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The Purchaser’s Perspective

Lead, Follow or Get Out of the Way: Incentives to Increase the Quality of Health Care Catherine Eikel, Director, Leapfrog Hospital Rewards Program P4P Web Summit May 1-3, 2006. The Purchaser’s Perspective. Employer-Based Health Care System in Trouble. Rapid escalation in cost (9-20+%/yr)

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The Purchaser’s Perspective

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  1. Lead, Follow or Get Out of the Way: Incentives to Increase the Quality of Health CareCatherine Eikel, Director, Leapfrog Hospital Rewards ProgramP4P Web SummitMay 1-3, 2006

  2. The Purchaser’s Perspective

  3. Employer-Based Health Care System in Trouble • Rapid escalation in cost (9-20+%/yr) • Companies unable to absorb growing medical cost through product price increases • Individual companies have limited purchasing power to effect change in system

  4. Managed Care Next Act! Increases in Health Insurance Premiums Compared to Other Indicators, 1988-2005 13.9%† * Estimate is statistically different from the previous year shown at p<0.05. No statistical tests were conducted for years prior to 1999. † Estimate is statistically different from the previous year shown at p<0.1. No statistical tests were conducted for years prior to 1999. Note: Data on premium increases reflect the cost of health insurance premiums for a family of four. Source: KFF/HRET Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Benefits, 1999-2005; KPMG Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Benefits, 1993, 1996; The Health Insurance Association of America (HIAA), 1988, 1989, 1990; Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index (U.S. City Average of Annual Inflation (April to April), 1988-2005; Bureau of Labor Statistics, Seasonally Adjusted Data from the Current Employment Statistics Survey (April to April), 1988-2005.

  5. Gridlock in the Health Care System Health Plans Not Letting Provider Value Show Through Providers Not Seeing Case for Reengineering Purchasers Not Buying Right, Toxic Payment System Consumers Not In the Quality Game Everyone Responsible, No One Accountable New Thinking is Needed to “Leapfrog” the Gridlock

  6. The Impact of Bad Health Care Purchasing

  7. Malfunctioning Market • Purchasers don’t use same standards in health care procurement as with other supply chains • Lay versus expert, lack of public information leads to distortion in the market • Hospital margins are improving while individual health care consumer and group purchasers’ costs are rising

  8. Failures in the Quality and Safety of Care • Patients receive recommended health care only 55% of the time1 • 30% of all direct health care costs are due to poor care • Misuse, under-use, overuse, and waste2 • Poor quality care costs between $1,900 and $2,250 per covered employee year2 • Poor quality means lives lost and mistakes made • Up to 98,000 deaths/year due to medical mistakes3 1McGlynn et al. 2003 2Midwest Business Group on Health/Juran Institute 2003 3Institute of Medicine 1999

  9. The Leapfrog Movement

  10. Pillars for Improving Quality Standard Measurements & Practices Incentives & Rewards Transparency

  11. The Leapfrog Operating System Inform & Educate Enrollees Multipliers:Health plan products Member Support & Activation Compare Providers CMS & state purchasers Improved Value Rewarding & Creating Incentives for Quality & Efficiency Other distribution channels & partners

  12. Standard Measurements & PracticesWe must ‘speak the same language’ when asking hospitals & doctors to report – national standards are essential

  13. TransparencyMake reporting results routine and use results to make health care purchasing decisions

  14. Incentives & RewardsEncourage better quality of care through incentives and rewards

  15. Growing Efforts to Buy Right • Public reporting and recognition • Financial rewards to providers • Financial incentives for consumers • More than 90 programs nationwide (1 in 4 use Leapfrog criteria) creating a lot of noise

  16. Leapfrog Hospital Rewards Program™: A tool for value-based purchasing • National Incentive & Reward (P4P) program that is customizable to fit local markets • Motivates hospital performance improvement in both quality and efficiency through incentives and rewards: improved patient care • Potential for purchaser/payer savings as hospital performance improves • Additional hospital performance information available to consumers: purchasers & patients • Adapts the CMS-Premier Hospital Quality Incentive Demonstration program for the commercial sector

  17. What does the Program do?: Measures • Measures hospital performance on two areas that matter to value-based purchasing: quality and efficiency • Five clinical areas: • 20% of commercial inpatient spending • 33% of commercial inpatient admissions • Coronary Artery Bypass Graft • Percutaneous Coronary Intervention • Acute Myocardial Infarction • Community Acquired Pneumonia • Deliveries / Newborn care

  18. What does the Program do?: Measures, cont’d • Uses nationally standardized measures: • JCAHO, Leapfrog Survey, National Quality Forum • Efficiency: first nationally collected/calculated efficiency measure • Leverage existing relationships & quality activities: • Data reported through JCAHO core measure vendors • Overlapping measurement with JCAHO & CMS’ Hospital Quality Alliance

  19. What does the Program do?: Transparency • Additional hospital performance data available to be used in educating and activating consumers

  20. How is the Program Used? 1 Additional hospital performance data for purchasers and consumers, publicly available on the Leapfrog web site Additional hospital performance data to be used by health plans, data vendors, etc. As a customizable hospital incentive and reward program 2 3

  21. Locally customizable incentive & reward program • Leapfrog Hospital Rewards Program™ • Savings Calculation • National Rewards Principles • Customizable by implementers based on market dynamics and goals for the Program • Partner with The Leapfrog Group to implement • Use LHRP quality and efficiency data as basis for rewarding hospitals • Work with Leapfrog to determine savings calculation and rewards payment methodologies, in line with national Program guidelines • Collaborate with Leapfrog to engage stakeholders, hospitals, etc. • Use the Leapfrog name and brand

