HIDA Webinar Series. ACOs and Acute Care Reimbursement Trends



Similar documents
HEALTHCARE REFORM OCTOBER 2012

ACO FINANCIAL AND STRATEGIC ANALYSIS

eacos The Next Generation of Health Plans

Accountable Care Communities 101. Jennifer M. Flynn, Esq. Senior Director, State Affairs Premier healthcare alliance January 30, 2014

Value Based Care and Healthcare Reform

Maximizing Partnerships in the Changing Healthcare Delivery System

Voluntary Alignment Frequently Asked Questions

Reimbursement Outlook and Analysis

7/31/2014. Medicare Advantage: Time to Re-examine Your Engagement Strategy. Avalere Health. Eric Hammelman, CFA. Overview

HAI LEADERSHIP PARTNERING FOR ACCOUNTABLE CARE

Chapter Three Accountable Care Organizations

Presented by Kathleen S. Wyka, AAS, CRT, THE AFFORDABLE CA ACT AND ITS IMPACT ON THE RESPIRATORY C PROFESSION

ACO s as Private Label Insurance Products

What is an ACO? What forms of organizations may become an ACO? IAMSS 30 th Annual Education Conference Pearls of Wisdom

What is an Accountable Care Organization. Amit Rastogi, MD President/CEO PriMed

OrthoIndex. Is this the Future? Shared Risk Initiatives: Bundled Payment, Private payer ACOs, and Network Provider Panels

THE EVOLUTION OF CMS PAYMENT MODELS

Anatomy of an ACO. Through the Eyes of a Physician-owned IPA. Genesis Accountable Care Organization

10 Key Concepts for Higher Sales into ACOs

Accountable Care Organizations: Opportunities & Challenges for SNFs

Accountable Care Organizations and Behavioral Health. Indiana Council of Community Mental Health Centers October 11, 2012

National Provider Call: Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program

Accelerating Innovation in Health Care Payment and Delivery: The CMS Innovation Center

October 18, Articulating the Value Proposition of Innovative Medical Technologies in the Healthcare Reform Landscape

AHLA. Q. Medicaid ACOs: Coming to a Neighborhood Near You. Clifford E. Barnes Epstein Becker & Green PC Washington, DC

PL and Amendments: Impact on Post-Acute Care for Health Care Systems

Nuts and Bolts Accountable Care Organizations: A New Care Delivery Model for New Expectations

Health Care Reform Update January 2012 MG LILLY USA, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Navigating CMS Incentive Programs for Eligible Professionals Why It Matters and What You Need to Know. Dr. Paul Mulhausen, CMO

Gold Coast Health IT Resource Center. Accountable Care Organization (ACO)

Value-Based Programs. Blue Plans Improving Healthcare Quality and Affordability through Innovative Partnerships with Clinicians

Advancing Accountable Care

Value-Based Purchasing Program Overview. Maida Soghikian, MD Grand Rounds Scripps Green Hospital November 28, 2012

Steven E. Ramsland, Ed.D., Senior Associate, OPEN MINDS The 2015 OPEN MINDS Performance Management Institute February 13, :15am 11:30am

Key Design Feature Scope of services Governance Payment Measurement & Evaluation

LTC Division Webinar Accountable Care Organizations and LTC Pharmacy - The New Era in Health Care Delivery

See page 16. Thomas A. Vallas

How Health Reform Will Affect Health Care Quality and the Delivery of Services

INTRO TO THE MICHIGAN PIONEER ACO 101: THE BASICS. Karen Unholz, RN, BSN

Accountable Care Organizations and Future Healthcare Delivery

Proven Innovations in Primary Care Practice

Banner Health Network Pioneer ACO - Physician Toolkit

Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs): Potential to Foster Quality While Reducing Costs

Federal Health Care Reform: Implications for Hospital and Physician partnerships. Walter Kopp Medical Management Services

ACO OVERVIEW MAKING SENSE OF THE FINAL MEDICARE SHARED SAVINGS PROGRAM REGULATIONS

A white paper. Collaborative Accountable Care. CIGNA s Approach to Accountable Care Organizations a 11/11

Reforming and restructuring the health care delivery system

ACO Program: Quality Reporting Requirements. Jennifer Faerberg Mary Wheatley April 28, 2011

Georgia Society for Healthcare Materials Management. The status of ACO s in the market and how they impact materials management.

