Title: Report Cards, P4P, EMRs, and Disease Management
1Report Cards, P4P, EMRs, and Disease Management
- An Analysis of Managed Care 2.0
2The debate about quality has been corrupted in
two ways
- Quality problems have been exaggerated this is
usually accomplished by confusing inferior
quality with access barriers. - Discussion of QI has been limited to those
activities which plans can conduct (e.g.,
financial incentives, report cards). QI which
leaves out plans (e.g., public health, ending the
nurse shortage) gets less attention.
3Example of exaggeration of the quality problem
- Extensive research has documented that all
three forms of clinical quality problems
underuse, overuse, and misuse are ubiquitous in
American medicine. (p. 166). - Elise C. Becher and Mark R. Chassin, Improving
the quality of health care Who will lead?
Health Affairs 200120(5)164-179, 166.
4Becher and Chassin offered this proof of
ubiquitous inferior quality
- A 1998 Rand literature review finding 30-40
underuse and 20-30 overuse, and malpractice
studies finding, 1 misuse. - But a far more extensive Rand study (2003) found
46 underuse and 11 overuse. - Overuse and misuse obviously involve provider
error. But underuse may not.
5Rand reported 46 underuse and 11 overuse
- But Rand made no attempt to determine what
caused underuse and overuse. - Examples of Rand findings for diabetics
- 24 had A1c measured every six months
- 14 had annual eye exam
- 23 had urine protein checked annually
- 56 received dietary and exercise counseling
- 45 had follow-up visit every six months.
-
6Researchers ignored underuse until late 1990s
- Most health services research to date has been
directed at identifying and reducing excessive
utilization. Little attention has been given to
underuse of care. - Two scholars at the RAND Corporation (R. L.
Kravitz and M. Laouri, Measuring and averting
underuse of necessary cardiac procedures A
summary of results and future directions, Joint
Commission Journal on Quality Improvement
199723268-76).
7Example of misuse of the 2003 Rand study
(conflating quality and access)
- Despite the extensive investment in
developing clinical guidelines, most clinicians
do not routinely integrate them into their
practices. In a recent study of US adults,
Elizabeth McGlynn and colleagues found that more
than half did not receive the recommended
care. - Dan Mendelson and Tanisha V. Carino,
Evidence-based medicine in the United States De
rigueur or dream deferred? Health Affairs
200524133-136, 134.
8Another example of the misuse of the Rand study
- Research has shown that physicians incorporate
the latest medical evidence into their treatment
decisions 50 percent of the time (McGlynn et al,
2003). - US Department of Health and Human Services,
Office of National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology, The Decade of Health
Information Technology Delivering
Consumer-Centric and Information-Rich Health
Care, July 21, 2004, 3.
9Another example of misuse of the Rand study
- Physicians deliver recommended care only about
half of the time. (citing McGlynn et al.) - Richard Hillestad et al., Can electronic
medical record systems transform health care?
Potential health benefits, savings, and costs,
Health Affairs 2005241103, 1110. - This article, also by Rand scholars, was funded
by the computer industry hailing the benefits of
EMRs.
10Rand facilitated misunderstanding our results
need no risk adjustment
- We primarily chose measures of processes as
indicators, because they represent the activities
that clinicians control most directly, and
because they do not generally require risk
adjustment. - Elizabeth McGlynn et al., The quality of
health care delivered to adults in the United
States, New England Journal of Medicine
20033482635-45, 37.
11Outcome and process measures
- Outcome measures reflect changes in patient
health. Examples mortality rates after surgery,
cholesterol level, and ability to carry out
activities of daily living. - Process measures reflect how well providers
comply with standards of care. Examples percent
of children vaccinated, and percent of diabetics
given eye exams.
12Underuse is affected by factors outside physician
control
- No health insurance or insurance with pre-ex
exclusions or out-of-pocket payments - Other barriers (patient values, low income,
illiteracy, immobility, transportation, daycare,
change in residence or insurance).
13Evidence that health insurance affects underuse
by diabetics
- Athough an estimated 35 percent of those with
health coverage had received a blood glucose
test, a cholesterol test, eye exam, foot exam,
and influenza vaccination, just 14 percent of
those without health coverage received the same
set of services. - US GAO, Managing Diabetes Health Plan Coverage
of Services and Supplies, February 2005, 19.
14Evidence that patient behavior affects process
measures
- Three-fifths of elderly Medicare beneficiaries
who receive an appropriate recommendation for
cholecystectomy fail to have it done - half of insured patients who should, according to
a stress test, have an angiogram do not get it
and - a fourth of insured patients who, according to
their angiogram, should have angioplasty or
bypass surgery receive neither. - Sources SM Asch et al., Measuring underuse of
necessary care among elderly Medicare
beneficiaries using inpatient and outpatient
claims, JAMA 20002842325-2333 (cholecystectomy
bullet) PP Garg et al., Understanding
individual and small area variation in the
underuse of coronary angiography following acute
myocardial infarction, Med Care 200240614-626,
and M Laouri et al., Underuse of coronary
angiography Application of a clinical method,
Int J Qual Health Care 1997915-22 (angiogram
bullet) LL Leape et al., Underuse of cardiac
procedures Do women, ethnic minorities, and the
uninsured fail to receive needed
revascularization? Ann Internal Med
1999130231-233, and M Laouri et al., Underuse
of coronary revascularization procedures
Application of a clinical method, J Am Coll
Cardiol 199729891-897.
15Patient refusal has been documented in studies of
- warfarin for atrial fibrillation,
- aspirin for heart attack,
- hypertension medication,
- vaccines for influenza and pneumonia,
- blood glucose tests,
- colorectal cancer screens, and
- radiation therapy for cancer.
- Sources SD Weisbord et al., Is warfarin really
underused in patients with atrial fibrillation?
