Spending, Quality and Efficiency of Care Addressing the paradox of plenty Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine Center for the Evaluative Clinical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
U.S. is some- where in this zone Frequency of Care Life Expectancy Shape of the Benefit-Utilization Curve: Supply-Sensitive Services.
Advertisements

Copyright 2014 Center to Advance Palliative Care. Reproduction by permission only. Palliative care is specialized care for people with serious illness.
The Role Of ACOs in Emergency Medicine Ken Hanover For the Emergency Department Practice Management Association (EDPMA) Solutions Summit XVI 2013.
ACHIEVING VALUE IN HEALTHCARE: Some Experiential-based Observations ACHIEVING VALUE IN HEALTHCARE: Some Experiential-based Observations Kenneth W. Kizer,
The High Value Healthcare Collaborative (HVHC) Model for Driving Innovation/Spread in Care & Payment Reform Lucy Savitz, Ph.D., MBA Director of Research.
K. John McConnell, PhD Oregon Health & Science University Accountable Care Organizations: An Overview.
Head CT Scans per 1,000 Children ( , age-sex-payer adj.) 14.7 to19.7 (13) 12.3 to
Shared Decision-making’s Place in Health Care Reform Peter V. Lee Executive Director National Health Care Policy, PBGH Co-Chair, Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure.
Literature Review: Readmissions and how geographical location of the hospitals affects the rate of readmissions -Shubhshankar.
The Role of Shared Decision Making in Reducing Unwarranted Variation in Health Care A Talk by Jack Wennberg A Talk by Jack Wennberg Implementing shared.
How data can improve health care What we don’t know can hurt us Gov 2.0 September 10, 2009 Elliott Fisher, MD, MPH Director, Population Health and Policy.
Middle Atlantic Actuarial Club September 17, 2009 Baltimore, MD Shannon Brownlee, MS Senior Research Fellow, New America Foundation Overtreated: Why Too.
1 Pay-for-performance More than rearranging the deck chairs? Robert and Alma Moreton Lecture May 21, 2007 Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine.
Understanding Practice Variations: A Focus on Academic Medical Centers The Eisenberg Legacy Lecture The Eisenberg Legacy Lecture Stanford, California Presentation.
Congressional Budget Office Presentation to The Tax Policy Center and the American Tax Policy Institute Taxes and Health Insurance February 29, 2008.
The Big Puzzle Evolving the Continuum of Care. Agenda Goal Pre Acute Care Intra Hospital Care Post Hospital Care Grading the Value of Post Acute Providers.
Deploying Care Coordination and Care Transitions - Illinois
1 A Crystal Ball: How to Improve the Health Care System Tom Closson President and CEO Ontario Hospital Association NAPAN 8th Annual Conference Sunday,
Nancy D. Zionts Chief Operating Officer Chief Program Officer Jewish Healthcare Foundation © 2013 JHF & PRHI.
The Value Imperative: Meeting the Total Needs of The People of Utah Greg Poulsen Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer.
Strengthening partnerships: A National Voluntary Health Agency’s initiatives in managed care Sarah L. Sampsel, MPH* Lisa M. Carlson, MPH, CHES* Michele.
Research and analysis by Avalere Health Are Medicare Patients Getting Sicker? December 2012.
What’s Next for Health Care
Congressional Budget Office Presentation for the Bipartisan Policy Center Health Care: Capturing the Opportunity in the Nation's Core Fiscal Challenge.
Variation in the Delivery of Medical Care: Is More Better? Todd Gilmer, PhD Professor of Health Policy and Economics Department of Family and Preventive.
Medicare’s Disease Management Activities Stuart Guterman Director, Office of Research, Development, and Information Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
The Troubled Physician Workforce: Is a physician surge the answer? David C. Goodman, MD MS Professor of Pediatrics and of Community and Family Medicine.
The Business Case for Bidirectional Integrated Care: Mental Health and Substance Use Services in Primary Care Settings and Primary Care Services in Specialty.
Health Policy Seminar on Sunday, April 19 th, 2009 Washington, D.C. Shannon Brownlee Visiting Scholar, NIH Clinical Center Dept. of Bioethics Schwartz.
Technology in Healthcare Amitabh Chandra HARVARD UNIVERSITY.
Congressional Budget Office Presentation for The Hastings Center Rising Health Care Costs and the Federal Budget May 20, 2008.
Unwarranted Variation: Expanding the Agenda for Rebuilding the Health Care system in Louisiana January 16, 2007 REDESIGNING 10 th Annual Health Care Forum.
Slide 1 Bending the cost curve Addressing the problem of “supply-sensitive” care Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine Center for the Evaluative.
