Vermont’s all-payer ACO will begin in January

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20161026/NEWS/161029930/vermonts-all-payer-aco-will-begin-in-january

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In January, Vermont will become the first state in the nation to move to a voluntary all-payer accountable care organization model, the CMS announced Wednesday.

The Vermont program is modeled after a similar one from Maryland, but the Maryland program covers only hospitals. The Vermont ACO will cover Medicare, Medicaid and commercial payers, requiring those who participate to pay similar rates for all services.

The CMS is giving Vermont $9.5 million in start-up funding to support the transition. The demonstration, funded through a 1115 waiver, will last five years.

“This model is historic in terms of its scope, aiming to include almost all providers and people throughout the state in an all-payer ACO model to drive improved quality, better care coordination, healthier people, and smarter spending,” the CMS’ Chief Medical Officer Patrick Conway said in a statement.

“We will become the first state in America to fundamentally transform our entire health care system so it is geared towards keeping people healthy, not making money,” said Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin, who earlier this year traveled to Washington to negotiate a deal with HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell.

The state aims to have 70% of its insured residents covered by an ACO by 2022. The model will be considered an advanced alternative payment model under the new Medicare reimbursement program, making participants eligible for a performance bonus.

Playing hardball: doctors start negotiating with doctors

Playing hardball: doctors start negotiating with doctors

Since the introduction of Obamacare, a growing number of physicians are part of what are called Accountable Care Organizations, where physicians, nurses and other providers are responsible for the health of their patients and the costs of that care.

The shifting landscape is rearranging incentives, and leading doctors into corners of their work they’ve rarely visited.

On a late Friday afternoon last month, the Family Health Associates practice in Charleston, West Virginia is empty.

Empty except for Dr. Julie DeTemple and her staff.

“I should be home and I’m here typing away doing my notes, charting,” DeTemple said.

The primary care doctor has had to adjust from examining patients – why she got into the business – to examining data.

Her quality time with spreadsheets has ramped up this year, now that’s she’s co-founded the Aledade West Virginia ACO, made up of 11 physician practices in the state.

The physicians constantly meet, looking for ways to improve care and cut out wasteful spending.

Doctors cut costs by getting to know their patients

Doctors cut costs by getting to know their patients

76-year old Millard Scott who suffers from COPD and community health worker Nurse Samantha Runyon.

The healthcare landscape is changing, even as Obamacare bumps along.

In the past six years, we’ve seen the rise of Accountable Care Organizations, now numbering more than 800, where doctors or hospitals work together to streamline care. For physicians that means they now get some compensation through contracts that reward improving health and controlling costs, as opposed to simply making money for every service provided regardless of the outcome or expense.

There are now an estimated 28 million Americans enrolled in these ACOs, and that means, at least for some, their care looks radically different than even just a few years ago. That’s particularly true for some of the sicker people in the country.

People like 76-year-old Millard Scott.

Scott, who lives in the small town of Williamson, West Virginia, population 3,000, suffers from Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. When his COPD kicks up, struggling to breathe is Scott’s big problem.

Vermont all-payer ACO model approved, will count for MACRA

http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/vermont-all-payer-aco-model-approved-will-count-macra

Under model, rates paid to a given provider are set so that all third parties pay the same price for services to particular provider.

Clinton vs. Trump: 5 critical election issues

http://managedhealthcareexecutive.modernmedicine.com/managed-healthcare-executive/news/hillary-vs-trump-5-critical-election-issues?cfcache=true&ampGUID=A13E56ED-9529-4BD1-98E9-318F5373C18F&rememberme=1&ts=25102016

While Hillary Clinton vows to forge ahead with Obamacare if she is elected president, Donald Trump would scrap it altogether. The end results would be two very different forms of healthcare, and industry leaders have much to consider.

