RESUMO
Congress established the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) to design, test, and spread innovative payment and service delivery models that either reduce spending without reducing the quality of care or improve the quality of care without increasing spending. CMMI sought to leverage these models to foster market innovation and accelerate the transformation of payment and care delivery to achieve the Triple Aim of better health, better care, and lower cost. This article provides a perspective on the design and execution of CMMI's five initial models, the resulting outcomes and lessons, and how their core concepts evolved within and spread beyond CMMI. This experience yields three key insights that could inform future efforts by CMMI and public and private payers, including model designs and policy decisions. These insights center on the need for iterative testing and learning guided by market feedback, more realistic time frames to demonstrate impact on cost and quality, and greater integration of models.
Assuntos
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. , Ciência da Implementação , Modelos Organizacionais , Inovação Organizacional , Atenção à Saúde/métodos , Reforma dos Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Estudos de Casos Organizacionais , Estados UnidosAssuntos
Nível de Saúde , Administradores Hospitalares , Liderança , Humanos , Diretores Médicos , Estados UnidosRESUMO
BACKGROUND: The primary care medical home has been promoted to integrate and improve patient care while reducing healthcare spending, but with little formal study of the model or evidence of its efficacy. ProvenHealth Navigator (PHN), an intensive multidimensional medical home model that addresses care delivery and financing, was introduced into 11 different primary care practices. The goals were to improve the quality, efficiency, and patient experience of care. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the ability of a medical home model to improve the efficiency of care for Medicare beneficiaries. STUDY DESIGN: Observational study using regression modeling based on preintervention and postintervention data and a propensity-selected control cohort. METHODS: Four years of claims data for Medicare patients at 11 intervention sites and 75 control groups were analyzed to compute hospital admission and readmission rates, and the total cost of care. Regression modeling was used to establish predicted rates and costs in the absence of the intervention. Actual results were compared with predicted results to compute changes attributable to the PHN model. RESULTS: ProvenHealth Navigator was associated with an 18% (P <.01) cumulative reduction in inpatient admissions and a 36% (P = .02) cumulative reduction in readmissions across the total population over the study period. CONCLUSIONS: Investing in the capabilities of primary care practices to serve as medical homes may increase healthcare value by improving the efficiency of care. This study demonstrates that the PHN model is capable of significantly reducing admissions and readmissions for Medicare Advantage members.
Assuntos
Eficiência Organizacional/normas , Assistência Centrada no Paciente/normas , Qualidade da Assistência à Saúde/normas , Intervalos de Confiança , Eficiência , Eficiência Organizacional/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Revisão da Utilização de Seguros , Medicare Part D , Modelos Estatísticos , Assistência Centrada no Paciente/métodos , Assistência Centrada no Paciente/estatística & dados numéricos , Pennsylvania , Pontuação de Propensão , Pesquisa Qualitativa , Qualidade da Assistência à Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Análise de Regressão , Estados UnidosRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To test whether an integrated delivery system could successfully implement an evidence-based pay-for-performance program for coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. METHODS: The program consisted of 3 components: (1) establishing implementable best practices; (2) developing risk-based pricing; (3) establishing a mechanism for patient engagement. Surgeons reviewed all class I and IIa "2004 American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology Guidelines for CABG Surgery" and translated them into 40 verifiable behaviors. These were imbedded within a new ProvenCareSM program and "hardwired" within the electronic health record system, including order sets, templates, and "time outs". Concurrently preoperative, inpatient, and postoperative care within 90 days was packaged into a fixed price. A Patient Compact was developed to highlight the importance of patient activation. All elective CABG patients treated between February 2, 2006 and February 2, 2007 were included (ProvenCareSM Group) and compared with 137 patients treated in 2005 (Conventional Care Group). RESULTS: Initially, only 59% of patients received all 40 best practice components. At 3 months, program compliance reached 100%, but fell transiently to 86% over the next 3 months. Reliability subsequently increased to 100% and was sustained for the remainder of the study period. The overall trend in reliability was significant at P=0.001. Thirty-day clinical outcomes showed improved trends () but only the likelihood of discharge to home reached statistical significance. Length of stay decreased by 16% and mean hospital charges fell 5.2%.(Table is included in full-text article.) CONCLUSION: A provider-driven pay-for-performance process for CABG, enabled by an electronic health record system, can reliably deliver evidence-based care, fundamentally alter reimbursement incentives, and may ultimately improve outcomes and reduce resource use.