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The IHS Telehealth Program: Innovation and ROI Mark Carroll, MD

The IHS Telehealth Program: Innovation and ROI Mark Carroll, MD. Objectives for this presentation. Overview of IHS and Indian health care Highlights specific to the IHS Telehealth Program

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The IHS Telehealth Program: Innovation and ROI Mark Carroll, MD

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  1. The IHS Telehealth Program: Innovation and ROI Mark Carroll, MD

  2. Objectives for this presentation • Overview of IHS and Indian health care • Highlights specific to the IHS Telehealth Program • Thoughts and possibilities re: strategic collaboration with the Northwest Regional Telehealth Resource Center

  3. INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE MISSION, GOAL, & FOUNDATION The Mission, in partnership with American Indian and Alaska Native people, is to raise their physical, mental, social and spiritual health to the highest level. The Goal is to ensure that comprehensive, culturally acceptable personal and public health services are available and accessible to all American Indian and Alaska Native people. The Foundation is to uphold the Federal Government’s obligation to promote healthy American Indian and Alaska Native people, communities and cultures, and to honor and protect the inherent sovereign rights of Tribes.

  4. A Quick Look at the INDIAN HEALTH SERVICE • Provides a comprehensive health service delivery system for approximately 1.9 million of 3.3 million American Indians and Alaska Natives. • Serves members of 561 federally recognized Tribes in 35 states. • FY 2007 appropriation is approximately $3.2 billion. • Indian Health Service total staff consists of about 15, 850 employees, which includes approximately 2,600 nurses, 930 physicians, 390 engineers, 500 pharmacists, 300 dentists, and 170 sanitarians

  5. Partnership with Tribal Governments • The Indian Self-Determination Act of 1975 includes an opportunity for Tribes to assume the responsibility of providing health care for their members, without lessening any Federal treaty obligation. • Tribes now administer health care contracts and compacts with the IHS valued at over $1.5 billion. This represents approximately 54% of the IHS budget authority appropriation.

  6. 163 Service Units in 12 Areas Located in 35 States

  7. Indian Health Care Systems The IHS also supports 34 Urban Clinics across the nation. Source: IHS Regional Differences, 2000-2001

  8. IHS Hospital System • JCAHO Accredited • Size varies: 156 Beds - 6 Beds • 59,000 Admissions per year (2006) • 9,797,000 Outpatient visits per year (2006)

  9. l l l l l l l l l l n l l l 60% of IHS hospitals and ambulatory centers are in remote areas n l n l l l l l n l l l l l l l l n l l l l l l n l n l l l l l n l n l l l n l l l l l l l l l n l n n l n l l l l l l n l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l n l n l l n l l n l l l l l n l n l n n l l l l n l l l n n l n n l n l l l n l l l n l l l l n l l n n l l l l l l l n l n l n n n n n l l n l l l l l l l n n l l n n l l l l l n n l l n l l l l n Hospital l n l l l AmbulatoryCenter l Rural Primary Care System – with some Urban Locations

  10. Community Oriented Programs • Community oriented primary care • Public health emphasis • Traveling services in remote villages • Community health representatives • Village health aids • Community & school health education Traveling dental team visits remote villages in Alaska