Brill“Many different factors are weighing on managed care executives such as the costs of pharmaceuticals, diagnostics and devices; the impact of consolidation amongst hospitals, physicians, health plans; and the losses in the exchange marketplace,” says Managed Healthcare Executive editorial advisor Joel V. Brill, MD, chief medical officer, Predictive Health, LLC, which partners with stakeholders to improve coverage of value-driven care. “With each of these factors, plans can, at least at a high level, make some educated guesses about the relative risk of each factor and impact to the bottom line.”

The election results, however, are much less certain, which from a risk perspective, weighs heavily on the minds of healthcare executives, Brill says. “How can you plan for business knowing that whatever you are doing currently could be upended in the beginning of November?”

To help provide some clarity, Managed Healthcare Executive identified five of the top industry issues, reviewed the candidates’ platforms for each, and asked industry experts to weigh in.

Healthcare Triage News: Health Care Reform, and the Issues We Face

Healthcare Triage News: Health Care Reform, and the Issues We Face

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As we approach the election this fall, it seems like the news media report on little else. Unfortunately, too little news coverage addresses health care reform. That’s wackadoo, because there is still so much to be done to improve the cost, quality, and access for patients within the US health care system.

So let’s talk about the major health policy issues we in the US face. This is Healthcare Triage News.

21 statistics on high-deductible health plans

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/21-statistics-on-high-deductible-health-plans.html

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Hospital and health system executives are well aware of the affects high-deductible health plans have had on hospital finances, from patient collections to bad debt. To help quantify the impact of increasing patient financial obligations on the business of healthcare, here are 21 statistics to know about high-deductible health plans.

MIPS breakdown: 6 must-know parts of the MACRA final rule

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/mips-breakdown-7-must-know-parts-of-the-macra-final-rule.html

OR Efficiencies

The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act final rule is here. As industry experts begin to dig into the 2,400-page document released Friday, a few details are emerging that will be critical for providers who plan to practice fee-for-service medicine in 2017.

Physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, clinical nurse specialists and certified registered nurse anesthetists who bill more than $30,000 a year or provide care for at least 100 patients under traditional, fee-for-service Medicare will be subject to MACRA’s Merit-Based Incentive Payment System beginning Jan. 1.

Becker’s caught up with two experts who have already started reading — Tom Lee, PhD, founder and CEO of SA Ignite, and Dan Golder, DDS, principal at Impact Advisors — to determine a few details providers should heed in preparation for MIPS next year.

Here are seven takeaways based on the initial findings of Drs. Lee and Golder.

STDs Hit Historic High: CDC

http://www.medpagetoday.com/InfectiousDisease/STDs/60900?isalert=1&uun=g885344d5310R7095614u&xid=NL_breakingnews_2016-10-19

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The number of cases of a sexually transmitted disease reported in the U.S. reached an all-time high last year, the CDC is reporting.

The combined total of reported chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis cases was more than 1.8 million in 2015, the agency said in its annual Sexually Transmitted Disease Surveillance Report.

Those numbers are probably an underestimate, the agency said in a release, since most STD cases are undiagnosed and untreated. But the treated cases have reached an all-time — and expensive — high: the agency said it estimates the annual cost of therapy at nearly $16 billion.

The reported incidence of all three conditions rose from 2014 — by 5.9% for chlamydia, 12.8% for gonorrhea, and a whopping 19% for primary and secondary syphilis.

Healthcare Triage: Medicaid has a Huge Return on Investment

Healthcare Triage: Medicaid has a Huge Return on Investment

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As we pass the 3-year anniversary of the opening of the insurance exchanges, most news seems to focus on the private insurance people can purchase there. In recent months, many have complained about private insurers exiting the exchanges, networks being narrowed, premiums rising, and competition dwindling out of existence.

But it’s important to remember that many, if not most, of the newly insured are part of the Medicaid expansion. As of today, 19 states have still refused to participate in that program. Some cite reports and news that Medicaid offers poor quality and little choice of providers. But most seem to cite the cost of Medicaid, claiming that its growing cost will eventually bankrupt states.

Such declarations only consider one side of the equation, though. In most ways, Medicaid offers an excellent return on investment. That’s the topic of this week’s Healthcare Triage.