Value Based Payment Models: What are they and strategies for success

Atrius Health ACO Initiative. Agenda

Value Based Insurance Design Key concepts & their application at HealthPartners Health Insurance Plan

PIONEER ACO A REVIEW OF THE GRAND EXPERIMENT. Norris Vivatrat, MD Associate Medical Director Monarch HealthCare

Accountable Care Organizations: An old idea with new potential. Stephen E. Whitney, MD, MBA Testimony to Senate State Affairs September 22, 2010

Healthcare Payment Reform: Transition from Volume-Based to Value-Based Payments. October 6, 2014

Payor Perspectives on Provider Realignment and ACOs

The Regulations Are Out: Is An ACO Right For You? Moderator David Pursell

Accountable Care Organizations: What Providers Need to Know

Medicare ACO Road Map

Home Health Care Today: Higher Acuity Level of Patients Highly skilled Professionals Costeffective Uses of Technology Innovative Care Techniques

CMS Innovation and Health Care Delivery System Reform

Analytic-Driven Quality Keys Success in Risk-Based Contracts. Ross Gustafson, Vice President Allina Performance Resources, Health Catalyst

Performance Measurement in CMS Programs Kate Goodrich, MD MHS Director, Quality Measurement and Health Assessment Group, CMS

Health Care Financing: ACC/ ACO s, beyond the hype hope. Brian Seppi, MD, President, Washington State Medical Assn.

The Changing Face of Healthcare: Challenges & Solutions. Mark Stauder, President/COO

The Affordable Care Act

MEDICARE. Results from the First Two Years of the Pioneer Accountable Care Organization Model

DRIVING VALUE IN HEALTHCARE: PERSPECTIVES FROM TWO ACO EXECUTIVES, PART I

HCAHPS and Value-Based Purchasing Methods and Measurement. Deb Stargardt, Improvement Services Darrel Shanbour, Consulting Services

Affordable Care Act at 3: Strengthening Medicare

Transcription:

HIDA Webinar Series ACOs and Acute Care Reimbursement Trends

Agenda Healthcare reform update: acute care Status of the main provisions Key changes for hospitals Accountable care organizations Types Quality measures Trends Key to success in this changing environment Impact on the supply chain: big picture

What Is Healthcare Reform, Anyway? 1,000 Pages of Changes Hard to See the Whole Picture

Status of Healthcare Reform Provisions

Reform Was Built on Promise of An Insured Population State based Insurance Exchanges Federal Insurance Exchange Employee Mandates Individual Mandate Medicaid Expansion 29-30 Million Business Co ops

Medicaid Expansion State Perspective

Insurance Exchanges State Perspective

Deadline for Employer Health Insurance Mandate Pushed Back a Year

Payment Drivers Are Changing Emphasis on quality Skin in the game Reduced costs Mandatory Coming to a market near you! Value-based purchasing Readmissions policy Infection policies Voluntary Accountable care organizations (ACOs) Bundled payment pilot program

Hospitals Key Changes

Hospital Payment Tied to Performance % of hospital pay tied to performance ACO amount is unknown and depends on physician participation/ pay model

VBP - 1,427 Hospitals Penalized This Year Value-based Purchasing (VBP) Ties pay to performance on quality measures Rolling out in acute care first Starts with measures for heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia, certain surgeries, six infections and patient experience Plan to implement VBP in skilled nursing facilities, ASCs Hospitals can earn back more than their share or lose it by not meeting performance benchmarks