  22. Incentive & Reward Program Design and Goals • To improve patient care and help consumers make informed health care decisions • To motivate hospital quality improvement through recognition and rewards • To use documented savings as the basis of direct financial rewards: limited amount of new money on the table • Win-win for payers & providers • Opportunity for multiple types of rewards • Financial (direct & indirect) • Non-financial

  23. Step 1 – Defining Savings • Analysis of hospital data tells us how much is saved when hospital efficiency improves • Example: Each 1 unit reduction in Adj ALOS for AMI saves about $3,300 per admission

  24. Step 2 – Allocating Rewards:National Program Rewards Principles Principle 1: Bonuses to hospitals must be based on shared savings that accrue to the purchaser/payer Principle 2: All top LHRP Performance Group hospitals should receive bonus payments Principle 3: Hospitals demonstrating sustained improvement should receive bonus payments Principle 4:Patients should be encouraged to go to Performance Group 1 & Performance Group 2 hospitals through benefit design Principle 5: Performance Group 1 hospitals and hospitals showing sustained improvement should be publicly recognized as well as financially rewarded Principle 6: Rewards should be calculated every 6 months Specific rewards methodologies can be tailored to local market needs.

  25. Payer Value • No rewards are paid if no savings are generated • If savings are generated, payer shares at least 50% with hospital • Positive ROI is designed into program • Hospital quality improvements motivated by Program implementation

  26. Hospital Value • The Rewards Package: • Direct rewards • Patient shift • Public recognition • Costs are kept low by use of existing data reporting systems and processes • Data feedback & benchmarking reports catalyze performance improvements

  27. Market-specific Implementation • Tailor LHRP Rewards Principles based on the market: • Goals of program implementation • Current reimbursement mechanism in the market • Analysis of historic reimbursement information • Other recognition & rewards as part of “total rewards package”

  28. Getting Started: Estimating Implementer ROI • Inputs • Number and demographics of covered lives: • Number of admissions for each of the five LHRP conditions • Local hospital costs • Administrative costs • Assumptions about program adoption rates and influence

  29. Estimating ROI, cont’d

  30. Getting Started: Market Success Factors • Active employer and/or health plan leadership • Market champion: political will • Willingness to work through the details of creating an effective Rewards Package for the market • Willingness to engage stakeholders and develop partnerships • High-level of awareness of Leapfrog and quality improvement goals among provider community • Engagement of hospitals in market area

  31. Leapfrog Hospital Rewards ProgramTMProgram Implementation Case Study: Memphis

  32. Why LHRP? • Considers both effectiveness & efficiency • Meets both MBGH mission provisions • Clear opportunity for improvement • History told us something had to be done • Extension of existing transparency initiative • Builds on hospital-based focus • Builds on Leapfrog survey & JCAHO core measures • Expansion of existing transparency initiative • Adds more clinical & efficiency information in public database • Shared savings rewards methodology limits risk • If you don’t save, you don’t pay

  33. Example of LHRP in Memphis • Which hospitals will participate? • Pilot with Methodist Healthcare for MBGH members that access the Methodist network • Collect, report & use data separately for each Methodist Healthcare general, acute care hospital • How will baseline & progress be measured? • Use national benchmarks to rank each hospital separately for baseline & incremental improvement • Will benefit designs steer toward higher performance groups? • Benefit designs will not change initially due to single hospital system focus • Benefit designs may change in future years, if significant differences identified among system facilities

  34. Coalition Role • Assess market readiness • Program design & development • Employer & hospital recruitment • Facilitate decisions on program specifics • Ranking level (e.g., national, regional, local) • Rewards methodologies • Convene & manage local regional team meetings & activities • Monitor program performance across employers • Serve as liaison with hospitals and health plans • Represent program publicly to the media & community • Participate in national user group meetings & bring national developments to the local market

  35. Market Readiness • Design the program by: • Working closely with Leapfrog • Identifying what’s possible • Keeping it small if you need to • Engaging champions/supporters • Key employers • Key hospitals • Building on prior activities

  36. Market Readiness • Recruit Employers by: • Laying foundation • Compare performance • LF Hospital Quality and Safety Survey • JCAHO Core Measure • Establish general business case • Leapfrog Hospital Rewards Program ROI Estimator • Gaining commitment • Analyze local data • Work with The Leapfrog Group • Provide administrative structure/support • Appeal to corporate culture

  37. Market Readiness • Recruit hospitals by: • Using already collected data & relationships • LF/JCAHO effectiveness measures • JCAHO Core Measure vendor • Providing transparency • Give backup material for key program elements • Bringing employers to table • Creating a win-win

  38. Challenges • Readiness of employers • Comfortable with “transparency” • Isn’t that enough? • Significant change in philosophy • Aren’t we already paying for quality? • Inherent complexity of program design • Will hospitals “game the system”? • Additional program administration requirements

  39. Challenges • Readiness of hospitals • Reporting requirements • Don’t I have enough programs I am reporting to now? • Lack of physician engagement • What is in this for the doctor? • Rewards methodology • Changes in reimbursement methodologies

  40. Observations • For both employers & hospitals: • It isn’t (only) about the money, it is about • Improvement • Transparency • Recognition • Partnership • Change takes time • Education (repeat, repeat, repeat) • Internal review & approval process • It’s easier if there is data • Historical transparency initiatives • Run local data through the model

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