Activity Based Funding and Palliative Care



Similar documents
"It s time to remember NOCC is also about casemix: Australian casemix development in mental health"

NSW mental health services in context Professor Kathy Eagar, Director of Australian Health Services Research Insititute, University of Wollongong

Development of the Australian Mental Health Care Classification

NATIONAL HEALTH REFORM AGREEMENT

Demographic and utilisation changes for rural and remote populations subacute admitted care

Costs of Care Standards 2009/10

AROC. Establishing and Maintaining a National Clinical Registry. Frances Simmonds, AROC Director

Australian Healthcare Reform

Activity Based Funding Mental Health Care Data Set Specifications Independent Hospital Pricing Authority

Health reform, ECLIPSE and data management in the private sector

Measures for the Australian health system. Belinda Emms Health Care Safety and Quality Unit Australian Institute of Health and Welfare

HEALTH PREFACE. Introduction. Scope of the sector

Appendix A: Database quality statement summaries

S T A G E A F I N A L R E P O R T :

NATIONAL HEALTHCARE AGREEMENT 2012

Palliative Care Role Delineation Framework

The AROC rehabilitation benchmarking journey from inpatient to ambulatory Leading the Way In Continuing Care Conference 21 November 2008

NDIS Mental Health and Housing. May 2014

Activity Based Funding and Management Program. Annual Performance Management Framework

Health Funding Principles and Guidelines

Health expenditure Australia : analysis by sector

SUBMISSION TO THE MEDICARE BENEFITS SCHEDULE REVIEW TASKFORCE

Mental Health Nurse Incentive Program Program Guidelines

Activity based funding for Australian public hospitals: Towards a Pricing Framework

NATIONAL PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT ON TRANSITIONING RESPONSIBILITIES FOR AGED CARE AND DISABILITY SERVICES

Health funding principles and guidelines

INTEGRATED CARE INFO SUMMARY INTEGRATED CARE STRATEGY

Accreditation Workbook for Mental Health Services. March 2014

THE NATIONAL QUALITY FRAMEWORK FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION AND CARE: INFORMATION FOR FAMILIES

Improving Inpatient Psychiatric Payment Methods

POSITION PAPER: Occupational therapy in oncology

4 Community mental health care and hospital outpatient services

Ambulance transport payment guidelines

Primary Health Care Reform in Australia National Health and Hospital Reform Commission Professor Justin Beilby University of Adelaide

National Clinical Programmes

Position Statement #37 POLICY ON MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

Key Priority Area 1: Key Direction for Change

FEES PROCEDURES MANUAL FOR PUBLIC HEALTH ORGANISATIONS AMENDMENT NO. 82(14/05/15)

COUNTRY UPDATE ORGANISATION OF THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM IN AUSTRALIA

Age-friendly principles and practices

Supplemental Technical Information

The Australian Healthcare System

Every Student, Every School. Learning and Support

rights&responsibilities as a private patient in hospital

Mental Health Nurse Incentive Program

Australia. Old Age, Disability, and Survivors. Australia. Exchange rate: US$1.00 equals 1.32 Australian dollars (A$). Qualifying Conditions

NORTHERN TERRITORY VIEWS ON CGC STAFF DISCUSSION PAPER 2007/17-S ASSESSMENT OF ADMITTED PATIENT SERVICES FOR THE 2010 REVIEW

A Framework for the Delivery of Comprehensive Palliative Care Services in the Australian Private Sector

WA HEALTH LANGUAGE SERVICES POLICY September 2011

Submission to the. National Commission of Audit

How To Value A Rehabilitation Medicine Clinical Registry

Inquiry into palliative care services and home and community care services in Queensland. Submission to the Health and Community Services Committee

Primary Health Networks Life After Medicare Locals

Pricing the national health insurance scheme in Qatar opportunities and challenges

How To Become An Executive Assistant At Neami National

DUAL DIAGNOSIS POLICY

Title of report: South West Yorkshire Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (SWYPFT) Review of Rehabilitation & Recovery Services

Workforce for quality care at the end of life

Submission to the National Disability Insurance Scheme inquiry into accommodation for people with disabilities and the NDIS

Private Health Insurance: What Consumers Want. Anna Greenwood. Deputy Chief Executive Officer. Presentation to the 2012 PHIO Industry Seminar

Florida Medicaid Inpatient Prospective Payment System

Specialist training programme for elderly care physicians (previously: nursing home physicians) in the Netherlands

National Health Reform Enterprise Data Warehouse (NHR EDW) Program. RFT Industry Brief

National Disability Insurance Scheme.