J Gen Intern Med 200116743-749 J ONeil, A
small step for womens hearts, New York Times,
February 22, 2005, D6 BS Bloom, Continuation of
initial antihypertensive medication after one
year of therapy, Clin Ther 199820671-681 PR
Dexter et al., Inpatient computer-based standing
orders vs physician reminders to increase
influenza and pneumococcal vaccination rates A
randomized trial, JAMA 20042366-2371 VS
Elliott VS, Researchers call for more diabetes
testing, American Medical News, September 22/29,
2003, 19 LC Walter et al., Pitfalls of
converting practice guidelines into quality
measures Lessons learned from a VA performance
measure, JAMA 20042912466-2470 N Bickel et
al., The quality of early-stage breast cancer
care, Ann Surg 2000220-224..
16(Patient refusal cont.)
- Patient refusal accounted for 59 percent of the
underuse of colorectal cancer screens among
Veterans Affairs patients. - At a 2005 meeting of the American Heart
Association, investigators reported on a study
which found that doctors recommended aspirin on a
daily basis to about 95 percent of women who had
suffered heart attacks and stroke, but that only
54 percent of the heart-attack patients and 43
percent of the stroke patients complied with the
recommendation. - Sources Walter et al., op cit.(colorectal
bullet) ONeil, op cit. (aspirin bullet)
17Thus, current research permits us to say
- Overuse occurs 11 of the time and
- Misuse (malpractice) occurs lt1 of the time.
- Underuse due to provider failure occurs some
unknown percent of the time. - These figures reveal serious problems, but they
do not add up to ubiquitous.
18Exaggerating the problem of inferior providers
serves insurance industry
- Insurance industry has used the picture of inept
providers to promote managed care. - QI that does not assume inept providers and/or
which insurance companies cannot do that is,
which does not fall under the rubric of managed
care gets much less attention.
19Managed care is not the only way to improve
quality
- Other methods with more substantial evidence to
support them include - Ending the nurse shortage
- ending waiting times for emergency services
- insuring the uninsured and under-insured
- conducting public education campaigns re
appropriate medical care and the effects of
unhealthy behavior - rolling back the excesses of managed care
- measuring and sharing performance results
privately with providers - conducting controlled trials and other forms of
traditional research to find new treatments and
to evaluate the efficacy of existing treatments.
20Managed care has gone through two stages
- Managed Care 1.0 relied on
- financial incentives (capitation and bonuses),
and - utilization review and drug formularies.
- Managed Care 2.0 relies on
- report cards, which facilitate P4P, and
- disease management.
21Definition of terms
- Report cards Any document purporting to measure
the quality of care given by particular providers
which is used to reward or punish providers. - Pay for performance Any method of paying
providers based on grades on report cards.
22(Definitions cont.)
- Report card advocates propose that providers be
rewarded and punished by - market forces (plans, employers, and patients
avoid low-scoring providers and patronize
high-scoring providers), and/or - pay for performance (insurers pay low
scorers less, high scorers more).
23DMAAs definition of DM
- Activities conducted by third parties that
- Identify people with certain diseases by
examining their medical records or claims - Rely on evidence-based practice guidelines
- Educate patients (may include surveillance)
- Measure processes and outcomes and report the
results to patients and providers. - Source Disease Management Association of
America http//www.dmaa.org/definition.html,
accessed February 9, 2006.
24Another definition of DM
- Disease management is the latest catchphrase
in the ever-evolving American health care
spectacle. Disease management is a
systematic, population-based approach to identify
persons at risk, intervene with specific programs
of care, and measure clinical and other
outcomes. - Thomas Bodenheimer, Disease management
Promises and pitfalls, New Eng J Med
19993401202-1205, 1202.
25Report cards are now advocated simultaneously
with
- Interoperable electronic medical records (EMRs)
(aka, regional and national health information
networks) and - Pay-for-performance methods of reimbursement in
order to reward high scorers and punish low
scorers.
26Interoperable EMRs are advocated in order
- To facilitate collection of medical records on
all Minnesotans/Americans all the time, and - To risk adjust scores on report cards.
- Risk adjustment refers to the process of
adjusting scores on report cards to reflect
differences in patient health and other factors
outside of provider control.
27In sum, Managed Care 2.0 means
- (1) Report cards, which require
- interoperable EMRs and
- pay-for-performance methods of reimbursement and
- (2) Disease management.
28Managed Care 2.0 appeared in the wake of the
failure of MC 1.0
- Events of the past year demonstrate beyond a
doubt that managed care has failed and failed
dismally. The greatest single ethical crisis
facing American health care as we move into new
year is what to do about it. - Art Caplan, director of the Center for
Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania ("In
2001, managed care our No. 1 health crisis,"
MSNBC, December 21, 2001 http//www.msnbc.com/news
/671464.asp, accessed December 23, 2001).
29(Failure of MC 1.0 cont.)
- Managed care is basically over. People hate it,
and it's no longer controlling costs. Health-care
inflation is now back in the double digits. So if
it's not saving money, then why should we have
it? But like an unembalmed corpse decomposing,
dismantling managed care is going to be very
messy and very smelly, and take awhile. - George Lundberg, former editor of JAMA who as
recently as 1996 had co-authored an article
defending managed care (Linda Marsa, Former JAMA
editor laments the state of medical care, Los
Angeles Times, March 26, 2001, http//www.latimes.
com/print/health/200103 26/t000026016.html,
accessed March 28, 2001).
30MUHCCs position on report cards and
pay-for-performance
- Quality Report cards and P4P have not been shown
to improve quality, and some research indicates
they harm patients. - Cost Report cards and P4P have not been shown to
save money, and may raise costs. - Small-scale report card and P4P experiments
should be conducted report cards P4P should not
implemented on a wide scale.