CMS s Proposed Changes to VBP for 2016 1 new process measure: flu immunization 2 new HAIs: catheter-associated urinary tract infection and surgical site infection 3 process measures removed: coronary intervention w/in 90 min, discharge instructions for heart failure, and blood cultures for pneumonia patients prior to antibiotic New floor for all patient satisfaction measures Reweighting the four measure domains clinical process, patient experience, outcomes, and efficiency to increase weight of outcomes and efficiency

Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program - 1% Cut in 2013 Hospital payments reduced for excess readmission rates within 30 days of discharge: Heart attack, heart failure, and pneumonia FY2014 2% cut FY2015 3% cut

Other Providers are on The Hook for Readmissions More than 2000 hospitals penalized in FY2013 Hospitals hit hardest in NJ, NY, DC, AR, KY, MS, IL, and MA Safety-net hospitals hit harder than others Smooth transitions in care Mandates: 30 Day Hospital Readmission Policy Pressure to perform on other providers Future referrals at risk! Pressure to move to electronic medical records

CMS s Proposed Changes to Readmissions Policy Penalty increases up to 2% for FY 2014 Revised methodology to account for planning readmissions 2 new readmission measures for 2015 penalties: Hip/knee arthroplasty COPD

Infections: Multiple Programs Could Lead to Multiple Penalties Medicare and Medicaid do not reimburse for preventable health-acquired conditions FY2015 1% cut for hospitals in top quartile for infection rates Multiple penalties

CMS s Proposed Changes to Infections Policy Domain #1 patient safety indicators (PSIs): Pressure ulcer rate Volume of foreign object left in body Iiatrogenic pneumothorax rate Postoperative physiologic and metabolic derangement rate Postoperative pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis rate Accidental puncture and laceration rate Domain #2: HAIs Central line-associated blood stream infection Catheter-associated urinary tract infection

Bundled Payments Another Step Away From FFS Pilot project where payments are bundled for acute inpatient, physician, outpatient, post-acute services 2 Payment Types, 4 Models CMS has suspended further implementation of Model 1 due to lack of participation. January 1, 2013, national voluntary pilot program begins HHS report to Congress on program - 2015 HHS report to Congress on final results of program, as well as a plan for expansion - 2016 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

ACOs

What is an ACO? A group of healthcare providers that contracts with Medicare (or another payor) to coordinate care for beneficiaries and reduce the overall costs associated with delivering the care. Specifically ACO providers agree to work together to: Coordinate patient care Perform well on quality measures Reduce costs Share in achieved cost savings by reducing cost to deliver care

Various Types of ACOs Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) Built into healthcare reform law Three-year participation agreement 221 ACOs selected Medicare Pioneer ACOs Demonstration project Similar emphasis on quality and savings, but with more flexibility in program Same quality measures Private sector ACOs Vary widely

The Rulebook Depends on Who Makes the Rules FEDERAL ACO PROGRAMS PRIVATE SECTOR ACOS 32 - Pioneer ACO Demo 221 - Medicare Shared Savings Program Insurers Healthcare Providers 10 - Physician Group Practice Demo Advanced Payment Model ACOs The framework, or rules, for each ACO depends on the payer

Does ACO Formation = Ownership Consolidation? Pioneer ACOs Medicare Shared Savings Program Private sector ACOs Not necessarily ACOs need a formal legal structure to receive and distribute payments for shared savings to participating providers Separate entities may participate, such as hospitals and physician practices One provider organization serves as convener

Medicare Sharing Savings Program

The Basics Share in the SAVINGS, and in some cases RISK At least 5,000 Medicare beneficiaries Participate for three years Medicare beneficiaries must be informed, they retain the option to decline participation 33 quality measures Governance requirements

How Does the Money Work? Approved Medicare Shared Savings ACOs have two track options: One-sided risk model Share in savings all three years Must first meet a minimum savings rate of between 2% and 3.9% (depends on population size) Then, they can share up to 50% of first dollar savings depending on quality scores Two-sided risk model Share in savings or losses all three years Must first meet 2% saving/loss rate Share up to 60% of savings/losses depending on quality scores