Congressional Budget Office Presentation to The Alliance for Health Reform Health Costs and Health Information Technology Peter Orszag Director June 20,
Surgeon Specialty and Operative Mortality With Lung Resection PP Goodney, FL Lucas, TS Stukel, JD Birkmeyer VA Outcomes Group, White River Junction, VT.
Driving Quality and Efficiency Improvements Through IT Adoption: The California Experience David S. P. Hopkins, Ph.D. Pacific Business Group on Health.
The U.S. Physician Workforce: Beyond the Numbers The U.S. Physician Workforce: Beyond the Numbers Richard A. Cooper, M.D. Leonard Davis Institute of Health.
Foundation for American Healthcare Leadership Summit John E. Wennberg, MD, MPH Chicago, IL June 17-18, 2004.
Health System Improvement Opportunities In Louisiana: Analysis Through the Lens of Unwarranted Variation June 9, 2008.
BHCAG Summit Minneapolis, MN February 23, 2012 Shannon Brownlee, MS Instructor, The Dartmouth Institute Acting Director, New America Foundation Health.
Stanford Medicine: A Financial Management Perspective Stanford Staff Leadership & Development Program Tina Darmohray Osman Akhtar May 6, 2009.
Kaplan University LS 621 Unit 1 Town Hall John Gray September 25, 2011 Are there any questions about the syllabus? Are there any other.
Outpatient Services and Primary Health Care Heidi Kinsell Master of Health Administration (MHA) Health Services Research, Management and Policy 1.
In Healthcare, Is More Always Better? Thérèse Stukel Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Toronto Dartmouth Medical School, US Graham Woodward Cancer.
Reducing Regional Disparities in Health Spending: Framing the Debate David Wennberg and Friends Maine Medical Center Center for the Evaluative Clinical.
How Much Do Patients’ Preferences Contribute To Resource Use? Anthony D L, Herndon M B, et al. Health Affairs, 28, no. 3 (2009):
The future of Medicare fee-for- service Mark E. Miller, Ph.D. Executive Director Medicare Payment Advisory Commission October 16, 2006.
Area Variation in Rehabilitation Use in Nursing Homes Wen-Chieh Lin, PhD 1 Gregory F. Petroski, PhD 2 David R. Mehr, MD, MS 1 Steven C. Zweig, MD, MSPH.
1 Delivery System Reform: Developing Accountable Care Organizations John Bertko, F.S.A. Visiting Scholar Brookings Institution July 30, 2009 State Coverage.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Chronic Care Initiatives to Improve the Medicare Program Stuart Guterman Director, Program on Medicare’s Future The Commonwealth.
Chronic Care in the 21 st Century Building an Infrastructure for Quality and Efficiency March 2, 2009 Philadelphia, PA John Tooker MD,MBA,FACP Chief Executive.
Wins/Losses and Errors/Ties: Quality of Care for Acute Myocardial Infarction in the VA Health Care System Laura A. Petersen, M.D., M.P.H. 1 Sharon-Lise.
Improving Value in Health Care: Challenges and Potential Strategies Arnold M Epstein October 24, 2008 Congressional Health Care Reform Education Project.
Health Reform: Local Safety Net Implications Karen J. Minyard, Ph.D., Executive Director, Georgia Health Policy Center, Georgia State University.
Accountable Care: The Challenge of the Decade Michigan’s Premier Public Health Conference October 13, 2011 Kim Horn President and CEO Priority Health.
Quality Measurement and Improvement Component 2, Unit 7a.
Slide 1 Achieving National Quality Reporting Progress? Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences Dartmouth.
Performance assessment A performance assessment framework is a collation of statistics across a district or within a hospital and is far removed from.
The Challenge of Practice Variations And the Future of Primary Care 2009 Blanchard Memorial Lecture John E. Wennberg May 1, 2009.
Technology Growth and Expenditure Growth in U.S. Health Care Amitabh Chandra Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Jonathan Skinner Department.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Melinda Abrams, MS The Commonwealth Fund Patient-Centered Primary Care Collaborative Stakeholders Workshop Meeting Washington, DC.
Geographic Variation in Healthcare and Promotion of High-Value Care Margaret E. O’Kane November 10, 2010.
Date of download: 9/19/2016 From: The Implications of Regional Variations in Medicare Spending. Part 2: Health Outcomes and Satisfaction with Care Ann.
David Radley and Cathy Schoen
From: The Implications of Regional Variations in Medicare Spending
White River Junction, Vermont VA Outcomes Group REAP
Congressional Budget Office
Component 2: The Culture of Health Care
Medicare and Disease Management
Dexter W. Shurney, MD, MBA, MPH
Presentation transcript:

