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IOM-DHS Occupational Health 6/10/2013 Gary M. Franklin, MD, MPH Research Professor

Disability Prevention, Health Care Cost Control and Innovation in Health Care Delivery Historic Changes in WA Workers’ Compensation. IOM-DHS Occupational Health 6/10/2013 Gary M. Franklin, MD, MPH Research Professor Departments of Environmental Health and Neurology University of Washington

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IOM-DHS Occupational Health 6/10/2013 Gary M. Franklin, MD, MPH Research Professor

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  1. Disability Prevention, Health Care Cost Control and Innovation in Health Care DeliveryHistoric Changes in WA Workers’ Compensation IOM-DHS Occupational Health 6/10/2013 Gary M. Franklin, MD, MPH Research Professor Departments of Environmental Health and Neurology University of Washington Medical Director Washington State Department of Labor and Industries

  2. Over the past decade: Claims with disability payments are staying open longer

  3. What is the relationship between health care delivery and prevention? Disability Prevention: Changing the Paradigm Primary prevention Prevent workplace injuries and illnesses Secondary preventionPrevent disability among workers with work-related injuries and illnesses Tertiary prevention Manage disability to reduce residual deficit and dysfunction

  4. What are the main categories of risk? Disability Prediction in Workers’ Compensation Most important risk factor categories Medical Work Administrative Psychosocial Demographic Legal More Modifiability Less

  5. 38% Increase since 2001

  6. What has contributed the most to decade long pattern of increased disability duration? • Use of harmful treatments, which contribute to prolonged disability: opioids, spinal surgery (lumbar fusion) • Multiple diagnosis problem (eg, TOS) • Bad docs

  7. Use of opioids early after a low back injury increases risk of long term disability • Webster et al, 2007 Spine; 32: 2127-32 • >450 mg MED associated with 69 additional time-loss days • Franklin et al, 2008 Spine 33: 199-204 • >7 days or 2 Rxs opioids associated with doubling of risk of disability at 1 year

  8. CA CWCI study-Swedlow et al, March, 2011 3% of prescribers account for 55% of Schedule II opioid Rxs DLI will send letters to all prescribers with any patient on opioid doses at or above 120 mg/day MED • Call their attention to AMDG Guidelines and new WA state regulations • Associate medical director will meet with these docs personally http://www.cwci.org/research.html

  9. Surgical outcomes are universally worse in workers compensation • Harris et al, JAMA 2005; 293: 1644-1652 • Reviewed 211 studies, 1966-2003 • 175 outcome worse, 35 ND, 1 better • Meta-analysis of 129 studies (N=20498): • Summary odds for unsatisfactory outcome 3.79 (3.28-4.37)

  10. Contrasting Policy CA vs WAMartin et al, under review, 2013 *

  11. Index admission costs* • Controlling for age, sex, comorbidity • & diagnosis

  12. WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRIESLumbar Fusion and SIMPs

  13. 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Prevent Chronic Disabilitythru Physician Education and Support Increase use of occupational health best practices to reduce disability Current % Patients on disability Desired Months of Lost Work Time Cheadle A et al. Factors influencing the duration of work-related disability. Am J Public Health 1994; 84:190–196.

  14. Centers of Occupational Health and Education (COHEs) • Wickizer et al, A communitywide intervention to improve outcomes and reduce disability among injured workers in Washington State, Milbank Q 2004; 82: 547-67 • http://www.lni.wa.gov/ClaimsIns/Providers/Research/OHS/default.asp

  15. Dept. of Labor UW Research WCAC/HC Team & Industries Business Labor COHE Pilot Advisory Board Community Community Physicians COHE Organization and Governance

  16. Important components of COHE Model • This is a health care system, not an insurance company, intervention • Health care institutional support • Occupational health leadership • Business/labor advisory committees

  17. Important components of COHE Model • Occupational health best practices • Quality Indicators • Health Services coordination-function reports to the health care providers • Information support system • Modest payment incentives for best practices

  18. Initial Quality Indicators • Process, not specific treatment, indicators • Prompt submission of ROA (48 hrs) • Telephone call Re RTW by physician • Activity prescription • 4 week assessment of barriers to RTW

  19. COHE Communities Institution-based COHEs The Everett Clinic 327 providers ~3,000 claims (annual) Operations began 2007 Harborview Medical Center Emergency Department Operations began 2007 Renton COHE 270 providers ~8,500 claims (annual) Operations began 2002 Eastern WA COHE 935 providers ~16,000 claims (annual) Operations began 2003