Make sure you have health cover for your family. Allianz Global Assistance OVHC offers three types of policies:

Summary of new Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) item numbers: general practice and allied health. Updated April 2013

Actuaries Institute submission to the Private Health Insurance Review

One in Four Lives. The Future of Telehealth in Australia

Australia s primary health care system: Focussing on prevention & management of disease

Transcription:

Activity Based Funding and Palliative Care Professor Kathy Eagar Director, Australian Health Services Research Institute Sydney Business School Palliative Care Australia Forum, Canberra October 2012

Some important background to start with

The starting point for our western health care system New South Wales became a (penal) colony in 1788, followed progressively by the other Australian States. Australia didn t became a country until 1901

A federation Commonwealth (national) government 6 State (previously colony) and 2 Territory governments Constitution (1901) - health is the responsibility of the States Except quarantine matters Amended in 1946 To allow Commonwealth to provide health benefits and services to returned soldiers Commonwealth didn t have a formal role in health care until 1972 (Medibank) Except for war veterans States and territories own all public health facilities and infrastructure

Public hospital funding - 1 Commonwealth originally agreed to contribute 50% of public hospital funding in 1972 (with inception of Medibank) 5 year Commonwealth-State agreements from 1983 Current agreement is 2008-2013 Progressive but slow decline in Commonwealth share, particularly during 2000s 2003 agreement - Commonwealth effectively ended 30 year commitment to 50% argued that private health insurance (PHI) tax rebate would take pressure off public hospitals PHI took no pressure off public hospitals and public hospitals perceived to be increasingly in crisis since then

Public hospital funding - 2 Public hospital crisis over the last decade largely due to Commonwealth decision to reduce it s funding contribution in real terms in the 2003-2008 agreement last agreement under Howard government Rudd government elected in 2007 provided an injection of funds in 2008 and began planning for national reform The states and territories wanted a return to a 50% share by the Commonwealth they got national health reform instead

National reform agenda

A plethora of reviews and reforms Election commitments (GP Super Clinics, dental etc) National Healthcare Agreement and NPAs 2008-2013 National Prevention Taskforce National Primary Care Strategy Australia 2020 recommendations National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission Culminating in the COAG National Health and Hospitals Network Agreement

National Health Reform Agreement (NHRA) Signed by COAG 31 July 2011

Core design features

Brave new world Health system splits into 5 Hospitals - State responsibility Commonwealth to contribute its share on an activity basis Private sector primary care - Commonwealth responsibility Aged care including Home and Community Care (HACC) for people 65 years and over - Commonwealth except Victoria and Western Australia Disability services - State responsibility All disability, HACC and residential care for people less than 65 years Community health, population health and public health - State responsibility

New entities National Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA) National Health Performance Authority (NHPA) National Health Funding Pool Reserve bank accounts (one for each state and territory) with an independent administrator State Ongoing reorganisations of most departments Local Local Hospital Networks (LHN) Local Health Districts in NSW, Hospitals and Health Services in Qld etc Medicare Locals

Commonwealth Premise Hospitals - big white buildings surrounded by a fence Everything outside the fence is either primary care or aged care or a disability service no terms defined Specialist services outside the fence (public and private) not adequately recognised in original agreement but IHPA has gone some way to addressing this since

Hospitals The centre of the health reform - creating perverse incentives for some very regressive thinking!

Commonwealth and State joint responsibilities Funding public hospital services using Activity Based Funding (ABF) where practicable and block funding in other cases Nationally consistent standards for healthcare and performance reporting Collecting and providing comparable and transparent data

Commonwealth role Pay a national efficient price for every public hospital service Funding at current levels (around 38%) until 2014 2014-2017 - fund 45% of efficient growth in public hospitals 2017 on - fund 50% of efficient growth in public hospitals Commonwealth will never get back to 50% of total hospital funding Current estimate is that Cw contribution will be about 44% in 2030 Fund States (and through them LHNs) a contribution for: teaching, training and research block funding for small public hospitals Agreement has detailed arrangements for defining a hospital service that the Commonwealth will partly fund

Scope of Commonwealth funding Hospital services provided to both public and private patients in a range of settings (including at home) and funded either: on an activity basis or through block grants, including in rural and regional communities; teaching and training undertaken in public hospitals or other organisations (such as universities and training providers) research funded by States undertaken in public hospitals and public health activities managed by States From 1 July 2012 funding to be provided on an ABF basis wherever possible

