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Bipartisan Congressional Health Policy Conference January 13, 2006 Miami, FL

Bipartisan Congressional Health Policy Conference January 13, 2006 Miami, FL. Maureen Bisognano Executive Vice President & COO Institute for Healthcare Improvement. IHI’s Assumptions. Better care does not always mean higher cost care.

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Bipartisan Congressional Health Policy Conference January 13, 2006 Miami, FL

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  1. Bipartisan Congressional Health Policy ConferenceJanuary 13, 2006Miami, FL Maureen Bisognano Executive Vice President & COO Institute for Healthcare Improvement

  2. IHI’s Assumptions • Better care does not always mean higher cost care. • Providers will face steadily increasing pressure to take cost (i.e., reduce waste) out of the system while maintaining or increasing the quality of care. This is evidenced by the following: • Health care inflation costs continue to outstrip increases in GDP; • The increasing availability, reliability, and use of information on provider quality; • The current trend whereby payors reward providers who offer both low cost and high quality care by directing patient volume to these providers (e.g., tiered networks) and by offering financial incentives (e.g., CMS/Premier Pay-for-Performance initiative; multiple initiatives by Massachusetts payors); and • The appearance of disruptive entrants (e.g., Minute Clinic) offering care that meets specific patient needs at radically lower cost than traditional providers. • To achieve the goal of better care for all, it is imperative that delivery costs fall, which in turn reduces costs to patients (while providers preserve an acceptable margin).

  3. Approach to Waste Reduction • According to Noriaki Kano (a Japanese thinker on process-design and quality improvement), improving the quality of a product or service can be considered using three categories. Each represents a different type of quality improvement lever: • Lever 1: Eliminate the quality problems that arise because the customers’ expectations are not met. • Lever 2: Reduce cost significantly while maintaining or improving quality. • Lever 3: Expand customers’ expectations by providing products and services perceived as unusually high in value.

  4. Exploring the Differences between Improvement Projects Focused on Kano 1, Kano 2, and Kano 3 Approaches

  5. Primary Drivers Secondary Drivers Projects Standardize purchasing Base utilization on best practices Purchase wholesale instead of retail Switch from brand-name to generic Prescribe based on industry norm Mass Purchasing Pharmaceuticals Wasted Materials Match Capacity:Demand Hospital Throughput Ancillary Throughput Redesign care management Redesign ER processes Redesign OR processes Achieve optimum performance levels Use a flexible staffing model Reduce agency usage Implement an acuity identification system Use appropriate patient lifting techniques Turnover/Recruitment Premium Pay Work Days Lost Due to Injury/Illness Reduce settlements by changing process when sentinel event occurs Prevent infections (SSI, CLI, VAP) Prevent Decubitus Ulcers Prevent readmissions Malpractice claims Coordination of Care Adverse Events and Complications Stop denial rework Stop services not adding value (ex. unnecessary landscaping) Improve chronic disease management Stop performing outpatient services as inpatient services Waste in Admin Services End-of-Life Care Unnecessary Procedures/ Hospitalizations Clinical Quality Problems Staffing Flow Supply Chain Mismatched Services Dark Green Dollars Reducing Operating Budget by 1-3% a year

  6. A Balanced Strategy of Initiatives • Kano Aim #2 • Aim: Reduce Operating expense budget by 1% per year, year after year • Start with the dark green dollars and design portfolio • - • - • - Kano Aims #1 & #3 Aim: Raise the bar on… Clinical Care - - - Service & Systems - - - Work Environment - - - Business Case Management Systems Reinvestment strategy Service & Systems Great Work Environment IT / HR Bottom Line Clinical Care

  7. An Assertion • Society needs and would value a health system that is optimized on three dimensions: health of a defined population; experience of an individual over time especially during an “episode” of care; and per capita costs. Unfortunately, as structured today, most health care entities such as hospitals, physician practices, and long term care facilities operate under business models that exclude at least one of the three dimensions.

  8. New Challenges: The Triple Aim 1. The health of a defined population; 2. The experience of care by the people in that population; and 3. The cost per capita of providing care for this population. Health Experience of care Cost per capita

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