Nonacute Care: The New Frontier

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/leadership/nonacute-care-new-frontier?spMailingID=10066722&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1061461419&spReportId=MTA2MTQ2MTQxOQS2

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What happens outside the hospital is increasingly important to success, so healthcare leaders need to influence or control care across the continuum.

If you’re running a hospital, one irony in the transformation toward value in healthcare is that your future success will be determined by care decisions that take place largely outside your four walls. If you’re running a health system with a variety of care sites and business entities other than acute care, the hospital’s importance is critical, but its place at the top of the healthcare economic chain is in jeopardy.

Certainly, the hospital is the most expensive site of care, so hospital care is still critically important in a business sense, no matter the payment model. But if it’s true that demonstrating value in healthcare will ensure long-term success—a notion that is frustratingly still debatable—nonacute care is where the action is.

For the purposes of developing and executing strategy, one has to assume that healthcare eventually will conform to the laws of economics—that is, that higher costs will discourage consumption at some level. That means delivering value is a worthy goal in itself despite the short-term financial pain it will cause—never mind the moral imperative to efficiently spend limited healthcare dollars.

So no longer can hospitals exist in an ivory tower of fee-for-service. Unquestionably, outcomes are becoming a bigger part of the reimbursement calculus, which means hospitals and health systems need a strategy to ensure their long-term relevance. They can do that as the main cog in the value chain, shepherding the healthcare experience, a preferable position; but physicians, health plans, and others are also vying for that role. Even if hospitals or health systems can engineer such a leadership role, acute care is high cost and to be discouraged when possible.

Will Consumerism Rein in Healthcare Costs? Why the Answer Is No

Click to access Healthcare-Consumerism_Rising-Costs_LEK-Executive-Insights_1806.pdf

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In the first of our multipart Executive Insights series on consumerism in healthcare, L.E.K. Consulting examines why a more engaged consumer — despite the increasing optimism — will not be nearly enough to bend the healthcare cost curve or even stop the rising rates substantially.

Why Geisinger posts negative physician reviews

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/why-geisinger-posts-negative-physician-reviews/429810/

Late last month, CMS updated its Overall Hospital Quality Star Rating program, its first update since July. In the update, 112 hospitals are now deemed five-star hospitals, up from 102 five-star hospitals in July but down from 251 in April 2015. As Becker’s Hospital Review noted, the October release includes updated data on patient experience, safety, effectiveness and timeliness of care.

The star ratings are related to patient satisfaction with care experiences based on data from the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey (HCAHPS) measures. The survey covers topics such as how well nurses and doctors communicated with patients, how responsive hospital staff were to patient needs, how clean and quiet hospital environments were and how well patients were prepared for post-hospital settings.

Opponents of the ratings have argued they oversimplify complex data and thereby convey misleading information that can harm reputations and reflect unfairly on certain hospitals. However, the move toward value-based care and transparency has led some healthcare organizations – such as Intermountain Healthcare and Geisinger Health System – to publish what patients think of them, for better or worse.

Patient stories have a greater impact on clinicians more than metrics like HCAHPS, Dr. Greg Burke, chief patient experience officer at Geisinger, told Healthcare Dive last week after a panel discussion on patient experience at U.S. News & World Report’s Healthcare of Tomorrow conference.

Geisinger serves more than 3 million residents throughout 45 counties in Pennsylvania. The physician-led system is comprised of approximately 30,000 employees, including nearly 1,600 employed physicians. It’s been in the news a bit lately due to its unorthodox move implementing its ProvenExperience money-back guarantee (It has refunded at least $400,000as of August). Burke stated that Geisinger posts about 97-98% of the comments it receives on the system’s clinicians.

4 forces that will influence medical cost trends in 2017

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/4-forces-that-will-influence-medical-cost-trends-in-2017/421162/

The healthcare industry is in a transformational period. The rising use of retail clinics, MACRA, population health efforts and the Medicare Part B demonstration are but a few examples of disruptive conversations being had in board rooms. Yet, all of these discussions are underscored by the one topic underlying most business conversations: the almighty dollar.

There’s been plenty of digital ink given this year to the costs surrounding the industry. Just last week, a new Kaiser Family Foundation report outlined how the cost for the most popular ACA plan – the silver plan – is expected to rise on average 10-11% next year. Healthcare costs are generally expected to increase each year but, for context, the average silver plan increased an average of about 5% the previous year, according to the report.