31MUHCCs position on EMRs
- Quality EMRs may enhance quality in some clinics
and hospitals. Evidence does not support the
claim that making EMRs interoperable will improve
quality. - Cost Evidence does not support the claim that
EMRs, with or without interoperability, will
reduce cost. - Providers should not be required by government,
or given financial incentives financed by taxes,
to buy EMR hardware and software.
32MUHCCs position on disease management
- Quality DM has been shown to improve quality.
- Cost The evidence does not warrant the claim
that DM will save money. - Because DM can improve quality, research on
effective means of DM should continue, and
effective DM programs should be covered by
insurance or delivered through public health
agencies.
33Report cards
- The following slides examine the claims made for
report cards, pay-for-performance, and electronic
medical records.
34Governor claims report cards will improve
quality, reduce costs
- Rewarding providers for improved health
outcomes and encouraging patients to use the best
providers will not only help contain costs, it
will improve the quality of care, Pawlenty
said. (Governor Pawlenty unveils Smart Buy
Alliance to slow health care costs and improve
quality, press release, November 29, 2004,
http//www.governor.state.mn.us, accessed
November 30, 2004).
35The Legislature claims report cards improve
quality, cut costs
- Minnesota Statutes Sec. 62J.43, signed by
Governor Pawlenty on May 29, 2004, says - To improve quality and reduce health care
costs, state agencies shall encourage the
adoption of best practice guidelines. The
commissioner of health shall facilitate access to
quality of care measurement information to
providers, purchasers, and consumers by
disseminating information on adherence to best
practices care by physicians and other health
care providers.
36Governor-Legislature claims rely on three
assumptions
- (1) Report cards improve quality more often than
they damage quality - (2) Quality improvements inevitably lead to cost
reductions - (3) The cost reductions achieved by report cards
will outweigh the cost of producing report cards.
37There is little evidence that report cards
improve quality
- Despite extensive adoption of quality
measurement and reporting, little research
examines the effect of public reporting on the
delivery of health care, and even less examines
how report cards may improve care. The
potential negative consequences of public
reporting are largely unexplored. - Rachel M. Werner and David A. Asch, The
unintended consequences of publicly reporting
quality information, JAMA 20052931239-44, 39.
38Report cards could damage quality three ways
- (1) By being inaccurate (steering patients to
inferior doctors) - (2) By inducing doctors to reject sicker
patients - (3) By inducing doctors to shift resources from
unmeasured to measured patients.
39Report cards can be accurate for some things,
e.g., vacuum cleaners
- Consumer Reports report card on vacuum
cleaners - Offers grades on 38 vacuum cleaners on a
five-point scale (from excellent to poor). - 3 quality measures
- - cleaning (carpet, bare floors, w/ tools)
- - other results (ease of use, noise, emissions)
- - features (bag, brush, manual pile adj,
weight) - Kenmore (Sears) got 79 points, Sanyo Performax
and Panasonic Fold NGo got 53
40But patients are not floors, and doctors are not
vacuum cleaners
- Comparisons of quality are not useful if the
playing field is not level, that is, if the
conditions under which quality is measured are
not the same. - Keeping the playing field level is much easier to
do while measuring the quality of vacuum cleaners
than it is while measuring doctors and hospitals.
41Many factors outside provider control influence
health outcomes
- Factors that influence health outcomes that are
outside of provider control include - Patient health status prior to treatment
- Patient insurance status (presence of
deductibles and co-pays no coverage for service
being measured no coverage at all) - Patient income, education and values.
42Failure to measure health status affects scores
- The next slide illustrates how scores on
hospitals can be distorted when differences in
patient health are measured only crudely. It
shows that when stage of illness at admission
was ignored, 18 of 65 hospital units scored above
or below average, but when it was factored in,
only 6 scored above or below average.
43Hospital mortality rates vary depending on stage
of illness
- Hospital mortality rates for 13 hospitals and
five conditions under HCFA and Green-Wintfeld
Models - Actual Mortality Rate HCFA Model Green-Wintfeld
Model - Above expected range 8 2
- Within expected range 47 59
- Below expected range 10 4
- Total 65 65
- Low-risk heart disease, severe acute heart
disease, cancer, stroke, and pulmonary disease - HCFA adjusted mortality rates for only a few
of the factors that could have affected patient
mortality that were outside hospital control
(risk adjustment included age, sex, diagnoses
other than the principal diagnosis, number of
hospitalizations in the past 12 months, referral
source (physician or nursing home), and urgency
of admission (emergent, urgent, or elective)).
Green-Wintfeld added to the HCFA adjusters an
adjustment for stage of principal diagnosis at
admission.
44Income affects preventive services for insured
patients
- Lower SES socioeconomic status patients had
lower compliance with Pap smears, mammograms, and
diabetic eye exams, and were less likely to have
a referral or make any office visit. These
income effects are not confined to the poorest
patients but span the entire socioeconomic
spectrum. - Peter Franks et al., Effects of patients and
physician practice socioeconomic status on the
health care of privately insured managed care
patients, Medical Care 200341842-852, 842 - Patients were all insured by the same plan,
described as the largest local managed care
organization in the ten-county area surrounding
Rochester, New York.
45Quality-of-care scores for diabetics vary
depending on measure of quality
- (1) LDL cholesterol under 130 73
- (2) Measure (1) doctor has responded to high
- reading, patient has contraindications to
statins 87 - (3) Measures (1) (2) other factors 90
- Other factors included patient refuses to
take lipid-lowering medications lipid management
low priority or difficult to address no primary
care visit after high reading has active care
elsewhere other interventions tried within six
months of high reading (diet, exercise, or other
lipid-lowering drug). - Source Eve Kerr et al., Building a better
quality measure Are some patients with poor
quality actually getting good care? Medical
Care 2003411173-1182.
