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Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. Carlson School of Management Department of Finance sparente@umn

University of Minnesota The Healthcare Marketplace Medical Industry Leadership Institute Course: MILI 6990/5990 Spring Semester A, 2017. Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. Carlson School of Management Department of Finance sparente@umn.edu. What is minimum insurance you are willing to buy.

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Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. Carlson School of Management Department of Finance sparente@umn

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  1. University of MinnesotaThe Healthcare MarketplaceMedical Industry Leadership InstituteCourse: MILI 6990/5990Spring Semester A, 2017 Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. Carlson School of Management Department of Finance sparente@umn.edu

  2. What is minimum insurance you are willing to buy

  3. Information Technology Overview • Goals of Health IT • Health IT Econ Background • Value of Health IT – IOM Report • Health IT Pyramid • Hardware • Data • Vision Quest – Integrating Clinical & Insurance Data for Management • Health IT & Health Reform – Options

  4. What are the Goals of Information Technology? • Make life easier • Easier to obtain products & services • Improve quality of life • Save Money • Labor-savings $$$ • Less costly mistakes • Make Money • Focused Marketing

  5. Economic Theory of IT • Good work by: Erik Brynjolfsson and Lorin Hitt (2000) from MIT Sloan School • Three Different Measure’s of IT Value: • Productivity • Profit • Consumer Welfare

  6. Unique Features of Health IT Economics • Standard assumption is that IT can not yield profits only reduce costs. • Assumption is not true if an industry has high barriers to entry. • Health care has many barriers to entry, so providers & insurers should buy IT not just as a tool to control cost but to profit as well.

  7. Econometric Application - 3Consumer Surplus • Consumer surplus is derived from consumers purchasing a good at a market price lower than what they would have been willing to pay. • IT is full of these examples in the PC market today. What about Health IT? • Want to plot a demand curve to measure CS: • Could obtain data from insurers and providers to see whether consumer surplus exists. • May need a patient survey for Internet applications related to health.

  8. What is the ‘Value’ of Information? • Hard to Express……. • A proxy valuation is the ‘opportunity cost’ of not having the information. • Opportunity cost is defined as the cost you would pay to obtain one unit of information in exchange for one unit of another good. • Health example: An insurer not having a diabetes care tracking system by 2017 will lead to employer with 5,000 beneficiaries to leave the plan, which would decrease profits by $2 million.

  9. The IOM Quality Chasm Report:Health IT Diffusion Catalyst?

  10. The Problem of Health ITFrom the IOM Quality Chasm Report • “Health care delivery has been relatively untouched by the revolution information technology that has been transforming nearly every other aspect of society.” • “The challenges of applying information technology to health care should not be underestimated….do to the complexity of the industry.”

  11. The Opportunity of Health IT “The Internet has enormous potential to transform health care through information technology applications in such as areas as consumer health, clinical care, administrative and financial transactions, public health, professional education, and biomedical and health services research (National Research Council, 2000).”

  12. Actual eLinks To Build Congress <90% Income Federal Government Main Street Biotechnology Big Business Physicians 99% Income 91-99% Income Courts Insurers Hospitals

  13. Chasm Recommendation #9 • “Congress, the executive branch, leaders of health care organizations, public and private purchasers, and health informatics associations and vendors should make a renewed national commitment to building an information infrastructure to support health care delivery, consumer health, quality measurement and improvement, public accountability, clinical and health services research, and clinical education. This commitment should lead to the elimination of most handwritten clinical data by the end of the decade.” • In short, Health IT is good. • IT is anecessary, but not sufficientasset for a21st century delivery system.

  14. Insurer’s IT Paradox • They are being held accountable for an insured patient’s total care. • Best breadth of data • Most all places of service • ‘Standardized’ data • Worst detail • No clinical info on patient health status and outcomes.

  15. Insurers’ Role in Health Information Technology • They are the ‘links’ that connect to everything about a patient in an electronic form. • Employers • Providers • Patients • Government agencies • Researchers

  16. Actual eLinks <90% Income Federal Government Congress Main Street Biotechnology Big Business Physicians 99% Income 91-99% Income Courts Insurers Hospitals

  17. HEALTH INSURANCE CLAIM FORM

  18. Insurance Database Architecture • Claims • Membership • Provider files • Case management • Utilization review / Demand Management • Decision-support databases • Analytic / Financial data

  19. Claims Data Example

  20. Medical Data Collection - 1 • Operational data: Transaction-oriented • Hospital pharmacies • Laboratories • Radiology departments • Critical care units • Order-processing units