State responsibilities Management of public hospitals, including: hospital service planning purchasing services from LHNs planning, funding and delivering capital planning, funding (with the Commonwealth) and delivering teaching, training and research managing Local Hospital Network performance Lead role in public health Management and 100% funding of community health and public sector primary care

States responsible for system-wide public hospital service planning and policy and capital works Based on this planning, States enter into a Local Health District (LHD) Service Agreement with each LHD that specifies services to be provided LHN reports to State (and through to C wealth) on activity and performance State and Commonwealth transfer funding for these services to the National Health Funding Pool Commonwealth contribution based on efficient price as determined by Independent Hospital Pricing Authority Quarterly financial adjustments for variations in volumes as per Service Agreement LHN receives C wealth and State funds from National Health Funding Pool State contribution determined by each State

Activity Based Funding Also known as casemix funding

CHSD Centre for Health Service Development But first, Casemix 101

A Definition of Casemix The mix of cases The classification of patient episodes based on those patient attributes that best explain the cost of care ( cost drivers )

What makes a good classification? Consumer related cost drivers Consumer (but not necessarily clinical ) characteristics Not the type, or extent, of services used. Variance reduction Minimum variation within each class and maximum differences between classes. Sensible clinical groups Ease of collection Variables used should be capable of routine collection, coding and data entry.

Diagnosis Related Groups The most widely used casemix classification Used to classify acute care Classes defined by principal medical diagnosis, plus variables such as other diagnoses, age and procedures

COST WEIGHT an index of relative costliness for each casemix class the average cost per patient treated is given a weighting of 1 a cost weight of 1.2 means that the cost is 20% above the average a cost weight of 0.5 means that the cost is 50% below the average used to "casemix adjust" information about hospital performance

AR- DRG V4.1 No. Example of cost weights by class AR-DRG Title Cost Weight O01A Caesarean Delivery W Multiple Complicating Diagnoses, At Least O 2.22 O01B Caesarean Delivery W Severe Complicating Diagnosis 1.63 O01C Caesarean Delivery W Moderate Complicating Diagnosis 1.66 O01D Caesarean Delivery W/O Complicating Diagnosis 1.39 O02Z Vaginal Delivery W Complicating O.R. Procedure 1.08 O03Z Ectopic Pregnancy 0.90 O04Z Postpartum and Post Abortion W O.R. Procedure 0.52 O40Z Abortion W D&C, Aspiration Curettage or Hysterotomy 0.33 O60A Vaginal Delivery W Multiple Complicating Diagnoses, At Least One 1.19 O60B Vaginal Delivery W Severe Complicating Diagnosis 0.90 O60C Vaginal Delivery W Moderate Complicating Diagnosis 0.86 O60D Vaginal Delivery W/O Complicating Diagnosis 0.70

AR- DRG V4.1 No. Some neonatal DRGs AR-DRG Title Cost Weight P03Z Neonate, AdmWt 1000-1499 g W Significant O.R. Procedure 19.37 P04Z Neonate, AdmWt 1500-1999 g W Significant O.R. Procedure 13.11 P05Z Neonate, AdmWt 2000-2499 g W Significant O.R. Procedure 11.42 P06A Neonate, AdmWt > 2499 g W Significant O.R. Procedure W Multi Maj 13.21 P06B Neonate, Adm Wt > 2499 g W Significant O.R. Proc W/O Multi Major 4.50 P60A Neonate Died or Transf <5 Days of Adm, W/O Significant O.R. Proc 0.50 P60B Neonate Died/Transf <5 Days of Adm, W/O Significant O.R. Proc, N 0.89 P61Z Neonate, AdmWt < 750 g 22.10 P62Z Neonate, AdmWt 750-999 g 19.93 P67A Neonate, AdmWt > 2499 g W/O Significant O.R. Procedure W Multi M 3.79 P67B Neonate, AdmWt > 2499 g W/O Significant O.R. Procedure W Major P 1.89 P67C Neonate, AdmWt > 2499 g W/O Significant O.R. Procedure W Other P 1.06 P67D Neonate, AdmWt > 2499 g W/O Significant O.R. Procedure W/O Probl 0.76

IHPA role Set the price that the Commonwealth will pay for a cost weight (National Weighted Activity Unit) IHPA determines the price paid to States (via LHNs) IHPA does not determine the price paid by a state or territory to an LHN or hospital Although states and territories are free to adopt the IHPA price if they want IHPA does not determine the funding for individual palliative care services

Problems with DRG-centred models DRGs don't work for many case types: rehabilitation psychiatric chronic illness palliative care intensive care Because the principal diagnosis is not the main cost driver

