10 things for healthcare executives to note as they head into 2018

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-management-administration/2017-the-year-that-was-10-things-for-healthcare-executives-to-note-as-they-head-into-2018.html

Disruption got real. Hospital-insurer negotiations heated up. Activist shareholders shook up legacy hospital operators. Healthcare and the government failed to effectively communicate. These and six other trends that shaped the year in healthcare — and the lessons executives can take from them into 2018.

1. Disruption got real. After years of speculation about who or what would become the “Uber of healthcare,” the tectonic plates of the industry shifted substantially in the past year — and there’s reason to believe this will only continue in 2018. A number of mergers illustrate the blurring line between healthcare and other industries, such as retail and insurance. Consider the combinations of CVS and Aetna or Optum and DaVita and Surgical Care Affiliates. As for what’s to come, Apple and Amazon have both shown interest in expanding their healthcare footprint. In fact, just last month, we reported Amazon was in talks to move into the EHR space.

Executive’s takeaway: Executives grew skeptical of the term ‘disruptor’ when it was used as generously as it was circa 2011-2016. But now disruption is actually unfolding at a rapid clip, and executives are paying close attention to who/what poses the greatest threat to their business models.

2. Hospital-insurer negotiations heated up. Previously, a health system and a commercial insurer occasionally hit a snag in the contract negotiation process, resulting in a dispute palpable enough to consumers that it warranted headlines. These impasses generally lasted a matter of weeks before outside pressure drove the parties to compromise. The nature of these conflicts has since changed. This past year brought regular coverage of strained provider-payer talks. In fact, we now do a weekly compilation of payer-provider disputes and resolutions to stay abreast of these conflicts as they occur and subside. In 2017, we saw lawmakers intervene in payer-provider disputes, a health system executive’s meant-to-be-private email about an insurance company go public, and a children’s hospital go out of network with a commercial insurer — affecting 10,000 kids.

Executive’s takeaway: Health system executives are growing increasingly vocal with their thoughts about commercial insurers. In the past, executives took great lengths to observe discretion in these relationships. Now the gloves are off — or at least one is. We’re sure we haven’t seen the worst of a payer-provider dispute yet, but the number we see on a weekly basis, and their tone, indicates that disputes are both more frequent and more serious than in years past.

3. Investments in value-based care, once a somewhat safe bet, became debatable. In a final rule issued in November, CMS officially canceled the hip fracture and cardiac bundled payment programs and rolled back some mandatory requirements in the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement Model. This will continue to have a ripple effect on payers, providers and health system strategy. For hospitals and health systems that made significant investments to support excellence under the program, this news is difficult to take — especially since no investment is made lightly amid thin margins. Although CMS says it is still committed to value-based care as a concept, the mandatory nature of the bundles program acted as a pedal-to-the-metal force that made hospitals act. Since commercial payers follow Medicare, the fate of the program will likely influence the adoption of bundles among private insurers, too. 

Executive’s takeaway: Most all executives tell us they want to be on the leading edge, not bleeding edge, of value-based care. Without a “do it or lose it” approach to bundles, the industry lost a major impetus toward value-based care, in which many health systems and physicians would take the plunge together. Providers have never had a clearly paved path for their “journey toward value-based care.” At best, it was a dirt trail. Now it could be compared to a dirt trail covered in snow. This leaves executives questioning the value of their current and future investments in value-based care.

4. Big systems want bigger. Just when you thought you had a handle on what a “big” health system looked like in the United States, a few major players rewrote (or are attemping to rewrite) the playbook. After more than a year of talks, Catholic Health Initiatives and Dignity Health signed a definitive agreement in December to create a 139-hospital, $28.4 billion health system. Soon after came reports of St. Louis-based Ascension and Renton, Wash.-based Providence St. Joseph discussing a merger, which would result in a 191-hospital, $44.8 billion operation. Although both of these deals trail Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente and its nearly $65 billion in revenue, they illustrate how the composition of nonprofit American health systems is continuing to change from local and regional entities to corporate national networks. For example, if Ascension and Providence combine, they will outsize the largest for-profit health system today — Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare — which includes 177 hospitals in 20 states and Britain.