  11. IHS Constructs Community Water Supply & Waste Disposal Facilities

  12. WHAT ABOUT RESULTS?

  13. Mortality Rates for Indian People Have Declined Since 1973 CY 2000-2002 Source: IHS/OPHS/DPS, June 2005

  14. MORTALITY RATE DISPARITIES CONTINUE American Indians and Alaska Natives in the IHS Service Area 2001-2003 (Age-adjusted mortality rates per 100,000 population) U.S. Ratio: AI/AN All Races AI/AN Rate Rate to U.S. 2001- 2003 2002 All Races ALL CAUSES 1042.2 845.3 1.2 Tuberculosis 1.8 0.3 6.0 Alcoholism 43.6 6.7 6.5 Diabetes 75.2 25.4 3.0 Motor vehicle crashes 51.1 15.7 3.3 Unintentional Injuries 93.8 36.9 2.5 Homicide 12.7 6.1 2.1 Suicide 17.1 10.9 1.6 Cervical cancer 4.4 2.6 1.7 Infant deaths 1/ 9.8 7.0 1.4 Cerebrovascular diseases 54.7 56.2 1.0 1/ Infant deaths per 1,000 live births NOTE: American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) rates were adjusted to compensate for misreporting of AI/AN race on state death certificates. AI/AN rates are based on 2000 census with bridged-race categories developed by the Census Bureau and the National Center for Health Statistics. Jan. 2007

  15. 35 30 25 20 Male 15 Female 10 5 0 All White Black American Indian/ Alaska Native Asian Hispanic American Suicide RatesAges 15-19, by Race and Gender Rates per 100,000 people Source: CDC/2000

  16. Prevalence of Diagnosed Diabetes: AI/ANs Compared to U.S. Population 1980- 2004 Source: IHS Program Statistics and National Diabetes Surveillance System.

  17. Per Capita Expenditures Trend:IHS Compared to US Average

  18. Telehealth as a Business Tool • To improve service delivery in the face of: • Increasing service population/need • Disparities in: • Mortality data • Funding • Staffing • Facilities

  19. Indian Health Service and Health Information Technology • Improve health care access, quality, transparency, and value • Highlight the vital perspectives and priorities of communities, as well as populations • Involve the input of our “key stakeholders” - the American Indian and Alaska Native people Emphasis on Emerging Tools that:

  20. Key Questions for Telehealth • What are the opportunities for shared/collaborative service delivery? • To help improve • Acess to quality care • Value • What are the opportunities specific to chronic care? • Specialist care • Care coordination/remote monitoring

  21. IHS Telehealth Directory - 2005 • National directory work done in 2005 • Foundation for targeting collaboration opportunities with IHS Areas within NRTRC ‘catchment’ • All IHS Areas had active clinical telehealth underway • In over 30 clinical disciplines

  22. 2005 Not updated since 2005

  23. 2005 Not updated since 2005

  24. Collaborations are Key • Within Indian health • Southwest Telehealth Consortium • Alaska Federal Health Care Access Network (AFHCAN) • Inter-Area “corporate” projects • With other federal agencies • Veterans Health Administration • With universities, states, and other organizations

  25. IHS Telehealth Program:Leveraging Investments • Build on existing successes

  26. IHS Joslin Vision Network • Retinal screening and diagnostic tele-ophthalmology services for patients with diabetes • 57 sites nationally in 15 states • Single reading center at Phoenix Indian Medical Center • Over 22,000 interpretations performed to date

  27. IHS/JVN Teleophthalmology Program2000 - 2007 Projecting 100 Deployments by end of FY 2009 21,000 total studies

  28. Going Mobile • Portable JVN • Proof-of-concept to the Artic Circle in 2006

  29. AFHCAN Telehealth • 8 years operational history • R&D Telehealth System • 10,000 cases / year • Manufacturing of Medical Devices • Whole Product Solution • Design  Installation  Training  Support  Marketing • Installed Customer base includes: • 248 sites, 44 organizations • 37 Tribal organizations • US Army sites (6) • US Air Force bases (3) • State of Alaska Public Health Nursing (26) • US Coast Guard clinics (5) • US Coast Guard cutters and ice breakers (6)

  30. IHS-AFHCAN Collaboration • National Telehealth Infrastructure in Indian Health • Offer a secure enterprise solution for store-and-forward telemedicine across Indian health

  31. Multi-Modality “Store&Forward” T-Health

  32. For this case, rate the following statement: Telemedicine will improve the QUALITY OF CARE for this patient. (n=1,681)

  33. Product Evaluation

  34. AFHCAN Status Report - #1 • Server infrastructure • IHS core network in place • Includes capability for outside, non-IHS consultants/specialists • Multiple Areas with AFHCAN servers • Nashville, Phoenix, Portland • Other Area capacity expanding • Some via planned expansion of tele-consultation support for IHS AIDS-HIV telemedicine project