The way we once thought (and some people still do) Health care hospitals everything else inpatients - use AN-DRGs everything else - ignore ignore

Known cost drivers in health care acute inpatients rehab psychiatry palliative care emergency neonatology diagnosis, age, procedure functional impairment, ADL function ADL function, severity of symptoms, social and economic circumstances, aggression pain, symptoms, carer support, ADL function urgency birth weight

3 Care Types Diagnosis-related care (acute) Function-related care (sub-acute, including rehabilitation and palliative care) and Supportive care (non-acute, including NHTP)

AN-SNAP Adopted by IHPA as the initial casemix classification for palliative care

Key Cost Drivers - 1 Case Type - characteristics of the person and the goal of treatment function (motor and cognition) - all Case Types phase (stage of illness) - palliative care impairment - rehabilitation behaviour - psychogeriatric age - palliative care, rehab, GEM and maintenance

Key Cost Drivers - 2 There are additional cost drivers in ambulatory care: problem severity - palliative care phase - psychogeriatric usage of other health and community services and probably: availability of Carer instrumental ADLs (eg. medication management, food preparation)

AN-SNAP Version 1 developed in 1996, Version 2 in 2007, Version 3 in 2012 Based on a study of 30,057 episodes in 104 services in Australia and New Zealand 150 classes in the current version: Care Type Ambulatory Inpatient Total GEM 8 7 15 Maintenance 16 11 27 Palliative Care 22 12 34 Psychogeriatric 7 7 14 Rehabilitation 15 45 60 Grand Total 68 82 150

An example: AN-SNAP v2 palliative care inpatient classes ClassNo Description S2-101 Assessment only S2-102 Stable, RUG-ADL 4 S2-103 Stable, RUG-ADL 5-17 S2-104 Stable, RUG-ADL 18 S2-105 Unstable, RUG-ADL 4-17 S2-106 Unstable, RUG-ADL 18 S2-107 Deteriorating, RUG-ADL 4-14 S2-108 Deteriorating, RUG-ADL 15-18, age <=52 S2-109 Deteriorating, RUG-ADL 15-18, age >=53 S2-110 Terminal, RUG-ADL 4-16 S2-111 Terminal, RUG-ADL 17-18 S2-112 Bereavement

Future possibilities

Cost drivers Need to distinguish between classification and pricing Are additional classification variables required to better explain differences between patients? Do additional factors need to be taken into account in pricing to better explain legitimate cost differences between providers? Eg, location, travel

What unit of counting?

Person

Per son Episode of Illness 1 Episode of Illness 2 Episode of Illness etc

Person Episode of Illness 1 Episode of Illness 2 Episode of Illness etc bundle to form Episode of care 1 Episode of care etc Episode of care 2

Person Episode of Illness 1 Episode of Illness 2 Episode of Illness etc bundle to form Episode of care 1 Episode of care 2 Episode of care etc bundle to form Day of care 1 Day of care etc Day of care 2

Person Episode of Illness 1 Episode of Illness 2 Episode of Illness etc bundle to form Episode of care 1 Episode of care 2 Episode of care etc bundle to form Day of care 1 Day of care 2 Day of care etc bundle to form Event or service 1 Event or service etc

Capitation or needs-based funding to provider Provider carries most risk Person Person Person Episode of Illness 1 Episode of Illness 2 Episode of Illness etc bundle to form Episode of care 1 Episode of care 2 Episode of care etc bundle to form Day of care 1 Day of care 2 Day of care etc bundle to form Event or service 1 Event or service etc Purchaser carries most risk

Other future developments? How to deal with gaming? Manipulating your data so patients are assigned to higher-paying classes New classification variables (cost drivers) or a new classification? New models of care? Consultation liaison? Price for quality and outcomes, not based on current average cost? Pay for Performance (P4P)?

Conclusion Casemix (ABF) funding is here to stay We will need better health information and classification systems regardless of how the reform is fine-tuned as it unfolds We will need to try and shift the debate from cost to value for money

Want to know more? http://ahsri.uow.edu.au/chsd/abf/index.html ABF Information Series No. 1. What is activity-based funding? ABF Information Series No. 2. The special case of smaller and regional hospitals ABF Information Series No. 3. Lessons from the USA ABF Information Series No. 4. The cost of public hospitals - which State or Territory is the most efficient? ABF Information Series No. 5. Counting acute inpatient care ABF Information Series No. 6. Subacute care. ABF Information Series No. 7. Research and training ABF Information Series No. 8. Mental health