Executive’s takeaway: Executives may want to reevaluate the oft-spoken phrase “all healthcare is local” in light of 2017’s M&A activity. Hospitals will continue to serve as economic engines in their respective communities, but the organization of health systems is moving in a direction where they are viewed as ubiquitous brands as opposed to regional hubs for health. For example, San Francisco-based Dignity and Englewood, Colo.-based CHI are basing the corporate headquarters for their new enterprise in Chicago. Ascension and Providence would have footprints in 27 states if they merge.

5. Many health systems that were new players in the health plan business got out of it. Provider-sponsored health plans always carried a great amount of risk. Of the 37 health plans launched by hospitals and health systems since 2010, only four were found profitable in 2015, according to research published this past year by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. As major health insurers reduced their individual coverage options and rolled back from the public exchanges this year, we also saw several health systems decide to scale back or shut down their health plans. New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health shared plans in August to wind down its health insurance business, CareConnect, over the next year. Dayton, Ohio-based Premier Health is selling its health plan to Evolent Health, a Washington, D.C.-based value-based care platform. Louisville, Ky.-based Baptist Health plans to shut down its health plan operation in 2018. Late last year, Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare revealed plans to scale back its insurance business in 2017 after officials attributed lukewarm earnings to its health plan business.

Executive’s takeaway: When even the big five health insurers — so well-equipped with analytic tools, data, infrastructure, utilization management experience and risk analysis talent — have a difficult time accounting for risk, it is not surprising many green health systems made their move for the door this past year. This is not an opportune time for health systems with little experience managing risk to build or buy a health plan. 

6. Activist shareholders shook up legacy hospital operators. Board room issues within the major for-profit hospital operators are typically opaque, but 2017 brought a rash of investor-prompted activity that resulted in ousted CEOs, overhauled boards of directors, poison pills and new governance rules. Tenet Healthcare underwent significant change in 2017 under intense pressure from its largest shareholder, Glenview Capital Management. When two Tenet board members, both employed by Glenview, resigned over what they described as “irreconcilable differences,” they made it known that Glenview would possibly “evaluate other avenues” to be a constructive owner of Tenet on or after Sept. 1. By Aug. 31, Tenet announced it would replace CEO Trevor Fetter, “refresh” the composition of its board of directors and implement a short-term shareholder rights plan. Mr. Fetter resigned in October, before a successor was named, after 14 years with the system. In August, an investor in Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems called for the resignationof CEO Wayne Smith, who has led the 127-hospital system since 1997, over what the investor described as missteps in strategy resulting in financial trouble for the system. At this time, Mr. Smith still holds his job, but CHS may be bracing for more investor activity. Chinese billionaire Tianqiao Chen has gradually been ramping up his stock in the hospital operator since 2016. At time of publication, he holds nearly 23 percent of CHS stock. Finally, directors of HCA Healthcare made a change in late 2017 to allow established investors to participate in the board seat nomination process, a move made in response to an activist investor.

Executive’s takeaway: The fact that two of the largest U.S. for-profit hospital operators faced calls for CEO resignations in 2017 is part of a sweeping trend across industries in which activist investors start campaigns for change by targeting top management. Between January and May 2017, activist shareholders were responsible for ousting CEOs at three high-profile S&P 500 companies — American International Group, CSX and Arconic, according to The Wall Street Journal. Investors were attempting to oust six other CEOs in the same time frame. It’s worth noting that CEOs feel the heat at the launch of campaigns versus as a last resort. The WSJ characterized this trend as “a new level of aggressiveness for a group already known for its bold actions.” 