Spending, Quality and Efficiency of Care Addressing the paradox of plenty Elliott S. Fisher, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences Dartmouth Medical School Senior Associate VA Outcomes Group White River Junction, Vermont CECS Center for the Evaluative Clinical Sciences

Variations in practice and spending The Dartmouth Atlas

Variations in practice and spending Two to three fold variations in spending across regions 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 Medicare reimbursements per enrollee Miami, FL$11,352 Los Angeles, CA $9,752 Worcester, MA $8,203 Boston, MA $7,901 Springfield, MA $7,103 San Francisco, CA $6,408 Minneapolis, MN $5,213

How can the best medical care in the world cost twice as much as the best medical care in the world? Uwe Reinhardt Cedars-Sinai76,934 UCLA Medical Center72,793 New York-Presbyterian69,962 Johns Hopkins60,653 UCSF Medical Center56,859 Univ. of Washington50,716 Mass. General47,880 Barnes-Jewish44,463 Duke University Hosp.37,765 Mayo Clinic (St. Mary's)37,271 Cleveland Clinic35,455 20,000 40,000 60,000 80, , ,000 Inpatient + Part B spending per decedent Spending per Medicare beneficiary with severe chronic disease (Last 2 years of life, ) Variations in practice and spending and across American’s Best Hospitals (USN&WR + Cedars)

Variations in practice and spending Insights, challenges and opportunities 1. Variations in spending -- implications for health 2. What’s going on? -- some findings and hypotheses 3. What might we do? John Wennberg, MD, MPH Dartmouth Medical School Julie Bynum, MD, MPH Dartmouth Medical School Eric Holmboe, MD American Board of Internal Medicine Rebecca Lipner, PhD American Board of Internal Medicine David Wennberg, MD, MPH Maine Medical Center Lee Lucas, PhD Maine Medical Center Dan Gottlieb, MS Dartmouth Medical School Amber Barnato, MD, MPH University of Pittsburgh Therese Stukel, PhD University of Toronto Brooke Herndon, MD Dartmouth Medical School Jonathon Skinner, PhD Dartmouth Medical School Elliott Fisher, MD, MPH VA Outcomes Group, Dartmouth Denise Anthony, PhD Dartmouth College Brenda Sirovich, MD, MS VA Outcomes Group, Dartmouth Doug Staiger, PhD Dartmouth College Amitabh Chandra, PhD Harvard University Jack Fowler, PhD University of Massachusetts, Boston Patricia Gallagher, PhD University of Massachusetts, Boston Renee Mentnech, PhD Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services Causes and Consequences of Health Care Intensity Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care National Institute on Aging Robert Wood Johnson Foundation California Healthcare Foundation Wellpoint Foundation Aetna Foundation United Health Foundation Commonwealth Fund With support from: Investigators

Variations in spending What are the implications for health? Differences in spending largely due to differences in overall quantity of care (intensity) provided to similar populations. Key Question: What does more spending -- greater intensity -- buy? Ann Intern Med: 2003; 138: N Engl J Med 2004; 349;17: Health Affairs web exclusives, October 7, 2004 Health Affairs, web exclusives, Nov 16, 2005 Health Affairs web exclusives, Feb 7, 2006 Ann Intern Med: 2006; 144:

Variations in spending What are the implications for health? Study population -- Medicare enrollees Acute myocardial infarctionn = 159,393 Colorectal Cancer n = 195,429 Hip Fracturen = 614,503 Medicare Current Beneficiary Surveyn = 18,190 Study design -- natural experiment: Divided populations into five equal groups according to practice intensity of region of residence Practice intensity measured in different population (other Medicare enrollees in last six months of life)

