Title: Heinrich Schulte
1Examples of integratedcare systems from abroad
Heinrich Schulte
Endokrinologikum
2Our NHS, Our FutureInternational Clinical Summit
21st and 22nd November 2007, LondonProf. Dr.
med. Heinrich M. Schulte
3Guiding themes when founding POLIKUM
- 1. LeitmotivRequirements of the patient
- complete care, professionally and temporally
(every specialty at any time) - high quality
- physicians working as a team
- result-orientedness
- quick appointments
- short waiting times
- 2. LeitmotivRequirements of the physicians
- Unrestricted diagnosis therapy
- Medical care main occupation
- safety professional perspective
- Ideal working environment
- personal professional development
- 2.b Nurses requirements
4Specialties at POLIKUM
5POLIKUM Friedenau Geography
- Large potential patients base
- Approx. 170.000 people living in about 3 km
diameter - Direct access from the inner-city expressway (3
min.) - Positioned in an established medical are (on the
area of a 100 year old hospital)
Berlin
POLIKUM Grazer Damm (amb. OP)
POLIKUM Friedenau (Main building and pediatrics)
6POLIKUM Friedenau Current status
- Biggest MVZ in Germany
- 48 physicians employed (May 2007) on approx. 40
full-time licenses - Approx. 3.200 square meters (Phase I)
- Another 3.000 sqm will follow in Phase II
- Approx. 58.000 patient contacts in Q IV 2006
- Opened October 2005 with 16 physicians
- Only two major specialties missing OB/Gyn
Urology
7Centralised Digital Patient Record
- Features
- Highest demand on data protection
- Distributed access to all patients data at all
terminals - All technical diagnostic devices feed directly
into the record - Example ECG
- Complex appointments anywhere
- Interfaces to hospital software third parties
(work in progress) - Main advantages
- Process flexibility (e. g. change of receptions /
rooms depending on demand) - Zero-redundancy
- Integrated control
- Process management (integrated care / clinical
studies etc.)
8Other unique aspects of POLIKUM
- Doctors are employed with POLIKUM
- Central administration caters for all non-medical
aspects like purchasing, accounting control,
general controlling - Self-organised management medical director /
coordinators - Concentration on medical care as core occupation,
but project work - Geriatrics Network
- POLIKUM Institute
- Clinical Studies
- Integrated Care / Cross-specialty clinical
pathways / Case Management - Supply follows demand (from 16 to 48 doctors in
20 months) - Smooth transition between specialties / no
practice-barriers - Perhaps most important Basis for Standardisation
- In similar situations all physicians act similarly
9Discussion Pros Cons from a single doctors pov
- Pros
- No financial investment
- Young doctor no risk
- Established doctor license sale at a (hopefully)
favorable pricespeaking of license sales a
quick digression - No major deviation of the income scheme (on the
average)and bonus contracts awarding individual
excellence - No reduction of personal autonomy of decision
(but) - Concentration on medical work no more red tape
towards KV Co. no more of the proverbial
toilet paper purchase no more software upgrading
and keeping-up with the political development - Highly reduced accountability no personnel, no
leasing contracts etc.
10Discussion Pros Cons from a single doctors pov
- Cons
- Reduced personal freedom that goes with reduced
responsibilityput in an exaggerated fashion I
can no longer choose which toilet paper to use. - Adherence to strict opening hours shift work!
- In-house competition / potential risk of being
fired - Hierarchies that I (possibly) loathed in my time
at the hospital - Loss of social status
- Pressure to advanced training and openness to
criticism due to transparency principle (digital
patient record)
11Structural Vision Regional complete care
network
- Co-operation contracts
- Integration in digital patient record
- Building of star alliance-like network
- Central management
- Integrated service offerings to health plans
- Co-operation contracts
- Service-level agreement (admission discharge)
- Joint resource usage
- Management of emergency room
- Integrated service offerings to health plans
P
P
P
H
P
P
P
H
S
H
- Similar contracts / co-operation ideas
- Foster homes
- Self-help groups
- Rehab clinics
- Local / regional initiatives
S
S
H Hospital P Partner Practice (outpatient)
S medical service partner
12Contractual Vision fee for service performance
- Outpatient care consumes only 25 of the
budgetthat the three main sectors consume. - However, approx. 85 of the spending in the three
sectors combinedare triggered by outpatient
care. - POLIKUM estimates the cost reduction potential at
approx. 20...
13Cost savings obstacles
- No incentive to reduce costs today
- The outpatient sector doesnt profit from cost
savings. - CHIs are not-for-profit.
- Most hospitals belong to the public service.
- Hospitals and drug producers are paid on a
per-unit base. - Patients dont profit from cost-effective system
utilisation. - Urban myth The system is working at maximum
efficiency - Corollary Cost savings mean Quality reduction
- Political parties cannot profit from cost
reductions a) the lowest income-levels profit
the least b) public feels entitled to maximum as
opposed to optimal care (see corollary) - From the hospitals and drug producers
point-of-view the fragmentation in the outpatient
market (see 5 in the first presentation) is
divide and conquer-situation.
14Cost savings potentials (1 as shown at POLIKUM)
- Reduction of induced units utilised At POLIKUM
- there are no redundant prescriptions
- nor diagnostics
- nor other therapeutic treatments
- the house is open 14 hours a day (Mo Fr)
- the broad and complete spectrum of specialties
fosters an atmosphere and ambition of hospital
avoidance among the health care professionals. - Reduction of unit costs Bundled demand on the
buyer side ( the outpatient sector) combined
with standardisation efforts (7!) yield
profitable purchase conditions.
15Cost savings potentials (2 as politically
intended)
- The last three reforms (2004 / 2007-1 / 2007-4)
have brought about considerable liberalisation to
operate in the health care sector. - CHIs can now contract directly with providers to
take over the entire outpatient care for their
patients. The budgets will be subtracted from the
payments to KV (cf. 3 first presentation)! - Providers are now incited to re-organise in order
to become successful tenderers for the CHIs. - Patients can be offered individual incentives to
choose a provider (or a meta-provider), thereby
voluntarily reducing their freedom-of-choice.
16The means to this end
- POLIKUM will become network managers in the
entire system - Build networks of strong partners
- Develop standards
- Enforce standards (quality management)
- Negotiate favourable contracts with CHIs(success
bonuses capitation fees) - Negotiate favourable contracts with neighbouring
sectors (hospitals etc.) - Attract patients on a voluntary basis
- (3 months period of cancellation at most!)
- Long-term vision Maximise the contribution
margin over the expected lifetime of all patients
- Incentive to
- keep patients satisfied(no cancellation)
- long patients life
- early treatment
- effective treatment
expected costs morbidity-adjusted
actually incurred costs (each year)
17Thank you!
Prof. Dr. Heinrich M. Schulte ENDORKINOLOGIKUM
HAMBURG Zentrum für Hormon- und
Stoffwechselerkrankungen, Reproduktionsmedizin
und Pränatale Medizin Lornsenstraße 4-6 22767
Hamburg www.endokrinologikum.com