7. As the average health system C-suite grew, a few systems reduced administrative roles. While the number of practicing physicians in the U.S. grew 150 percent between 1975 and 2010, the number of healthcare administrators increased 3,200 percent in the same period. Yet in 2017, we saw a few major health systems go against the grain and not only lay off administrators, but eliminate their roles completely. In June, Houston-based MD Anderson Cancer Center eliminated executive vice president roles and gave senior vice presidents more focused areas of responsibility. Valley Medical Center, part of Seattle-based UW Medicine, got rid of the COO position in May, and Charleston, S.C.-based Roper St. Francis did the same in August. In December, San Diego-based Scripps Health shared plans to eliminate the CEO position in its four hospitals in favor of a regional CEO model. 

Executive’s takeaway: This past year contained several isolated incidents in which executive or administrative jobs were not immune from the financial pressures mounting on hospitals and health systems. There is reason to believe “right-sizing” (or at least reducing) administrative staffing at health systems will continue throughout 2018. Chris Van Gorder, president and CEO of Scripps Health, recently shared that layoffs at the system will likely include administrative and leadership roles while the system continues to hire caregivers. His reasoning, an excerpt of which follows, is applicable to many health systems today: “Healthcare is changing rapidly with huge growth in ambulatory care and reduced utilization of inpatient hospitals — and given the elimination of the individual mandate under the Affordable Care Act, the uninsured will once again be growing nationally. … We’ve got to shift our organizational structures around to be able to deal with the new world of healthcare delivery, find ways of lowering our costs significantly. If we don’t, we will not be able to compete.”

8. Healthcare and the government failed to effectively communicate. In 2017, the opportunities for the Trump administration, Congress and healthcare leaders to convene about healthcare legislation and policy came and went. CEOs from the five largest nonprofit health systems in the country took pen to paper, urging President Donald Trump and Congress to meet with them and exchange ideas. In the end, the closest thing we saw to healthcare reform in 2017 were bills — the American Health Care Act, Better Care Reconciliation Act of 2017 (or Skinny Repeal package), the Graham-Cassidy healthcare bill — that received significant opposition from major healthcare stakeholders, which are not historically liberal. Yet even an avalanche of nays from the American Medical Association, American Hospital Association, Federation of American Hospitals, American Psychiatric Association, Association of American Medical Colleges and several other groups did not sway Congress. All but three Republican Senators voted to pass the Skinny Repeal package, illustrating how the bipartisan nature of our political process is overriding expertise and informed lawmaking. 

Executive’s takeaway: A bipartisan approach is the most effective way when attempting to redesign a $3 trillion industry that influences life-or-death decisions. These efforts also require input from a variety of seasoned healthcare experts who can challenge ideas, anticipate repercussions and identify blind spots. This holds true no matter which party holds control of the White House, Congress or both. Although healthcare stakeholders and government officials did not productively connect in 2017, health system leaders must persist in their attempts to influence public policy and exercise greater creativity in their advocacy efforts. Strategies that worked in the past can no longer be counted on in 2018 and beyond. 

9. Fed up, nurses walked off the job. While nurses’ strikes are not a novel event, there is a reason many demanded wider attention and transcended local business news to become national headlines. The most noteworthy strike of the year took place July 12, when approximately 1,200 nurses at Boston-based Tufts Medical Center began a 24-hour strike — the first nursing strike Boston saw in 31 years. Roughly 120 miles from Boston, approximately 800 nurses at Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, Mass., participated in a one-day strike in October. Across the country in California, nurses organized rallies and protests at more than 20 Kaiser Permanente sites to protest what they called inadequate staffing levels. In September, nurses and other hospital personnel unionized with SEIU walked off their jobs at Riverside University Health System – Medical Center in Moreno Valley, Calif., for three days. The county footed the $1.5 million bill for temporary replacement nurses for those 72 hours. Speaking of a bill, Minneapolis-based Allina Health tallied the costs of two 2016 strikes — one lasting six weeks — called by the Minnesota Nurses Association. The system put the figure in the ballpark of $149 million, which anchored Allina’s operating loss of $30 million for fiscal year 2016. 