  21. Code Systems Standards - 1 • HL7 - American National Standards Institute Health Level • Patient registration data • Patient orders • Clinical information (e.g., vital signs) • Referral information • Clinical trial data • Other operational transactions

  22. Code Systems Standards - 2 • Diagnoses: International Classification of Diseases, Version 9 (ICD9) • Procedures: Current Procedural Terminology, Version 4 (CPT4) • Drugs: Food and Drug Administration’s Nation Drug Code (NDC) directory

  23. Integrated Delivery SystemIT Network Decision Support Life Support Data Hardware

  24. Insurer Only Data 1/31/17 PCP visit Laboratory test Specialist visit Biopsy Surgery Sub-Acute Care 2/6/17

  25. Medical Data Available to a U.S. Fee-for-Service Insurer Decision Support Life Support Data Hardware

  26. Medical Data Available to a U.S. Staff Model HMO Decision Support Life Support Data Hardware

  27. Provider Only Data 1/31/17 Referral to specialist White blood cell count high Cancer metastasized Malignant cancer remains 2/6/17

  28. Data Available to the Average Medical Provider About a Patient’s Care 10% of Care 25% of Care 15% of Care 15% of Care 35% of Care

  29. Merging Insurer & Provider Data 1/31/17 PCP visit Referral to specialist Laboratory test Specialist visit White blood cell count high Biopsy Cancer metastasized Surgery Malignant cancer remains Sub-Acute Care 2/6/17

  30. Actual eLinks To Build <90% Income Federal Government Congress Main Street Biotechnology Big Business Physicians 99% Income 91-99% Income Courts Insurers Hospitals

  31. Harnessing Health Information in Real Time Stephen T. Parente, Ph.D. Professor, Department of Finance Director, Medical Industry Leadership Institute Adjunct Scholar, AEI

  32. Harnessing Health Information in Real Time: Back to the Future for a More Practical and Effective Infrastructure • The Road to the Current Health IT initiative • The Fable of the Trojan Rabbit EMR • Parallel Universes & Flux Capacitors • Cheaper than Bribery: Retool current infrastructure • How Real Time Health IT may affect care & insurance • Short List of Pragmatic Health IT Policy Prescriptions

  33. The Road to ARRA Funded Health IT-1 1991: HHS Secretary Sullivan proposes Health IT infrastructure improvements. 1993: Health Security Act includes provisions for modernized Health IT infrastructure: TBD 1996: HIPAA – Kennedy-Kassenbaum mandates health insurance standard and advocates for electronic medical record standard by next decade 1998: David Brailer, PhD, MD starts Care Science, Inc. and proposes health IT data ‘interoperability’ between medical practices using financial services firms as paradigm.

  34. A Tale of Two Countries United States China 1991 – Call for US HIT by HHS Secretary 1999– Institute of Medicine call for EMR 2006 – Office of National Coordinator gets $50M from Congress 2010 – HIT Meaningful use criteria discussed 1991 – Last steam locomotive made 1999 – China prepares for Olympics 2006 – Invests $4 billion in EMR system using VA Vista model 2010 – Cloud-based EHR w/100k connections

  35. The Opportunity at Stake

  36. What if No One Wants a Trojan Rabbit? Sir Bedivere the Wise: “Now once we have gotten all the physicians to buy a ARRA-financed Dell computers from Wal Mart for an EMR/EHR install, we can distribute the software to them to place more data entry onto their existing workflow and then pay them less when we use the Meaningful Use criteria to tell them they are under-performing in their new medical home or Accountable Care Organization CMS Pilot.”

  37. Some Napkin Calculations • Assume $34 billion ARRA HIT funds goes only to doctors: • $68,000 per physician • Buy hardware & software • Offset training and indirect cost learning expense • Compared to cost of malpractice premiums: • In 2002 in Dade County, FL (granted – higher then ave.): • $56,153 (internal medicine) • $174,268 (general surgery) • $201,376 (OB/GYN) • Bonus from HIT!!! EMR produces terabytes of discoverable data for medical malpractice.