46Experts say risk adjustment of report card grades
is essential
- The interpretation of medical outcomes is
further complicated by the need to make
adjustments for comorbidity and the intensity and
state of the patients illness a far from
trivial undertaking. Paul Ellwood (Outcomes
management A technology of patient experience,
New England Journal of Medicine19883181549-1556)
. - The importance of co-morbidity must be
stressed.... If co-morbidity is not considered,
there will always be the potential for individual
providers to be unjustly accused of poor
quality because of patient selection. Richard
W. Asinger, MD (Constructive use of clinical
databases, The Medical Journal of Allina,
1996(1)31-34, 32). -
47(Experts say risk adjustment is essential, cont.)
- Case-mix adjustments are made in almost all
profile analyses to account for the differences
in provider performance attributable solely to
differences in the populations served (p. 764).
Risk adjustments contribute vitally to reducing
unfair profile evaluations (p. 765). Cindy L.
Christiansen and Carl N. Morris, Improving the
statistical approach to health care provider
profiling, Ann Intern Med 1997127764-768. - Accurate risk adjustment is necessary for
observational and health services research,
including comparison of outcomes of different
treatments and quality assessment. Jay F.
Piccirillo et al., Prognostic importance of
comorbidity in a hospital-based cancer registry,
JAMA 200429124241-47.
48(Experts say risk adjustment is essential, cont.)
- We found that patient characteristics were
315 times more important than hospital
characteristics in predicting mortality after
simple surgery, so small errors in risk
adjustment may loom large compared to hospital
differences. - Jeffrey H. Silver and Paul R. Rosenbaum, A
spurious correlation between hospital mortality
and complication rates The importance of
severity adjustment, Medical Care
199735OS77-OS92, Supplement, OS87.
49Unadjusted report cards damage access for sicker
patients
- Performance-based contracting gave providers of
substance abuse treatment financial incentives to
treat less severe OSA Office of Substance Abuse
clients in order to improve their performance
outcomes. Fewer OSA clients with the greatest
severity were treated in outpatient programs with
the implementation of PBC performance-based
contracting. - Yujing Shen, Selection incentives in a
performance-based contracting system, Health
Services Research 200338535-552, 535.
50Even risk-adjusted report cards can damage access
for sicker diabetics
- We found that if those physicians with the
worst profiles . . . for 1991 managed to
discourage the patients with the top 5 of HbA1c
levels (representing only 1-3 patients per
physician) from returning to their panel, they
would in most cases achieve a panel HbA1c profile
in 1992 that would be substantially improved than
average. . . . . Thus, the patients HbA1c levels
from the previous year proved a far better
predictor of what a patients HbA1c level would
be in the current year, better than . . . our
case-mix adjusters. Manipulating their patient
pool, based on a patients prior year HbA1c
level, is the easiest way for physicians to have
a substantial improvement in their profile - Timothy P. Hofer et al., The unreliability of
individual physician report cards for assessing
the costs and quality of chronic disease, JAMA,
19992812098-2105, 2103 emphasis added.
51New Yorks heart surgery report card
- First physician-specific report card
- Grades performance of hospitals and surgeons on
heart surgery using 30-day mortality as quality
measure - Considered most accurate report card in America
- Has been more carefully examined that any other
report card
52New York heart surgery report card is the gold
standard
- New York States measurement and publication of
coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery
mortality rates has emerged as a model in the
campaign for useful performance data. The
reality is that these measures of performance are
the best available, and that substantial
improvements are not likely for some years. - Stephen F. Jencks, Clinical performance
measurement -- a hard sell, JAMA
20002832015-2016, 2015, 2016.
53NY heart surgery report card is rigorously
adjusted
- 72 risk factors are adjusted
- They include
- number of coronary arteries occluded and degree
of occlusion - previous heart attack
- hemodynamic state just prior to surgery (ability
to maintain blood pressure) - chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- kidney failure
- smoking history (last two weeks, last year)
54NY report card is expensive
- The New York Department of Health pays for
- five full-time equivalent staff maintaining the
database... and - a utilization review agent to audit a sample
of 50 cases from half the hospitals each year. - The three dozen heart surgery hospitals in NY pay
for - data coordinators to collect and maintain their
databases most hospitals have a full-time
coordinator dedicated to this task. - Source Edward L. Hannan et al., Public release
of cardiac surgery outcomes data in New York
What do New York state cardiologists think of
it? Am Heart J 199713455-61, 62)
55Results of 1998-2000 NY report card on 34 CABG
hospitals
- Statewide 30-day mortality average 2.32
- Three hospitals had higher-than-expected rates
- Two hospitals had lower-than-expected rates
- 29 hospitals had expected rates
- Source New York Department of Health, Adult
Cardiac Surgery in New York State, 1998-2000,
http//www. health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/heart/pdf/19
98_2000) cabg.pdf, accessed January 16, 2005.
56Results of 2000-2002 NY report card on 36 CABG
hospitals
- Statewide 30-day mortality average 2.27
- Three hospitals had higher-than-expected rates
- Three hospitals had lower-than-expected rates
- 30 hospitals had expected rates
- Source New York Department of Health, Adult
Cardiac Surgery in New York State,2000-2002.