  20. COHE resultsWickizer et al, Medical Care 2011; 49: 1105-1111 • 20% reduction in likelihood of one year disability, 30% reduction for back injuries • Among COHE participating doctors, high adopters of best practices had 57% fewer disability days than low adopters • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22015667

  21. Key Results from COHE Pilots • 20% reduction in likelihood of one year disability, 30% reduction for back injuries • Among COHE participating doctors, high adopters of best practices had 57% fewer disability days than low adopters

  22. Rates of Reduced Disability Days • Based upon the COHE regression model, the number of reduced disability days per 1,000 injured workers treated was: • Renton: 4,800 days (13.2 years) of disability avoided per 1,000 workers treated • Spokane: 5,800 days (15.9 years) of disability avoided per 1,000 workers treated

  23. What have we learned from the COHEs? • Health care in large communities can be re-organized to provide more highly integrated Occ Health best practices • Reorganization is possible with modest financial and non-financial incentives • Maintained worker choice of provider without a mandate to direct care • Improved satisfaction at all levels in the community • From our standpoint, a small investment for big return from both the human and the $ standpoint Contrast this experience with the 2004 CA reforms mandating medical provider networks-impact short lived, very low satisfaction among providers and workers-Off the shelf PPOs and MCOs have no impact on preventing disability

  24. Average Medical CostsAverage Disability Costs Questionable Health/Disability Outcomes Moderate to High Medical Costs Moderate to High Disability Costs Poor Health/Disability Outcomes Low or AverageMedical CostsReduced Disability Costs Excellent Health/Disability Outcomes High Medical Costs High Disability Costs Very Poor Health/Disability Outcomes CommunityPhysicians Clinical Efficiency Poor Good Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Zone 4 (Costs & Quality) Distribution of Quality of Care Patterns of poor quality care that presents injured workers a risk of harm typically require other (non-COHE) interventions (minimum standards & risk of harm) • Incentives for quality indicators known to improve outcomes • Resources to help docs apply them (CME, HSCs, reminders) • Geared toward improving well-intentioned Zone 2 & 3 • COHE Model: Identify high performers to serves as mentors

  25. 2011 WA Leg: SSB 5801 (2011)-Defining harm for the first time in any jurisdiction • The department may permanently remove a provider …when the provider exhibits a pattern of conduct of low quality care that exposes patients to risk of physical or psychiatric harm or death. Patterns that qualify as risk of harm include, but are not limited to, poor health care outcomes evidenced by increased, chronic, or prolonged pain or decreased function due to treatments that have not been shown to be curative, safe, or effective or for which it has been shown that the risks of harm exceed the benefits that can be reasonably expected based on peer- reviewed opinion

  26. Screening for Disability Risk Linked to Delivery of Occ Health Best Practices Positive Functional Recovery Questionnaire (FRQ) • Not worked for pay in past two weeks • Pain greater than 5 on VAS • Back and leg pain OR pain in multiple body sites Functional Recovery Interventions (FRI) • Graded exercise/activity • Address low recovery expectations • Address any fear of usual activity reinjuring or worsening condition • Flag additional HSC focus on RTW

  27. New COHE subacute/early chronic quality indicators • Four weeks after care begins (up to 8 weeks after care begins), unless contra-indicated, AP referral for PT-supervised time-limited graded exercise program if worker not progressing sufficiently in self-managed activity program • AP referral of IW to activity coaching (weekly contacts with a trained activity coach using structured sessions and materials aimed at re-integrating the IW into life activities, including work) if worker still off work 4 weeks after care begins and no contra-indications for activity coaching • IW ratings of pain and function are obtained at each visit, using the 2 question Graded Chronic Pain (Von Korff) instrument

  28. New COHE transition quality indicators-better “hand-offs” • For IWs having surgery, there is a documented pre-op assessment of RTW capacity and specific goals related to RTW post-op • For IWs who have surgery, the HSC assists in transitioning the patient back to primary care after surgery when requested by surgeon • For IWs having surgery, there is an integrated post-operative team (e.g., COHE-delivered care) that will evaluate the patient if RTW goals are not met by 8 weeks post-op (12 weeks for lumbar fusion)

  29. Ideal Community-Based Workers’ Comp Health Care COHE-Primary Occ Health Care Surgical/ Specialty HSC Medical Home to prevent/treat chronic pain

  30. THANK YOU! For electronic copies of this presentation, please e-mail Laura Black ljl2@uw.edu For questions or feedback, please e-mail Gary Franklin meddir@u.washington.edu

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