Title: Cross the Finish Line First
1Cross the Finish Line First
2Why Chronic Conditions First?
- According to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), "Chronic diseases are the
leading cause of death and disability in the
U.S.," and Healthcare Cost Monitor underscores
this fact, revealing that "Seventy-six percent of
Medicare spending is on patients with five or
more chronic diseases. The Agency of Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) also emphasizes the
high cost of chronic conditions.
3Yesterday Claims-Based Predictive Models
- For years, healthcare insurance companies
(payers) have mined claims data for chronic
patients and have built predictive models to
identify high-risk patients. - Data used by payers to flag high risk patients
are historical claims dataprimarily costs,
admissions, and diagnoses. - Because this view is retrospective and heavily
biased toward cost, patients with past high acute
care costs are flagged as "risky" regardless of
their current State-of-Health (SOH).
4- These models lack a correlation to clinical
information. - The score becomes even more credible when there
is evidence of ER admissions or acute care
inpatient (IP) admissions. - Unfortunately, an individuals current SOH has no
bearing on his or her claims-based risk score. - Claims based risk scores are created with
regression analysis at a population level to
predict scores at the patient level.
5- Claims-based risk scores provide no insight for
care at the provider level. - Not only are todays calculations unsuitable for
determining a patients true risk, they provide
no insight into how an individuals score
improves or deteriorates after each clinical
visit. - Information lags far behind Claims-based risk
scores are not actionablethey provide no insight
for care at the provider level.
6A New Approach
- The best approach is to monitor all patients,
healthy and chronic, for risk of hospitalization.
- There is inherent conflict between physicians and
payers. To realize bonuses, they must choose cost
of care over effective care. - Progressive medical groups do not use
claims-based patient risk reports created by
payers to develop care management programs.
7Vital Progress
- The new generation of primary care management
solutions delivers real-time, meaningful use
clinical data from EHR records. - These systems use patient medical records to
measure SOH and evaluate the effectiveness of
care programs and evidence-based medicine. - Real-time clinical data from EHR records is also
being used to create sustainable, repeatable
programs to reduce the number of high-risk
patients and design individualized care
management programs.
8Closed-Loop CMP
- Using real-time clinical data from EHR records,
healthcare providers now have the capacity to
design a closed-loop population care management
program (Figure 1). - A well-designed program delivers primary care to
drive higher quality, reduce costs, and deliver
greater value in health care.
9Population SOH Stratification
The very foundation of the well-designed program
is population SOH stratification, the ability to
categorize patients into high (red), moderate
(yellow), and low (green) risk groups by chronic
condition (see Figure 2)
10- SOH stratification provides actionable and
measurable information about actual health status
at the population and patient levels, with
visibility of controllable and non controllable
factors. - An SOH model takes into consideration every
patients age, gender, ethnicity, family history,
all clinical factors (e.g. BMI, lipid panel,
blood HM, HcA1C). - A low score indicates excellent health.
11Origins of SOH Models
- Nationally accepted clinical models are the basis
for SOH models. - SOH scores are calculated at the patient level
and rolled up to a population level. - This approach allows healthcare providers to
design meaningful preventive care programs for
the exact population and create individualized
programs for specific patients.
12Chronic Disease Management
- Patients who comply with prescribed care programs
are typically more successful in managing chronic
conditions. - This is where care coordinators play an important
role. - Leveraging SOH scores, care coordinators pinpoint
high-risk patients by chronic condition.
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14Incentive Management
- Effective incentive programs clearly drive high
quality and reduce costs for greater value in
health care by - Aligning team incentives with population quality
and cost performance targets (physicians and care
coordinators) - Establishing and sharing best evidence practices
by chronic condition - Encouraging teamwork to lower healthcare costs
- Illustrating accurate physician and clinical
coordinator population performance and the impact
on incentives
15Incentive programs reward care teams for reducing
population risk scores, improving patient
satisfaction scores, and reducing overall patient
costs. Continuum of care dashboards (ambulatory
and acute) are useful in designing incentive
programs and illustrate risk-cost quality details
for each patient (Figure 4).
16- In this case, the quality metric captures
population SOH, ACO quality measures and patient
satisfaction scores. The intersection of the
crosshairs is the target for quality and cost for
the specific patient population. - Each bubble corresponds to a specific
physician/care coordinator team, and the size of
the bubble illustrates the size of the population
they manage. The distance of each bubble from the
crosshair indicates the positive or negative
variance from the target and is proportional to
each teams bonus or penalty.
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18Results Validating the SOH Model Approach
- To validate the new SOH model, researchers
(authors of this article) compared it with a
leading claims-based risk model (payer model). - The SOH model calculated a risk score between
0100 for four chronic conditionstype 2 adult
diabetes, coronary artery disease (CAD), CHF, and
asthma. - Next, researchers calculated an SOH score for
each patient using historical data over two years
(2008 2009) and stratified the population based
on SOH scores.
19Relationship IP/ER Admissions and SOH Score
Figure 6 shows the relationship between SOH
scores and IP/ER admissions. The X axis shows SOH
ranges. Y Axis shows the percentage of patients
in the SOH range with IP/ER admissions. As the
score increases, the admission within that band
also increases. Thus, Figure 6 validates the
accuracy and predictive power of the SOH score.
20Proven Track Records
- Healthcare providers can enable continuous
improvement using SOH models together with care
management programs. This approach already has
proven track records in a number of leading PCMHs
such as the Medical Clinic of North Texas (MCNT).
Within these organizations, a wide variety of
individuals actively use these models in their
daily work, including - Administrators and management
- Physicians
- Care coordinators
21- MCNT has pioneered the SOH-based population
management approach. - Their managed population of 2.4 percent
better-than-market performance was the
culmination of various quality-of-care drivers. - Overall performance index improved in Facility
Outpatient (-5), Other Medical Services (-6),
and Professional (-1) categories, relative to
the market.
22Chronic Diseases
- CDC on Chronic Diseases
- Seven out of 10 deaths among Americans each year
are from chronic diseases. Heart disease, cancer,
and stroke account for more than 50 of all
deaths each year. - Obesity has become a major health concern. One in
every 3 adults is obese, and almost 1 in 5 youth
between the ages of 619 is obese. - Source www.cdc.gov/chronicdisease/overview
- / index.htm
23AHrQ on Cost of Chronic Conditions
- The 15 most expensive health conditions account
for 44 of total healthcare expenses. Patients
with multiple chronic conditions cost up to seven
times as much as patients with only one chronic
condition. - Source www.ahrq.gov/research/ria19/expendria.htm
24Cost Monitor Chronic Disease Spending
- 76 of Medicare spending is on patients with 5 or
more chronic diseases. - Currently, 10 of healthcare dollars are spent on
overall direct costs related to diabetes,
amounting to 92 billion a year (1.5X the amount
spent on stroke or heart disease). - CDC predicts spending on diabetes care will reach
192 billion in 2020. - Source http//healthcarecostmonitor.thehastingsce
nter. org/ - kimberlyswartz/projected-costs-of-chronic-diseases
25Summary
- To lower health costs, physician networks and
medical homes must employ a closed loop
population management program that focuses on
patient SOH (risk) stratification, chronic
disease management, care coordination, and
incentive management. - To become masters in their population management
programs, they need decision support systems such
as population SOH stratification and predictive
models.