57Outliers on 1998-2000 and 2000-2002 NY hospital
CABG reports
- 1998-2000 2000-2002
- High mortality rates
- Albany Med Ctr (4.08) Buffalo General (4.67)
- Ellis Hosp (6.13) Mount Sinai (4.86)
- Mount Sinai (6.01) NY Hospitals Ctr (4.31)
- Low mortality rates
- Lenox Hill (1.15) St. Josephs (0.90)
- Winthrop U Hosp (1.10) Staten Island (0.82)
- Vassar Brothers (0.00)
58Rates for 1998-2000 NY hospital outliers two
years later
- 1998-2000 2000-2002
- Albany Med Ctr 4.08 2.83
- Ellis Hosp 6.13 3.29
- Mount Sinai 6.01 4.86
-
- Lenox Hill 1.15 2.02
- Winthrop U Hosp 1.10 2.78
-
59Change in outlier status among 156
surgeons,1998-2000 to 2000-2002 report
- 156 surgeons met criteria for grading in
1998-2000 report 21 (13) were outliers - 14 had higher-than-expected mortality rates
- 7 had lower-than-expected mortality rates
- All 21 outliers were graded in 2000-2002 report,
but in that period only 6 of these 21 were
outliers - Criteria were either 200 operations during
this period, or at least one operation in each of
1998, 1999, and 2000. - Source Calculations by Kip Sullivan based on
data in New York Department of Health, Adult
Cardiac Surgery in New York State, 1998-2000,
http//www. health.state.ny.us/nysdoh/heart/pdf/19
98_2000) cabg.pdf, accessed January 16, 2005.
60Study suggested New York report card improves
quality
- Odds of death from CABG surgery in
- NY relative to rest of US, 1994-1999 0.67
-
- Source Edward L. Hannan et al., Provider
profiling and quality improvement efforts in
coronary artery bypass graft surgery, Medical
Care 2003411164-1172, Table 4, 1170 (subjects
were Medicare beneficiaries risk adjustment was
done with 12 adjusters from administrative data)
61But the study in the preceding slide was poorly
done
- The study in the preceding slide is not
credible because it examined mortality rates only
among New Yorkers who underwent CABG surgery. The
study did not attempt to determine if NY surgeons
were refusing to perform surgery on sicker heart
patients. The next several slides indicate that
is what happened.
62Recent studies find NY report card damages health
overall
- Our results show that report cards on heart
surgeons led to increased expenditures for both
healthy and sick patients, marginal health
benefits for healthy patients, and major adverse
health consequences for sicker patients. Thus, we
conclude that report cards reduced our measure of
welfare over the time period of our study (p.
577). More severely ill patients experienced
dramatically worsened health outcomes (p. 583).
David Dranove et al., Is more information
better? The effects of report cards on health
care providers, Journal of Political Economy
2003111555-588.
63Reason NY report card induces surgeons to reject
sicker patients
- Mandatory reporting mechanisms inevitably
give providers the incentive to decline to treat
more difficult and complicated patients (p.
581). Report cards led to a decline in the
illness severity of patients receiving CABG in
New York relative to patients in states without
report cards (p. 583). - David Dranove et al., Is more information
better? The effects of report cards on health
care providers, Journal of Political Economy
2003111555-588.
64(NY report card induces surgeons to reject sicker
patients, cont.)
- The December 19, 1991 Newsday article stated
that several NY surgeons warned that some
surgeons were turning down difficult cases to
protect their statistics (p. 410). An article
appeared in the New York Times entitled Faint
hearts. As fate would have it, a woman was
turned down for surgery because she had a fresh,
large myocardial infarction. Her daughter was a
reporter for the New York Times. After great
difficulty, the daughter eventually found a
surgeon who would operate on her mother (p.
411). - Bradley J. Harlan, Statewide reporting of
coronary artery surgery results A view from
California, J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
2001121(3)409-17.
65(NY report card induces surgeons to reject sicker
patients, cont.)
- The incentive to refuse treatment for high-risk
patients has created a kind of spiritual crisis
in the field of cardiac surgery. Heart surgeons
are shrinking from taking on the toughest cases
because of statistics. - Sandeep Jauhar (When doctors slam the door
Under the current system, a doctors reputation
may depend on his or her willingness to turn away
a dying man, New York Times Magazine, March 16,
2003, 30, 34).
66Even the best surgeons dont trust the NY report
card
- There is nothing that separates me from the
rest of the people on the list, Dr. Jeffrey
Gold said. And even though Dr.Gold is ranked at
the top of the 1994 report, he has qualms about
it. Im concerned about the predictability of
it, he said. I certainly would not use it as
the sole way of selecting an institution or a
surgeon. - Elisabeth Bumiller (Death rankings shake New
York cardiac surgeons, New York Times, September
6, 1995, A1, B11)
67New Yorks angioplasty report card is having a
similar effect
- An overwhelming majority of cardiologists 79
in New York say that, in certain instances, they
do not operate on patients who might benefit from
heart surgery, because they are worried about
hurting their rankings on physician scorecards
issued by the state, according to a survey
released today. - Marc Santora, Cardiologists say rankings sway
choices on surgery, New York Times, January 11,
2005, A18.
68Report cards cause resource shifts to services
being graded
- Although paying for high quality is an
innovation with obvious potential benefits, it
may also lead to the misallocation of
resources. The medical director at one of
Californias largest managed-care organizations
described the problem succinctly 'Everybody's
doing what they are required to do in responding
to the quality measurements that are being used.
Every ounce of energy is being diverted to
responding to these not one ounce of energy is
going to any other aspect of quality. - Lawrence Casalino, The unintended consequences
of measuring quality on the quality of medical
care," New England Journal of Medicine
19993411147-1150, 1147.
69(NYs angioplasty report card, cont.)
- The patient population in the Michigan
angioplasty registry had a significantly higher
frequency of comorbidities. A case selection
bias driven by the fear of public reporting of
higher mortality rates in New York was one
possible explanation . - Mauro Moscucci et al., Public reporting and
case selection for percutaneous coronary
interventions, J Am Coll Cardiology
2005451759-65. -
70(Report cards cause resource shift, cont.)
- If providers face a number of tasks and
resources are limited, then effort will be
allocated toward those tasks that are explicitly
rewarded, taking resources away from other
activities. Inevitably, ... the dimensions of
care that will receive the most attention will be
those that are most easily measured and not
necessarily those that are most valued. - Meredith B. Rosenthal et al., Paying for
quality Providers incentives for quality
improvement, Health Affairs 200423(2)127-141,13
9.
71(Report cards cause resource shift, cont.)