How Will Doctors in an ACO be Paid? Medicare will continue to pay individual providers for specific services as it currently does CMS will develop a benchmark for savings to be achieved by each ACO if the ACO is to receive shared savings The amount of an ACO s shared savings or losses depends on its performance on quality standards ACOs must develop their own legal structure to share any savings with its affiliated providers

How ACOs Work

Bumpy Road for Pioneer ACOs Pioneers balk at level of risk Up to 9 expected to shift to MSSP program

Pioneer ACOs Include Many Leading Systems Organization Service Area 1. Allina Hospitals & Clinics Minnesota and Western Wisconsin 2. Atrius Health Eastern and Central Massachusetts 3. Banner Health Network Phoenix, Arizona Metropolitan Area (Maricopa and Pinal Counties) 4. Bellin-Thedacare Healthcare Partners Northeast Wisconsin 5. Beth Israel Deaconess Physician Organization Eastern Massachusetts 6. Bronx Accountable Healthcare Network (BAHN) New York City (the Bronx) and lower Westchester County, NY 7. Brown & Toland Physicians San Francisco Bay Area, CA 8. Dartmouth-Hitchcock ACO New Hampshire and Eastern Vermont 9. Eastern Maine Healthcare System Central, Eastern, and Northern Maine 10. Fairview Health Systems Minneapolis, MN Metropolitan Area 11. Franciscan Alliance Indianapolis and Central Indiana

Pioneer ACOs Include Many Leading Systems (cont d) Organization Service Area 12. Genesys PHO Southeastern Michigan 13. Healthcare Partners Medical Group Los Angeles and Orange Counties, CA 14. Healthcare Partners of Nevada Clark and Nye Counties, NV 15. Heritage California ACO Southern, Central, and Costal California 16. JSA Medical Group, a division of HealthCare Partners Orlando, Tampa Bay, and surrounding South Florida 17. Michigan Pioneer ACO Southeastern Michigan 18. Monarch Healthcare Orange County, CA 19. Mount Auburn Cambridge Independent Practice Association (MACIPA) Eastern Massachusetts 20. North Texas ACO Tarrant, Johnson and Parker counties in North Texas 21. OSF Healthcare System Central Illinois 22. Park Nicollet Health Services Minneapolis, MN Metropolitan Area

Pioneer ACOs Include Many Leading Systems (cont d) Organization Service Area 23. Partners Healthcare Eastern Massachusetts 24. Physician Health Partners Denver, CO Metropolitan Area 25. Presbyterian Healthcare Services Central New Mexico Pioneer Accountable Care Organization Central New Mexico 26. Primecare Medical Network Southern California (San Bernardino and Riverside Counties) 27. Renaissance Medical Management Company Southeastern Pennsylvania 28. Seton Health Alliance Central Texas (11 county area including Austin) 29. Sharp Healthcare System San Diego County 30. Steward Health Care System Eastern Massachusetts 31. TriHealth, Inc. Northwest Central Iowa 32. University of Michigan Southeastern Michigan

Quality Measures for Medicare ACOs (Both MSSP and Pioneer)

Shared Savings Tied to Quality Measures Quality performance standards must be met in order for an ACO to share in any savings **EHR meaningful use participation is a performance measure, not a 50% requirement Completely & Accurately Report Meet Performance Minimums Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 33 33 33 0 25 32 Providers in an ACO are still subject to additional health reform policies on infections, readmissions, and value-based purchasing!

The Challenge: Improve Quality, Reduce Spending Four groups of quality measures: Patient experience Care coordination and patient safety Preventive health Caring for at-risk populations CMS will develop spending benchmark for each ACO, every year to gauge financial performance

The Challenge: Improve Quality, Reduce Spending In the first year, providers must fully and accurately report on all four quality measure domains. In the second and third years, the share of savings will be tied to performance on quality measures. Points are assigned to each measure, and ACOs must attain a minimum of 30% on each measure for 70% of the measures in each domain. The benchmark is reset each year based on previous year s data.