  35. AFHCAN Status Report - #2 • Carts not required • Lots of telemedicine possible via free software + local PCs + peripherals (e.g. digital camera) • AFHCAN-RPMS interface • 1st phase being completed • Service models developing for multiple sites from different Areas • Note: Tremendous opportunity for quality, value, and system efficiencies

  36. Integrated Systems of Care • Focus on standards and information systems integration • AFHCAN to be integrated with - • The IHS Electronic Health Record • And VistA Imaging

  37. Tele-Behavioral Health • Growing experience already within Indian health • Growing need • National Tele-psychiatry consultant appointed • Possible funding increases in years ahead

  38. Care Model Community Health System Health Care Organization Resources and Policies ClinicalInformationSystems Self-Management Support DeliverySystem Design Decision Support Productive Interactions through effective asset based partnering over time Informed, Empowered Patient and Family Prepared, Proactive Practice Team PatientDriven Coordinated Timely and Efficient Evidence-based and Safe Improved achievement of patient and community goals

  39. Care Model • Develop a multidisciplinary team that optimizes the role of each member in clinic & community • Optimize the Care Team: each member performs at the highest level of their licensure. • Focus on access, efficiencies and flow • Provide clinical case management services for complex patients • Give care that patients understand and that fits with cultural background • Think about alternative approaches to traditional 1:1 face to face care: telehealth, group visits, etc. • Integrate traditional medicine Community HealthSystem Health Care Organization Resources and Policies DeliverySystem Design ClinicalInformationSystems Self-Management Support Decision Support Productive Interactions through effective asset based partnering over time Informed, Empowered Patient and Family Prepared, Proactive Practice Team PatientDriven Coordinated Timely and Efficient Evidence-based and Safe Improved achievement of patient and community goals

  40. VHA CCHT Patient Numbers As of 3/30/07 25,000 pts

  41. HOME TELEHEALTH FOR HEART FAILURE HEART Health Enhancement for American Indians & Alaska Natives Through Residential Telemedicine ‘Success with Failure’

  42. Economics of Home Telehealth • Annualized cost per patient ~ $2,500 • Includes cost of equipment and shared staff (new) to oversee day-to-day program • Annualized savings per patient ~$30,000 • Assumes prevention of roughly 1.5 hospitalizations per year for patients with heart failure as primary diagnosis

  43. POTENTIAL SAVINGS Note: Cost/Hospitalization from Dasta (2005) AHA 6th Scientific Forum on Quality of Care and Outcomes Research in Cardiovascular Disease & Stroke

  44. Home T-Health Reimbursement • System savings don’t equal individual facility budget savings • Savings to 3rd party insurers vs. individual facility CHS budget • And incentives are “malaligned” • E.g. Decreased hospitalizations are not advantageous to some referral facility operating budgets

  45. T-Health Business Models • Lapsed salaries • Use T-health for unfilled vacancies • Reimbursement • Relies on 3rd party payer policy and rates • Cost Avoidance • Eg.For contract health budgets • Agreements/contracts • Shared costs among facilities/communities for specialist FTEs/services

  46. Alaska ENT Outcomes (n=897) About 73% of the patients seen needed something done (meds, surgery, ongoing monitoring) and 27% needed to be screened out. Note: Percentages may not add to 100% due to multiple outcomes per case.

  47. ENT Tele-Consultation Center • Specialists at Alaska Native Medical Center • Statewide experience via the AFHCAN network • Extended in 2006 to patients at the Yakima Indian Health facility in eastern Washington • Further extension in 2007-08 to other Indian health facilities outside Alaska • “Expert triage” model

  48. Radiology Retinopathy screening Mental health Dermatology ENT Cardiology Pharmacy AIDS-HIV care Neurology Nutrition/Dietetics New Service Models Possible For:

  49. Telehealth Service “Menu” *Draft – Phoenix Area IHS* 2006

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