However, a new PricewaterhouseCoopers’ (PwC) report stated while health prices are increasing, they are being tempered by the demand for value. PwC’s Health Research Institute (HRI) projects the medical cost trend – the projected percentage increase in the cost to treat patients from one year to the next – won’t increase or decrease next year but will stay the same as 2016: a 6.5% growth rate for 2017.

The report shows there’s a push and pull between healthcare services utilization and narrow networks focusing on value that could shift the medical cost growth rate in future years. “When medical growth outpaces general inflation, a flat trend is not good enough,” the report states.

“As a result, 2017 will be a tough balancing act for the health industry,” the report states, adding, “Healthcare organizations must simultaneously increase access to consumer friendly services while decreasing unit cost. Employers, worried that this current trend is at an inflection point that could turn back up, will demand more value from the health industry.”

HRI highlighted four factors that will influence the 2017 medical cost trend.

Study: Dominant healthcare business models to go by the wayside as Apple & Google lean in

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/study-dominant-healthcare-business-models-to-go-by-the-wayside-as-apple/428862/

The findings suggest the market shifts are triggering entities such as medtech and pharma companies to bust out of their former molds, beyond products such as pills, to adopt customer-centric service solutions.

CEOs should look toward innovative business models that can help them monetize emerging opportunities, according to Frost & Sullivan Transformational Health Industry Analyst Kamaljit Behera.

“Collaboration and open-source innovation are key ingredients for future restructuring,” Behera stated. “Companies such as Apple, Google, IBM Watson and Intel will continue to compete outside their domain, forcing traditional healthcare companies to change their dominant business models.”

The company further pointed toward Walmart looking to become a primary health provider and Medtronic’s Diabetes Management’s move to an intelligent-based solutions business model, and suggested the use of “actionable health outcome data” will form the basis of the industry landscape. The future can expect to see more around crowdsourcing, mass customization, open innovation and data collection based on customer preferences – with scalability being the most critical factor for success, according to Behera.

The growing demand for value has indeed been providing some counterbalance against increasing healthcare costs, a PricewaterhouseCoopers’ (PwC) report similarly found earlier this year, with demand for consumer friendly services adding to the mix.

Chris Van Gorder on the changing face of healthcare

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Scripps Health CEO discusses the changing face of healthcare and his hope for the future.

Why clinical documentation is the missing link to value-based reimbursement

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/why-clinical-documentation-is-the-missing-link-to-value-based-reimbursement.html

The key to successfully making the jump from the old era of healthcare — one where fee-for-service is king — to the new era of healthcare — one where transparency, consumerism and value dominate — may actually be as simple as improving clinical documentation, according to Anthony Oliva, DO, vice president and CMO of Nuance Healthcare.

“For those who thought, ‘Maybe we can just hold out and [value-based care] will all go away,’ it’s never going to go away; it’s only going to get worse,” Dr. Oliva said at the Becker’s 2nd annual CIO/HIT + Revenue Cycle Conference in Chicago.

Healthcare is a classic example of a model explained in Ian Morrison’s book The Second Curve, according to Dr. Oliva. This two-curve model posits that any market undergoing transformation has two curves: the old and the new. Companies must ride the first curve and learn how and when to jump to the second, Mr. Morrison explains in the book.

Consumerism and RCM: 3 challenges posed by high deductibles & how to meet them

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/consumerism-and-rcm-3-challenges-posed-by-high-deductibles-how-to-meet-them.html

As high deductible health plans become more common, patients are becoming the new payers. This puts responsibility back in the hands of the provider to provide a consumer-friendly billing experience and collection strategy to maintain the speed of the revenue cycle management process.

At the Becker’s 2nd annual CIO/HIT + Revenue Cycle Conference in Chicago, the following five panelists discussed the top three challenges of consumerism and how RCM can meet those challenges: Steve Collins, vice president of business development at Zotec Partners; J. Wade Shields, owner and managing partner of Practice Partners; Susan Hawkins, executive director of revenue cycle at Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian in Newport Beach, Calif.; Amanda Cancelliere, vice president of operations and business performance services at McKesson Technology Solutions; and Brooke Murphy, writer/reporter with Becker’s Healthcare.

Five things that keep health execs up at night

http://managedhealthcareexecutive.modernmedicine.com/managed-healthcare-executive/news/five-things-keep-health-execs-night