health crisis funded start-up of new
centers - 79 of US reported they routinely held psych
patients in waiting rooms for some period of time
due to lack of immediate services. - Increased behavioral health funding by 89
million over last year.
7MCLNO business plan
Governor Jindal requested that DHH lead a
collaborative assessment of the business plan
with Tulane and LSU
- Results include
- 2016 Region I bed-demand projections decreased
from 966 to 862 - Bed-size based on patient mix, payor mix, faculty
practice patterns and use and utilization
decrease from 416 to 364 med-surg beds - The original pro-forma was revised to reflect a
projected annual net loss of 58m in 2016 down
from a projected 21m annual profit - 130m in annual state general fund subsidy will
be required under this model. - Both are better than a do-nothing scenario
which projects a 153m loss in 2016 if the
Interim LSU Hospital continues in operation as is.
8Health Information Technology
- Louisiana Rural Health Information Exchange
- more than 13 million in new FY to connect 7
additional rural hospitals to the Exchange and
provide them with electronic medical records - 4 million for the Louisiana Health Information
Exchange to build the infrastructure and staff
for a system that will allow health care
providers state-wide to securely share privacy
protected health information and electronic
medical records - DHH is providing hand held e-prescribing devices
to 523 Medicaid doctors statewide - 65 of our Medicaid patients receive a pharmacy
service - Initial estimates place Louisianas annual
savings at 4.8 million. - CMS-EMR demonstration project which will provide
incentives to 100 physicians practices in the
state to use EHRs, and to report and improve
quality. The state has committed 1 million
(matchable) Medicaid dollars to this effort.
9Transparency
- The Consumers Right to Know Act will allow the
state to collect and publish financial and
outcomes data for all health care providers in
Louisiana - SB 337 will require the state to collect and
publish the use of funds for uncompensated care
within all non-rural providers.
10Reforms to be introduced
- Medicaid reform
- Coverage reform
- Strengthening delivery systems
11Medicaid reform
Provider Service Networks
- Medicaid spending in Louisiana grew by
approximately 20 last year a combination of
legislatively mandated rate increases and
increased utilization - Very little care coordination exists in the
current Medicaid system - The Health Care Reform Act of 2007 appropriated
25m for Medicaid reform based on the medical
home system of care - In 2008 legislative regular session, 4.7m was
included for PSNs.
12Medicaid reform
Provider Service Networks
- PSNs are contracted networks of providers charged
with delivering care to the defined population
who choose their network. They - Would require at least 25 provider ownership
- Would be awarded through an RFP process within
each demonstration market (New Orleans, Baton
Rouge, Shreveport) - Would implement NCQA patient-centered medical
home criteria - Could be fee-for-service or prepaid.
DHH recently appointed a Medicaid reform advisory
group to assist in the design of the program
13Medicaid reform
Provider Service Networks will be required to
implement
- Enrollee and provider satisfaction reporting
- Anti-fraud and abuse systems
- Robust utilization management
- Aggressive disease management
- Increased EPSDT screening rates for children
- Health IT (EMR, Web-based tools, telemedicine) to
improve care coordination and measure health
outcomes - Incentives for high performers.
Children with special needs and persons receiving
developmental services would be carved out of
this system
14Coverage reform
- Commonwealth Fund links better access to better
quality - Different individuals and families have different
coverage needs - Coverage reform does not need to be
one-size-fits-all. - Reforms working elsewhere
- Individual and employer tax credits for
high-deductible health plans and health savings
accounts - Connectors/exchanges which merge multiple-funding
streams for health care from individuals,
employers and government to pay health insurance
premiums.
15Strengthening delivery systems
Leverage federal and state initiatives in Region I
- Three major federal grants assisting in
transforming the safety-net delivery system in
Region I to a more primary care, community based,
medical home model - Our intent is that by the end of the grant
periods, participating clinics and practices grow
to provide efficient and effective services - to a broad-array of patient and payor types
- in locations close to where users live and work
- that decrease the reliance on emergency rooms.
- DHH is convening a strategic planning session in
the late summer to begin system-level
sustainability planning with the grant recipients
and other local stakeholders.
16Strengthening delivery systems
3-year 100m grant Primary Care Access
Stabilization Grant
- Ensure the ability of the health care
infrastructure in the Greater New Orleans area
to - Provide primary care and behavioral health
services to the low-income and uninsured
population - Increase sustainable clinic capacity to meet
unmet demand for these services. - Twenty-five private and public not-for-profit
organizations delivering care at approximately 70
sites (including LSU) - 46.3 million awarded to date
- Delivered services to over 80,000 individuals
to-date - The population associated with these clinics grew
by over 10 during the last 6-month reporting
period.
Funding for this grants expires September 2010
17Strengthening delivery systems
50m Katrina Healthcare Related Professional
Workforce Supply Grant
- Recruitment and retention program for the Greater
New Orleans area - Available to physicians, dentists, nurses and
certain allied health providers - Each must agree to provide substantial care to
persons with Medicaid and the uninsured - To date, 35.6m has been awarded and obligated to
958 applicants - DHH is negotiating with HHS new recruitment and
retention uses for remaining funds, such as
practice management support to build thriving
practices.
The nation, and Louisiana in particular, faces a
looming crisis in medical workforce supply
18Strengthening delivery systems
3.5m ER Diversion Grant
- Intended to lower Medicaid beneficiaries improper
use of costly hospital emergency departments.
This program will - Establish alternate public-private networks of
non-emergency care in Baton Rouge and New
Orleans - Incentivize this network using Medicaid payments
to offer extended evening and weekend hours, and
urgent care facilities - Target outreach to high users of ER services at
the point of contact within the ER.
This grant is in the implementation planning
stage
19Questions?