Title: COMPARATIVE%20EFFECTIVENESS%20RESEARCH%20AND%20the%20California%20MEDI-CAL%20Program
1COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH AND the
California MEDI-CAL Program
- Len Finocchio, Dr.P.H
- Associate Director
- California Department of Health Care Services
2background
3Beneficiary Profile
California HealthCare Foundation. Medi-Cal Facts
Figures. September 2009
4Income Limits for Eligibility
California HealthCare Foundation. Medi-Cal Facts
Figures. September 2009
5Scope of Benefits
California HealthCare Foundation. Medi-Cal Facts
Figures. September 2009
- Covered for those under 21 and in nursing
homes
6Managed Care Fee-for-Service
7Expenditures
45 billion Total 2010-2011
California HealthCare Foundation. Medi-Cal Facts
Figures. September 2009
8Highest Expenditures
California HealthCare Foundation. Medi-Cal Facts
Figures. September 2009
9Managing Medi-Cal Expenditures
- Better delivery of existing services
- Care coordination management, focus on
prevention - Reduce the number of beneficiaries
- Scale back income eligibility thresholds
- Reduce scope of benefits
- Curtail or eliminate optional benefits (e.g.
dental, chiropractic) - Reduce provider reimbursements
- Value-based purchasing
- Delegate financial risk measure performance
- Non-payment for health care-acquired conditions
- Evidence-based service design
10Proposed Reductions FY2102-13
Health Human Services CalWorks 946.2
Health Human Services Medi-Cal 842.3
Health Human Services In-Home Supportive Services 163.8
Health Human Services Other HHS Programs 86.9
Education Prop 98 544.4
Education Child Care 446.9
Education Cal Grants 301.7
Education Other Education 28.0
All Other Reductions State Mandates 828.3
All Other Reductions Other Reductions 27.3
Total Expenditure Reductions Total Expenditure Reductions 4,215.8
Governors Proposed 2012-2013 Budget. Health
Human Services. http//www.ebudget.ca.gov/pdf/Budg
etSummary/HealthandHumanServices.pdf
11Cost Saving Proposals in Budget
- Improved care coordination for senior disabled
beneficiaries - Federally Qualified Health Center payment reform
- Managed care expansion to rural areas
- Align open enrollment with commercial plan
policies - Value-based service design
12Reasons for Better Purchasing
- Buy better value with limited public resources
- State budget shortfalls 26 billion last year
9 billion this year - Bend the cost curve
- Improve quality of care health of beneficiaries
- Maintain income eligibility and benefit levels
- Prepare for large program expansion in 2014
13Value-based service design
14Key Issues Questions
- Medical interventions often adopted without
rigorous evidence - New interventions are more effective than the
previous standard of practice - Can we perform technology assessment
retrospectively? - Can we selectively purchase health services using
evidence? - Can we selectively purchase health services in a
systematic transparent, not haphazard, way?
15Value-Based Service Design
- Assure beneficiary access to necessary health
care services - Identify and reduce services that
- Do not improve health outcomes
- May cause harm to patients
- Are overused should only be provided under
limited conditions. - Not synonymous with addition or removal of
benefits covered under the State Plan.
16Systematic Evidence Review
- Evidence-based treatment guidelines from
organizations whose primary mission is to conduct
objective analyses of the effectiveness of
medical interventions - National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence (NICE) - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
- US Preventive Services Task Force
- Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute
- Individual studies in peer reviewed literature
- Clinical practice guidelines published by medical
and scientific societies.
17Ranking Interventions
DESIRABLE
UNDESIRABLE
Hazardous High-volume Expensive
Effective High-volume Cost-saving
Questionable effectiveness Moderate-volume Moderat
e expense
18Examples of Candidates
- Where evidence shows little or questionable
value - Vertebroplasty
- Implantable cardioverter difibrillators
- Arthroscopic surgery for knee osteoarthritis
- Exercise electrocardiogram for angina
- Lumbar imaging for lower back pain
19Determine Costs Feasibility
- Determine potential costs and savings from
modifying, curtailing or eliminating targeted
services. - Â Determine feasibility of implementation
- Evaluate the cost and timeframe for computer
system changes - Staffing expertise needed to craft policies
that effectively limit inappropriate use of a
service without interfering with appropriate
(i.e., scientifically justified) use of that same
service - Ability to use utilization management staff to
effectively manage the targeted services - Identify services requiring prior authorization
for any particular beneficiary
20Transparency Stakeholder Engagement
- Consult with stakeholders
- Including health professionals, Medi-Cal
providers, and consumer advocacy organizations
prior to modifications to targeted services - Notification about proposed changes
- To targeted services, rate methodologies and
payment policies - Receive, review and respond to written input
- Regarding changes and provide a public
stakeholder meetings - Provide for an appropriate and meaningful
response - Notify the legislature
- Of the action taken and reasons for the action.
21Issues with Implementation
- Systematizing evidence review
- Consumer preferences, fear, knowledge
- Managing stakeholder engagement
- Lobbying by professional and advocacy groups
- Push me Pull You of expanding coverage while
contracting services/benefits
22For Research Community
- Build body of related research comparative
effectiveness of services and - Consumer perceptions
- Practitioner behaviors
- Deepen working relationships with major payers
- Communicate effectively and strategically about
findings - Take the long view
23thanks
- Len Finocchio, DrPH
- len.finocchio_at_dhcs.ca.gov
- 916.440.7400