- From the present study which found HMOs were
less likely to detect colorectal cancer early
and the earlier breast cancer study which
found HMOs were more likely to detect breast
cancer early one can infer that the incentives
of health plans are to allocate resources to
those activities upon which they are measured.
This suggests that preventive screening for
conditions such as colorectal cancer that are not
required to be in a report card (such as HEDIS)
are more likely to be neglected. - Anna Lee-Feldstein et al., Health care factors
related to stage at diagnosis and survival among
Medicare patients with colorectal cancer, Med
Care 200240362-374, 374.
72Example of a shift in resources triggered by
report cards
- It may seem that an optimal performance
standard would be to maximize the percentage of
patients who have an HbA1c lt7.0. Such a standard
may divert a health systems attention from
treating poorly controlled patients to
disproportionately focusing on the larger numbers
of patients who are slightly above this cutoff. - Rodney A. Hayward et al., Quality improvement
initiatives, Diabetes Care 2004 27 (Suppl.
2)B54-B60, B56.
73Reports on number of procedures do not pose risks
report cards do
- For a few procedures, evidence exists that
quality is higher at hospitals that do high
volumes of those procedures. Reports on the
number of procedures do not create the three
report card risks - (1) Inaccuracy
- (2) Doctors avoiding sicker patients
- (3) Doctors shifting resources away from
unmeasured to measured services
74Practice makes perfect rule has been found for
- Treatment for AIDS (strong correlation)
- Pancreatic cancer surgery (strong)
- Esophageal cancer surgery (strong)
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery (strong)
- Congenital heart disease surgery (strong)
- Coronary-artery bypass surgery (weak)
- Coronary angioplasty (weak correlation)
- Carotid endarterectomy (weak)
- Other types of surgery for cancer (weak)
- Some orthopedic procedures (weak)
- Treatment of low-birth-weight and premature
babies (weak) - Source Kenneth W. Kizer, The volume-outcome
conundrum, New England Journal of Medicine
20033492159-2161.
75Review
- We have reviewed the first of three assumptions
that have to be true in order for report cards to
work that report cards improve quality of care.
Report cards can damage quality three ways - (1) By being inaccurate
- (2) by inducing providers to refuse to treat
sicker patients (regardless of how accurate the
report card is) and - (3) by inducing providers and plans to shift
resources away from unmeasured services.
76We turn now to the last two assumptions about
report cards
- (2) Quality improvements inevitably lead to cost
reductions - (3) The cost reductions achieved by report cards
outweigh the cost of producing report cards.
77Quality improvement does not inevitably lead to
lower costs
- Although it's a widely held belief that
quality health care leads to lower costs,
insurers have no data that directly measures
return on investment of their P4P
pay-for-performance programs. Healthleaders
(Paula DeWitt , The new incentive plan, March
2004, http//www.healthleaders.com/magazine/cover.
php? contentid53006, accessed April 10, 2004)
78(Quality improvement does not lead inevitably to
lower costs, cont.)
- Results of this study show that it is possible
to increase SFDs symptom free days in children
with asthma. However, the improvements were
realized with an increase in the costs associated
with asthma care. - Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
(S.D. Sullivan et al., A multisite randomized
trial of the effects of physician education and
organizational change in chronic asthma care
Cost-effectiveness analysis of the Pediatric
Asthma Care Patient Outcomes Research Team II
(PAC-PORT II), 2005159428-434, 428).
79(Quality improvement and costs, cont.)
- Right from the start, it has been one of the
great illusions that quality and cost go in
opposite directions. There remains very little
evidence of that. - Donald Berwick, President and CEO, Institute
for Healthcare Improvement (A deficiency of
will and ambition A conversation with Donald
Berwick, Health Affairs, Web Exclusive,
January-June 2005, W5-1-W5-9, 7)
80Report card infrastructure will be expensive
- To achieve an NHIN (National Health Information
Network) would cost 156 billion in capital
investment over 5 years and 48 billion annual
operating costs or a total of about 400 billion
over 5 years, or 2 of total spending. - Note This is infrastructure only. The cost of
grading thousands of services provided by
hundreds of thousands of providers is extra. - Rainu Kaushal et al., The costs of a National
Health Information Network, Ann Int Med
2005143165-73, 165
81Report cards on providers suffer defects similar
to those on schools
- No Child Left Behind report cards on schools
have been criticized for the same reasons
provider report cards have - They dont adjust for factors outside school
control and are therefore inaccurate - they shift resources away from unmeasured
services and - they are costly.
82Bipartisan group concluded NCLB impedes quality
improvement
- The underlying problem is that all schools
are measured equally, regardless of differences
in socioeconomic factors or unique challenges
the schools face (p 15). Schools are
reluctant to accept transfers because they fear
it would increase their chance of failing (p.
22) - National Conference of State Legislatures, Task
Force on NCLB, Final Report, February 2005.
83Governor assumes Alliance can measure quality
accurately
- The Smart Buy Alliance will adopt uniform
methods of measuring quality of care and will
purchase health care based upon those
measurements. Consumers and purchasers cannot
make good decisions in the marketplace without
access to easy-to-understand information about
health care ... quality. The Alliance will
require health plans and providers to participate
in efforts to make such information available.
The Community Measurement Project is an
example of the type of information to be made
available. (Governor Pawlenty unveils Smart
Buy Alliance to slow health care costs and
improve quality, press release, November 29,
2004, http//www.governor.state.mn.us, accessed
November 30, 2004).