Quality Measures in Final ACO Rule

Quality Measures in Final ACO Rule

Quality Measures in Final ACO Rule

Healthcare Providers Form an LLC to Contract with Medicare

Providers Bill CMS Separately for Services; Also Submit Performance Data

CMS Determines Whether ACO Has Met Quality Benchmarks and Reduced Total Costs

CMS Shares Any Savings Above Minimum Rate Shared Savings Savings above the minimum savings rate, 2 3.9% depending on ACO size and risk model, go to the LLC, which distributes them to participating providers

Private Sector ACOs

Major Private Sector ACO Initiatives Cigna: collaborative accountable care (CAC) program with 32 CACs serving 300,000 patients in 16 states Aims to have 100 CACs covering one million patients by 2014 Aetna: 10 ACO-like agreements with providers in place, 14 more in the works Investing $1B+ in a capabilities to support ACO program, including acquiring a health IT services firm Blue Cross Blue Shield Massachusetts: ACO-like contracts Alternative Quality Contracts with 11 provider organizations established in 2009-2010, produced savings and quality improvements

Comparing Medicare and Private Programs Providers participating in ACO agreements with private payers may also choose to participate in the national MSSP program however, private sector agreements may have significant differences in terms of patient volume, eligible participants, financial incentives, and clinical/quality.

Comparing Medicare and Private Programs 4 ACO Providers Fact Sheet, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, October 2011. 5 Premier accountable care organizations Driving to a people-centered health system, Premier, Inc. 2011.

Key to Success in Your Changing Environment

Find the Pain and Take It Away Preventing infections Reducing readmissions Patient satisfaction Key clinical areas: heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia

Tie Your Marketing to New Quality Metrics For example: Patient Experience Care Coordination and Patient Safety COPD EHR Implementation by Primary Care Providers Screening for Risk of Falls Preventive Health Flu and Pneumonia Vaccination Rates Colorectal Cancer Screening Blood Pressure Screening Caring for At-Risk Populations Diabetes Control (SEVERAL measures) Blood Pressure Control

Plenty of Pain and Challenge on the Non-Acute Side Too Example: reducing readmissions Major opportunity to both improve quality of care and lower costs Majority are chronic disease patients Depends on primary care support Requires a strong primary care infrastructure ACO might decide to incentivize primary care physicians to spend more time on chronic disease management Requires trusted extended care relationships

Cost Pressures Create Enormous Customer Pain Being cheaper isn t the only way to reduce this pain Providers won t succeed if they cut spending in one area only to add costs in another ACOs won t succeed if they cut spending and quality declines Show Customers Why Spending for Your Product or Service Will Reduce System-Wide Costs

Hospitals of all sizes are generally willing to pay a 10-15% premium on average for disposables that demonstrate an ability to reduce errors and infection rates. --Stuart Jackson and Bob Lavoie L.E.K. Consulting Healthcare Reform Shifts Hospital Priorities, Creates New Opportunities for MedTech Companies, Executive Insights Vol. XIII, Issue 4, June 2011

Bring Data Providers are demanding data for evidence-based product and service selection Many distributors have more data than their customers do great source of competitive advantage Progressive providers and supplier organizations are preparing for this new era by expanding their talent pools with experienced data analysts who can conduct deeper dives into cost analytics to discover cost per case, cost per patient, and other needed metrics. New Integrated Delivery Models, ACOs, and the Healthcare Supply Chain, March 2012, Strategic Marketplace Initiative (SMI)

Speak the Language: Population Health Current State: Volume-Based Reimbursement (Fee-for-Service) Low financial accountability for cost of care Future State: Risk-Based Reimbursement (ACO/Shared Savings/ Capitation and Quality-Oriented) High accountability for cost of care Defines population as patients who present at the doctor s office Minimal infrastructure (technology, staff, data, etc.) to manage more than the sickest/most complex patients Culture rewards volume and operational efficiency Defines population as every patient in the provider organization panel, regardless of whether they present at the doctor s office Must have infrastructure to manage the entire population Culture rewards optimization of cost and quality Source: ACOs and Population Health Management, American Medical Group Association