Variations in spending Content of care -- three categories Effective care:Evidence-based services that all patients should receive. No tradeoffs involved. Acute revascularization for AMI Preference-sensitiveTreatment choices that entail tradeoffs among carerisks and benefits. Patients’ values and preferences should determine treatment choice. CABG for stable angina Supply-sensitive Services where utilization is strongly associated serviceswith local supply of health care resources Frequency of MD visits, specialist consultations use of hospital or ICU as a site of care Wennberg, Skinner and Fisher, Geography and the Debate over Medicare Reform Health Affairs, web exclusives, February13, 2002

Effective Care: Ratio of Rates in Highest vs Lowest Spending Regions Reperfusion in 12 hours for AMI Acute MI Lower in High Spending Regions Higher in High Spending Regions Quintile 1 Quintile

Effective Care: Ratio of Rates in Highest vs Lowest Spending Regions Reperfusion in 12 hours for AMI Aspirin at discharge Aspirin at admission Beta Blocker at discharge Beta Blocker at admission Acute MI Lower in High Spending Regions Higher in High Spending Regions ACE Inhibitor at discharge

Effective Care: Ratio of Rates in Highest vs Lowest Spending Regions Reperfusion in 12 hours for AMI Aspirin at discharge Aspirin at admission Beta Blocker at discharge Beta Blocker at admission Acute MI Mammogram, Women Flu shot during past year Pap Smear, Women 65+ Pneumococcal Immuniztation (ever) General Population Lower in High Spending Regions Higher in High Spending Regions ACE Inhibitor at discharge

Effective Care: Association between spending and overall quality rank Baicker and Chandra, Health Affairs, web exclusives

Preference-Sensitive Care: Highest vs Lowest Spending Regions Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery (CABG) Coronary Angioplasty Procedures after AMI Cholecystectomy Hernia Repair Cataract Extraction Total Hip Replacement Major Surgery (all cohorts combined) Total Knee Replacement Back Surgery Carotid Endarterectomy Lower in High Spending Regions Higher in High Spending Regions Angiography Angiography among appropriate cases

Supply-Sensitive Care : Highest vs Lowest Spending Regions Office Visits Initial Inpatient Specialist Consultations Inpatient Visits Physician Visits Lower in High Spending Regions Higher in High Spending Regions Electrocardiogram Tests and Procedures CT / MRI Brain Pulmonary Function Test Electroencephelogram (EEG) Discharges Inpatient Days in ICU or CCU Total Inpatient Days Hospital Utilization Feeding Tube Placement Emergency Intubation Procedures -- Last 6 months of life

Variations in spending What do higher spending regions -- and systems -- get? Technical quality worse No more elective surgery More hospital stays, visits, specialist use, tests Content / Quality of Care 1,2 Health Outcomes 1,2 (1) Ann Intern Med: 2003; 138: (2) Health Affairs web exclusives, October 7, 2004 (3) Health Affairs, web exclusives, Nov 16, 2005 (4) Health Affairs web exclusives, Feb 7, 2006 (5) Ann Intern Med: 2006; 144:

Variations in spending What do higher spending regions -- and systems -- get? Technical quality worse No more elective surgery More hospital stays, visits, specialist use, tests Content / Quality of Care 1,2 Slightly higher mortality No better function Health Outcomes 1,2 Worse communication among physicians Greater difficulty ensuring continuity of care Greater difficulty providing high quality care Greater perception of scarcity Physician’s perceptions 5 Patient-perceived quality 1,3 Lower satisfaction with hospital care Worse access to primary care Trends over time 4 Greater growth in per-capita resource use Lower gains in survival (following AMI) (1) Ann Intern Med: 2003; 138: (2) Health Affairs web exclusives, October 7, 2004 (3) Health Affairs, web exclusives, Nov 16, 2005 (4) Health Affairs web exclusives, Feb 7, 2006 (5) Ann Intern Med: 2006; 144:

Major points Higher spending across regions and physician groups is largely due to overuse of supply-sensitive services -- hospital and ICU stays, MD visits, specialist consults; and more is worse.

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice?

Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment Hospital Beds Medical Specialists LowHighLowHigh 32% higher 65% higher Regional Spending

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment Whatever capacity is in place will be fully utilized

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment -- are important drivers

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment -- are important drivers Clinical decision-making

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment -- are important drivers Clinical decision-making

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment -- are important drivers Clinical decision-making -- in the gray areas -- is critical

What’s going on? What explains the differences in practice? Patient preferences -- can’t explain the differences observed Capacity and payment -- are important drivers Clinical decision-making -- in the gray areas -- is critical Training environment -- preliminary findings underscore influence of local systems

Putting together a story… Physician - Patient Encounter Clinical Evidence Professionalism Clinical evidence (e.g. RCTs, guidelines) and principles of professionalism are a critically important -- but limited -- influence on clinical decision-making. Current payment system fosters growth and ensures that existing (and new) capacity is fully utilized. Consequence: reasonable individual clinical and local decisions lead, in aggregate, to higher utilization rates, greater costs -- and inadvertently -- worse outcomes Local Organizational Context (e.g. capacity - culture) Policy Environment (e.g. payment system) Physicians practice within a local organizational context and policy environment that profoundly influences their decision-making.

Major points Higher spending across regions and physician groups is largely due to overuse of supply-sensitive services -- hospital and ICU stays, MD visits, specialist consults; and more is worse. Overuse is largely a consequence of differences in clinical judgment (not outright errors) that arise in response to local organizational attributes (capacity, clinical culture) and state / national policies promoting growth and more care.

What can be done? Levels of decision-making -- and potential strategic levers Physician - Patient Encounter Local Organizational Context (e.g. capacity - culture) Policy Environment (e.g. payment system) Research priorities (disease biology - clinical practice) Coverage policy Performance measurement / Public reporting Payment system reform Recruitment / practice location decisions Capital investment (hospital, outpatient) Organizational structure (hospital, MD group) Process management (QI, IT adoption) Specialty certification Graduate Medical Education Continuing Medical Education HIT for care and decision-support Informed consumers / shared decision-making

What can be done? Levels of decision-making -- and potential strategic levers Physician - Patient Encounter Local Organizational Context (e.g. capacity - culture) Policy Environment (e.g. payment system) Research priorities (disease biology - clinical practice) Coverage policy Performance measurement / Public reporting Payment system reform Recruitment / practice location decisions Capital investment (hospital, outpatient) Organizational structure (hospital, MD group) Process management (QI, IT adoption) Specialty certification Graduate Medical Education Continuing Medical Education HIT for care and decision-support Informed consumers / shared decision-making

Organizational accountability Foster accountability for quality and costs Policy initiatives should focus on fostering organizational and professional accountability for longitudinal quality and costs. Formal: Prepaid / multi-specialty group practices (e.g Kaiser) Virtual:Hospitals and their affiliated physicians Hospitals / Medical Staff Majority of physicians work in or admit to only one hospital Chronic disease patients are highly loyal -- allowing comparisons of longitudinal costs and quality Performance measurement -- and payment reform -- would create incentives for hospital and staff to collaborate to improve quality Provides organizational context for capacity management -- and for implementation of information technology, QI, shared decision- making

Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care The care of patients with severe chronic illness Goal -- provide hospital specific measures of relative intensity of resource use Approach -- measure resource use in severely ill patients Assign Medicare beneficiaries to hospitals based upon predominant site of care during last 2 years of life (with chronic illness) Adjust for differences in underlying illness Measures include: Medicare reimbursements, utilization rates. Importance Measures reflect relative intensity and costs for other populations Provide insight into volume of supply-sensitive services (a reflection of capacity and culture)

Spending and utilization among severely ill patients in selected U.S. and Massachusetts hospitals *last two years of life, all other measures are during last six months of life Cleveland Clinic Cedars Sinai Part B spending* $19,427$6,490 Hospital days Primary care visits Medical specialist visits Physician visits Percent hospice

Spending and utilization among severely ill patients in selected U.S. and Massachusetts hospitals *last two years of life, all other measures are during last six months of life Saint Elizabeth’s BaystateMGH Cleveland Clinic Cedars Sinai Cooley Dickinson Part B spending* $12,292$9,519$10,316$8,840$19,427$6,490 Hospital days Primary care visits Medical specialist visits Physician visits Percent hospice

Major points Higher spending across regions and physician groups is largely due to overuse of supply-sensitive services -- hospital and ICU stays, MD visits, specialist consults; and more is worse. Overuse is largely a consequence of reasonable differences in clinical judgment (not errors) that arise in response to local organizational attributes (capacity, clinical culture) and state / national policies promoting growth and more care. Improving efficiency will require fostering local organizational accountability for the longitudinal costs and quality of care. Performance measurement, public reporting, payment reform and technical assistance should be aligned toward this goal.