84Diabetes quality measures, Community Measurement
Project
- None of these measures is risk-adjusted
- (1) patients with HbA1c less than or equal to
8.0 (and 7.0) OUTCOME - (2) patients with LDL-cholesterol less than 130
(and 100) OUTCOME - (3) patients with blood pressure less than
130/85 (and 130/80) OUTCOME - (4) patients over age 40 taking aspirin
PROCESS - (5) patients known to be nonsmokers OUTCOME
- (6) patients with annual screening for kidney
and eye complications PROCESS - (7) A composite of the first five measures
- An outcome measure is one that measures the
effect of treatment on patient health. Survival
after surgery is an example of an outcome
measure. So too is reported pain level in
arthritis patients following drug treatment. The
outcome measures shown above are sometimes called
intermediate outcome measures because they are
not equivalent to absence of disease but are
rather physiological indicators that serve as
rough predictors of health in the future. A
process measure is one that measures how
frequently doctors complied with a recommended
process, such as taking blood pressure or
administering beta blockers after a heart attack. - Source Gail M. Amundson and John Frederick,
Medical group quality data a reality,
MetroDoctors The Journal of the Hennepin and
Ramsey Medical Societies, January/February 2004,
17-19.
85HMO advocates have called for report cards for 35
years
- A performance reporting system of proven
reliability would be developed and installed to
provide both individual consumers and quantity
buyers (e.g., HEW) with accurate information on
the comparative performance of alternative
sources of health care. (HMOs would be required
to make such information available.) - Paul M. Ellwood et al. (Health maintenance
strategy, Medical Care 19719291-298, 297). -
86(HMO advocates have called for report cards,
cont.)
- The development of an effective system of
collecting and disseminating data on quality and
outcomes is an essential component of a health
care reform strategy. Such a strategy will allow
the monitoring of the impact of cost containment
initiatives on health care quality. . . . The
Commission and the Commissioner of Health will
work collaboratively to collect and disseminate
comparative data on the quality of services
provided by providers, health plans, and ISNs in
order to facilitate competition and continuously
improve systemwide health care quality. - Minnesota Health Care Commission (Containing
Costs in Minnesotas Health Care System A Report
to Governor Arne H. Carlson and the Minnesota
Legislature, January 25, 1993, 28).
87High-deductible advocates also call for report
cards
- Consumer-directed health care supposes a new
formulation one driven by consumers with
cash-in-hand, demanding to know for themselves
who is the best urologist in town, how do I get
the most value for the money Im spending?
Information systems to support this movement will
grow exponentially. But the information ... is
not an end to itself. The real revolution will
come when health-care consumers use that
information to reward higher quality and punish
the mediocre. - Greg Scandlen, Galen Institute (How
consumer-driven health care evolves in a dynamic
market, Health Services Research
2004391113-1118, 1117)
88But accurate report cards are almost nonexistent
- "We have no assurances that the competition of
health plans . . . will reward those who
deliver higher quality care. . . . Purchasers
and consumers have not, so far, rewarded or
punished plans based on quality. . . . If
purchasers and consumers had tools that allowed
them to buy on quality, ... the thinking that lay
behind the original HMO movement may still play
out" - Paul M. Ellwood, Jr. and George D. Lundberg,
("Managed Care A Work in Progress," Journal of
the American Medical Association
19962761083-1086, 1085).
89(Accurate report cards are almost nonexistent,
cont.)
- Physician profiles are not and may never be
ready for public consumption. - Andrew Bindman,Can physician profiles be
trusted? JAMA 1999281 2142-2143, 2143)
90(Accurate report cards are almost nonexistent,
cont.)
- Hospital profiling remains an unproven strategy
for improving outcomes of care. - David W. Baker et al., Mortality trends during
a program that publicly reported hospital
performance, Medical Care 200240879-90, 879.
91Quality can be improved without report cards
- The Cooperative Cardiovascular Project induced
large improvements in quality of care of heart
attack patients in four pilot states by giving
doctors feedback (at the hospital, in seminars,
by phone, and by mail). - Improvements included increased use of aspirin
(84 to 90) and beta blockers (47 to 68), and
reduced one-year mortality (32.3 to 29.6). - Source Thomas A. Marciniak et al., Improving
the quality of care for Medicare patients with
acute myocardial infarction Results from the
Cooperative Cardiovascular Project, JAMA
199821791351-1357
92(Quality improvement without report cards, cont.)
- Other methods of improving quality without
report cards include - (1) Traditional research
- (2) Establishing universal health insurance
- (3) Reducing drug prices
- (4) Ending the nurse shortage
- (5) Public health programs.
93Electronic medical records (EMRs)
- The following slides demonstrate that the
evidence does not support the claim that
interoperable EMRs will improve quality or reduce
costs.
94Advocates claim EMRs can do it all
- By computerizing health records, we can avoid
dangerous medical mistakes, reduce costs, and
improve care. - George W. Bush, State of the Union Address,
January 20, 2004 (quoted in Rainu Kaushal et al.,
The costs of a National Health Information
Network, Ann Int Med 2005143165-173, 165).
95(Advocates claims re EMRs cont.)
- It is widely believed that broad adoption of
electronic medical records (EMR) systems will
lead to major health care savings, reduce medical
errors, and improve health. - Richard Hillestad et al., Can electronic
medical record systems transform health care?
Potential health benefits, savings, and costs,
Health Affairs 20051103-1117, 1103.
96Proponents make three claims
- (1) EMRs save time
- (2) EMRs improve doctors decisions
- (3) EMRs facilitate the production of report
cards which in turn improve quality. - None of these claims have been proven.
97EMRs have not been shown to save time for
providers
- With the exception of pharmacy settings, there
is little consistent evidence that IT
information technology systems save time for
providers. In some instances, the literature
suggests the reverse. - Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (Report to
Congress New Approaches in Medicare, June 2004,
163)
98(EMRs dont save time, cont.)
- Only 13 of 100 trials evaluated the impact
of the CDSS clinical decision support systems
on clinician workflow, with more than half of
these CDSSs requiring more time and effort from
the user compared with paper-based methods. - Amit X. Garg et al., Effects of computerized
clinical decision support systems on practitioner
performance and patient outcomes A systematic
review, JAMA 20052931223-1238, 1226.