Speak the Language: Clinical Integration Generic meaning: clinical providers across a continuum of services work together to better care for patients More specific meaning: a legal arrangement to create the incentives, management, and infrastructure for physicians and health systems to improve quality and efficiency With a looming mandate to manage total cost risk for patients, hospitals must make physicians true partners in delivery system redesign. Yet, for most organizations, current physician relationships are inadequate to create this level of alignment. As a result, many are now looking to clinical integration (CI) as a strategy to align both employed and independent physicians around performance improvement. The Advisory Board

Speak the Language: Standardization Taking on a larger meaning Procedures Processes Products Providers focus on reducing variation to increase predictability of outcomes AND standardize products and suppliers Standardization efforts will be driven by evidence based data such as clinical outcomes, comparative effectiveness, and operational costs. Within the healthcare supply chain, variability equates to costs. As such, in order to improve costs, efforts to standardize on clinical practice, processes, products and suppliers will increase. New Integrated Delivery Models, ACOs, and the Healthcare Supply Chain, SMI, 2012

Speak the Language: Value Analysis The process of evaluating products based on cost, quality, contribution to patient outcomes Often done through value analysis teams or VATs VATs usually organized by supply chain dept. but made up primarily of clinical personnel Physician participation increasing Becoming more formalized in most health systems Tends to focus on highest-cost physician preference items (PPI) Roles are evolving fast: Expanding beyond evaluation of products into processes and clinical procedures Increasing emphasis on life cycle costs, patient outcomes, metrics

Common Features of Value Analysis Teams Source: Strategies for Medical Device Manufacturers to Address Hospital Value Analysis, Medical Device and Diagnostic Industry, May 2013

Speak the Language: Utilization Management Continual process of managing, benchmarking and controlling day-to-day product consumption We evaluate, select, and contract for a product, service or technology and then we turn it over to our hospital staff who use too many, employ the wrong products, choose feature-rich products, unknowingly waste products, or vendors upsell new higher-cost products inside your new contract. Why supply utilization management is significantly different than value analysis, Robert Yokl, Value Analysis Magazine, 2013

Take More of a Team Approach Than Ever At the field level, reps still need strong relationships with clinicians, doctors, purchasing agents, and practice administrators At the ACO or IDN level, key decision-makers may include: The materials management or supply chain department Value analysis committees Clinical leaders in areas such as infection control The leader of physician alignment or physician integration efforts Coordination among levels of the sales force is critical

Ask Questions Is your organization part of an ACO? If yes, with what partners? What type of affiliation? Now or how soon? What changes are you making in your practice as a result of healthcare reform? How can I help?

How Will Accountable Care Impact the Supply Chain?

More Focus on Standardization of procedures and processes Evidence-based medicine Data analytics Physician engagement Patient engagement Service line management (example: spine care) Cost reduction Where do they start first? Supply chain! Important to all acute care customers, with ACOs leading the way. A reduction of two percent in supply chain spending (operating expenses) would require an average hospital to increase revenue by 30 to 40 percent to have the same impact. (Navigant Pulse, Winter 2011)

Some Will Look at Consolidating Purchasing Across the Continuum Integrated delivery network (IDN) Types of providers included is driven by system goals Most typically, common ownership, possible some joint ventures Greater likelihood of consolidated supply chain strategy IDNs IDN-led ACOs Accountable care organization (ACO) Types of providers included is driven by program rules or payer agreements Much looser affiliations likely Consolidating the supply chain strategy more challenging ACOs

Some Will Look at Self-distribution Survey of Supply Chain Executives: Reasons for Self-distribution (ranked): 1. Control 2. Improved service 3. Product standardization 4. Reduce distributor costs 5. Collect administrative/manufacturer fees 6. Disaster preparedness Source: Cardinal phone survey of 17 self-distributors Used with permission

Healthcare at a Tipping Point Fee-for- Service Patient Satisfaction Physician Employment ACOs Volume Value