Executive’s takeaway:  Although it is tempting to reduce labor strikes to events fueled by local market forces and politics, hospital and health system executives should pause and consider that striking nurses’ arguments — that they are expected to work demanding jobs with too few staff, resulting in unsafe conditions, high stress and burnout — is a description that applies to many, if not most, U.S. hospitals. Gender dynamics may also yield greater influence on administrator-nurse affairs in the coming year. As the nation comes to terms with troubling events that went unaddressed after women’s claims and voices were not met with the attention they deserved, health system executive teams are wise to change the approach taken in years past and pay closer attention to the female-dominated field of nursing. As one representative with the MNA told The Nation“[Management is] a male institution thinking they can snub 1,200 women and pretend their opinions about healthcare don’t count.”

10. The year healthcare became very, extremely, incredibly difficult. Was any component of healthcare ever easy? Those who have spent years in the industry would say no. Yet 2017 was the year in which officials and lawmakers reminded the American public that healthcare is complicated. While true, this narrative functioned as a sound bite to normalize Congressional dysfunction. 

Executive’s takeaway: What’s concerning here is whether this throwaway statement will make its way from Capitol Hill to hospital board rooms, executive offices, clinician lounges and medical school lecture halls and, over time, nurture a climate that fosters and condones inaction. It is unproductive to constantly point out the complicated nature of healthcare and/or bask in this acknowledgement. To do so is not the behavior of an effective leader. It goes without saying that healthcare is complicated. Healthcare is also necessary, expensive, life-saving, honorable, slow, inaccessible, urgent, flawed, and never going away. What are you doing to make it better? 

Is M&A the Cure for a Failing Health Care System?

https://hbr.org/2017/12/is-ma-the-cure-for-a-failing-health-care-system

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The U.S. health care system is begging for disruption. It costs way too much ($3.3 trillion last year) and delivers too little value. Hundreds of millions of Germans, French, English, Scandinavians, Dutch, Danish, Swiss, Canadians, New Zealanders, and Australians get comparable or better health services for half of what we pay. For most Americans, care is not only expensive but is also fragmented, inconvenient, and physically inaccessible, especially to the sickest and frailest among us.

It should come as no surprise, then, that when titans of our private, for-profit health care sector — like Aetna, CVS, UnitedHealth Group (UHG), and DaVita — strike out in new directions, stakeholders react with fascination and excitement. Could this be it? Is free-market magic finally bringing Amazon-style convenience, quality, and efficiency to health care? Are old-guard institutions, like hospitals and nursing homes, on the verge of extinction?

The answer, frustratingly, is that it depends. It depends above all on the results. To be the change that many desire, these new mergers and acquisitions, and the others that will likely follow, must produce a higher-quality product for consumers (and satisfy physicians and other health professionals) at an affordable price. The details are crucial, and the details in health care — as our political leaders have recently learned — are complicated.

Even a high level look at two apparently similar deals suggests the importance of getting under the hoods of these arrangements. Both CVS’s planned $69 billion acquisition of Aetna and UnitedHealth’s $4.9 billion deal to buy DaVita Medical Group, bring together a very large national insurer and a large provider of health care services. Combining an insurance function with a delivery system has ample precedent in health care. Some of the nation’s most innovative, high-performing non-profit health care organizations use this formula.  These include the Kaiser Health Plans, Intermountain Healthcare in Utah and Idaho, the Geisinger System in Pennsylvania, the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit, and HealthPartners in Minnesota and Wisconsin, among others.

The reason this formula works is that when care-delivery systems also act as insurers, they assume financial responsibility for the care they provide. This tends to focus doctors, nurses, and other health professionals on the value of what they do — finding the most cost-effective approach to managing their patients’ problems. The result can be a culture of economy and quality that is very hard to replicate in the prevailing fee-for-service environment, where health professionals get rewarded for the volume rather than the value of services.

So the big question is whether these bold new combinations of insurer and provider can generate promising partnerships similar to a Kaiser or an Intermountain, or find some other equally powerful formula for disruption. The answer is far from certain, and the uncertainties differ for the two mergers.