  38. Let’s Rev Up the Flux Capacitor“When the Medicare Debt Hits $88 trillion you’re going to see some serious…debt reduction commissions”

  39. Parallel Universe Number One Veteran Administration (VistA) System Started 25+ years ago Has received $8 billion Links 153 hospitals Links 768 outpatient clinics & pharmacy Real-time access Add-ins: Indian Health Service, DOD military hospitals

  40. Parallel Universe Number Two • Financial Services industry • Started 25 years ago too • ATM transfers was key • Electronic credits cards were rife with fraud by early 1990s • Created fraud scoring technologies & data to flag suspicious transactions in real-time • Data was siloed like HIT • Led to FOUR near-time repositories of all financial services data.

  41. Applying Financials Services Lessons to Stop Health Care Fraud B4 Payment • Need to identify fraud and abuse and stop payment. This is the only way to get the savings from fraud & abuse prevention activities at an industrial scale with verifiable outcomes. • Can plug in intervention before or after payment by an insurer / Medicare / Medicaid. Ideally, you want to not pay a fraudulent claim. Page 41 • TerraMedica’ fraud and abuse identification and prevention solutions can be plugged into virtually any point in the healthcare value chain

  42. Such Technology Could Yield ‘Dartmouth Atlas’ of Medicare Fraud Except this graph would be updated in real-time and not sit static in top-tier journal with living trend revealed info Page 42

  43. Instead of Bribery Tap Existing TechInfrastructure for Health Reform 1) Get actuarially certified risk profiles for all insured based on existing data. Let people get them like a they would a credit report. Equifax and Experian are standing by and waiting for the go-switch. 2) Government and private federal exchanges portals. Take risk profiles from (1) and provide a ‘lock in’ by Internet click. Target the younger population not buying coverage today through the web. Have brokers handle the rest. Gives brokers time to get a Plan B. 3) Where the market fails from (2), auction off the high risk Given (1) and (2), who are the vulnerable and why Target resources to fill the insurance gaps using federal and state resources. 4) Let the Employer-sponsored market evolve; it’s not broken.

  44. Instead of Bribery Tap Existing Technology and Infrastructure Insurers Providers Let your systems be the conduits and record locators of clinical data. Sell/spin off or lease too data marts and sell retail insurance services in exchanges. Use coming ANSI X12 standard with ICD10 to harmonize all platforms Attach clinical data to billing records in return for prompt (<3 day to seconds) pay for ambulatory care. Stop customizing and get your data on an ICD10 compliant cloud. Walk away from ACO mutually assured destruction

  45. How might this Real Time HIT operate in the ideal world? Consider Anna a consumer with a diabetes. On January 1, 2017, she begins health coverage in a new health plan with Real Time HIT technology, an Integrated Health Card (IHC). The IHC web site provides a list of endocrinologists accepting patients in her area and quality scores for providers as well as those accepting IHC. Prior to the visit, the Anna logs onto a secure IHC web site from the health plan to verify her eligibility and requests her previous pharmacy history from a different health plan. When she visits the endocrinologist, the physician’s assistant swipes the health card using a USB swipe card machine connected to the Internet. The physician sees on the IHC web site that the patient has already authorized the provider to review her past history. The physician reviews all prior drug history and proceeds to conduct an initial evaluation with some sense of patient compliance with medications for a chronic illness as well as prior dosing. During the visit, the physician orders tests for Glycosylated Hemoglobin, blood sugar, and creatinine - records blood pressure, weight and height.

  46. Anna’s Story - 2 The physician’s assistant bills for an initial evaluation on the IHC web site which requests standard claims data as well as the patient’s height, weight and blood pressure Since the patient’s eligibility information is already knownthe allowed amount for the initial consultation is transferred directly to the physician’s practice business account. The patient sees the endocrinologist four more times during the year and keeps recording stable or improving lab values. At the end of year, the health plan invites the patient to comment on quality of care she has received since her HbA1c scores improved. If she comments, she will receive either a reduction in her co-insurance rate or a credit to her health savings/reimbursement account if she is enrolled in a consumer directed health plan. Anna decides to shop for a new health plan using her IHC data with clinical information, preferences and comments, and lab values. She finds she can get a 15% discount from another plan because of her healthy habits as a diabetic patient. She decides to take the new plan and keeps her IHC. The only changes are the designation of her health plan and eligibility criteria as well as the plan’s provider panel.

  47. Closing Thoughts Other than official deadlines when providers will be penalized for not having purchased the right health IT solution, little transparent and measurable progress is being made right now. Currently, there is no proactive sophisticated, effective, and efficient fraud-prevention solution in the health care industry. To succeed with health IT, we need to go back to the future before “bribed interoperability” became the latest policy prescription. Real-time health IT, if widespread, could break the oligopolistic control of health data by providers and insurers.

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