99EMRs have not been shown to improve health
- Fifty-two trials of clinical decision support
systems assessed patient outcomes . Only 7
trials reported improved patient outcomes. - Amit X. Garg et al., Effects of computerized
clinical decision support systems on practitioner
performance and patient outcomes A systematic
review, JAMA 20052931223-1238, 1231.
100(EMRs and health, cont.)
- In 2001, the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality determined that 14 safety practices had
greater strength of evidence regarding their
impact and effectiveness than any practice which
relied on IT. These include such low-cost items
as appropriate provision of nutrition and use
of maximum sterile barriers while placing central
intravenous catheters to prevent infections. - Medpac (Report to Congress New Approaches in
Medicare, June 2004, 162)
101Some studies report harm done by computers
- We found that a widely used CPOE computerized
physician order entry system facilitated 22
types of medication error risks. Examples include
fragmented CPOE displays that prevent a coherent
view of patients medications, pharmacy inventory
displays mistaken for dosage guidelines, and
inflexible ordering formats generating wrong
orders. - Ross Koppel et al., Role of computerized
physician order entry systems in facilitating
medication errors, JAMA 20052931197-1203.
102NHIN advocates favorite studies are opinions,
not evidence
- Two papers cited frequently by EMR advocates
- Richard Hillestad et al., Can electronic
medical record systems transform health care?
Potential health benefits, savings, and costs,
Health Affairs 20051103-1117, 1103. - Jan Walker et al., The value of health care
information exchange and interoperability,
Health Affairs Web Exclusives, January-June 2005
24, Suppl. 1)W5-10-18.
103Hillestad et al.
- Conclusion Fully standardized HIEI health
care information exchange and interoperability
could yield a net value of 77.8 billion per
year. - According to an accompanying paper, savings
would amount to 1.6 percent of health spending in
2019 (Clifford Goodman, Do it for the quality,
1125)
104(Hillestad et al. cont.)
- Authors are part of the Rand HIT Project.
- Funded by Cerner, GE, Hewlett-Packard, Johnson
and Johnson, and Xerox. - Their methods were extraordinarily biased
- The currently useful evidence is not robust
enough to make strong predictions, and we
describe our results only as potential. - We chose to interpret reported evidence of
negative or no effect of HIT as likely being
attributable to ineffective or not-yet effective
implementation.
105Walker et al.
- Conclusion Net savings from national
implementation of fully standardized
interoperability between providers and five other
types of organizations could yield 77.8 billion
annually, or approximately 5 percent of the
projected 1.661 trillion spent on US health care
in 2003 (W5-10)
106(Walker et al. cont.)
- Funded by the Foundation for the eHealth
Initiative, which is funded by the computer and
insurance industries among others. - We convened a panel of nationally known
experts. With relatively little research and
literature on the value of HIEI health care
information exchange and interoperability, the
panelists played an important role.
107Disease management
- The following slides demonstrate that disease
management (DM) is promoted by insurance
companies and DM vendors, and that the evidence
does not support the claim that disease
management will reduce health care costs.
108Disease Management Association of Americas
board, 2006
- Lifemasters Jefferson Medical College
- Wellpoint Dept of Mental Health, TN
- Geisinger Health Plan American Healthways
- McKesson Health Solutions Air Logix
- Matria Healthcare Magellan Health Services
- Caremark Rx Sanofi-Aventis
- Fibrogen Kaiser Permanente
- Pitney-Bowes American College of
- Astra-Zeneca Pharmaceuticals Cardiology
109DM was begun by the drug industry
- The boom in DM was initiated by the
pharmaceutical industry. By 1995, most
pharmaceutical manufacturers had unveiled a
variety of DM programs. Merck-Medco Managed
Care sells its diabetes DM program to
employers and plans , identifying patients
with diabetes through its 51-million-person
pharmacy data base. - Thomas Bodenheimer, Disease management
Promises and pitfalls, New Eng J Med
19993401202-1205, 1202.
110No evidence that disease management saves money
- On the basis of its examination of
peer-reviewed studies of disease management
programs, CBO finds that to date there is
insufficient evidence to conclude that disease
management programs can generally reduce the
overall cost of health care services. - Congressional Budget Office (An Analysis of the
Literature on Disease Management Programs,
October 13, 2004, http//www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?i
ndex5909sequence0, accessed September 25,
2005) -
111(DM doesnt cut costs, cont.)
- Although interest in disease management
programs is growing, evidence of their clinical
and cost effectiveness remains limited. Without
many attractive alternative mechanisms to control
costs, many employers are adopting disease
management despite the lack of evidence. - Center for Studying Health System Change
(Ashley Short et al., Disease management A leap
of faith to lower-cost, higher-quality health
care, October 2003, Issue Brief No. 69, 3)
112(DM doesnt cut costs, cont.)
- Despite high expectations, evidence of both
disease management and case management programs
success in controlling costs and improving
quality remains limited. - Center for Studying Health System Change
(Ashley Short et al., Disease management A leap
of faith to lower-cost, higher-quality health
care, Issue Brief No. 69, October 2003).
113(DM doesnt cut costs, cont.)
- A growing number of DM programs offer to
monitor patients with chronic conditions and help
avoid dangerous complications. But the long-term
cost effectiveness of such programs has been hard
to measure. ... There is a chance DM programs
could actually raise costs. - Wall Street Journal (Laura Landro, Does
disease management pay off, October 20, 2004,
D4).
114(DM doesnt cut costs, cont.)
- Weve made real progress in keeping people
healthier who have chronic illnesses, says
Edward Wagner with Group Health Cooperatives
Center for Health Studies in Seattle. But we
still dont know definitively what the economic
impacts of disease management are. Dr. Wagner
expresses skepticism about outsourced
disease-management programs. - Wall Street Journal (