In the CVS-Aetna case, the care provider, a pharmaceutical retailer and pharmaceutical benefit manager, provides a very limited set of health services: drugs, drug purchasing, and selected, basic, routinized primary care at more than 1,100 local Minute Clinics  located in communities around the United States. To become a Geisinger or an Intermountain equivalent, Aetna-CVS would have to acquire — or develop — seamless relationships with legions of primary care and specialty physicians and hospitals. It would have to turn its stores into medical clinics, with exam rooms, diagnostic laboratories, and x-ray suites. And it would have to install and link electronic health records with other providers in its communities. Having done all this, CVS would have to excel at the very challenging task of managing physicians and other health professionals — something that daily confounds even the most experienced, long-time, care-delivery systems. The challenge would be unprecedented, the expense considerable, and the outcome uncertain.

The CVS-Aetna partnership seems likely, instead, to set off in a very different, and intriguing, direction: offering an augmented suite of preventive and population health services for high-cost chronically-ill patients through its convenient, community-based outlets. CVS staff will serve as local case managers and coordinators for patients who might otherwise skip needed preventive services, have trouble getting to their primary care physicians’ offices, or just need help taking their medicines. The hope is that this will reduce patients’ use of more expensive emergency, hospital, and specialty services, thereby reducing Aetna’s bills and making its product more competitive. Aetna would incent its clients to use CVS services by exempting these from the normal deductibles and copays that most insurers charge, thus incidentally, increasing CVS’s business more generally. This strategy could attract customers to both CVS and Aetna, add health care value, and even drive up profits.

But uncertainties remain. In addition to those I’ve mentioned, one of the biggest challenges will be coordinating with traditional care providers, both primary care and specialists. Seamless teamwork is critical to effective care of complex, high-cost patients. And by adding another player to our already-fragmented health care system, the CVS-Aetna project could actually undermine coordination of services. And while better care for complex patients is clearly part of the solution to our cost and quality problems, it may not be the systemic disruption that some are hoping for.

The UnitedHealth-DaVita deal, in contrast, seems more likely at first glance to accomplish the insurer-provider partnership that has characterized Kaiser-style organizations in the past. The DaVita Medical group employs 2,000 primary care and specialist physicians in nearly 300 medical clinics, 35 urgent-care centers, and six outpatient surgery centers in six states. Among the group’s divisions is the formerly independent HealthCare Partners, which, as this Commonwealth Fund case study makes clear, has a long history of accepting and managing financial risk, using advanced information systems, and promoting quality-improvement programs.

That said, no one should underestimate the challenge of growing the UnitedHealth acquisition of dispersed physician groups into a national system capable of disrupting our floundering health system. Health care is a very local affair, and the organizations providing it tend to be creatures of their localities and histories. It can take generations for a provider-insurer partnership to develop a culture of trust, collaboration, and value orientation that has made existing examples of these combinations so uniquely effective. If the new entity seeks to grow, it will find that recruiting and training physicians who can leave the fee-for-service mentality behind is a challenge, as is finding leadership that can gain and keep health professionals’ trust. Kaiser has failed in several attempts to spread to new locations. And though UnitedHealth’s Optum division, which will run the partnership, has some limited experience managing selected specialty health services, making this new enterprise work could prove daunting.

Even if the Aetna-CVS and UnitedHealth-DaVita ventures contain the seeds of transformative health system change, it will take time for those seeds to germinate. But Wall Street is not a patient audience. The involved companies will face short-term pressure to prove the profitability of the new arrangements. From this standpoint, it does not bode well that DaVita was anxious to sell its medical groups because they were not performing financially.

The excitement about these two bold new health care arrangements says as much about the desperation with our current health care systems as it does about the promise of the mergers themselves. They may have compelling short-term business value to shareholders — though that, too, remains to be proven. As fundamental health care disrupters, however, they face challenging and uncertain futures.

 

3 Disruptive Solutions For U.S. Healthcare: CareMore, Forward, Health City

https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertpearl/2017/11/14/disruptive-solutions-healthcare/#31b4ef452364

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American healthcare needs a hero. Among other wealthy countries, it ranks dead last in clinical outcomes yet costs more than $3 trillion a year. By comparison, Europe spends $1.8 trillion annually on healthcare for a population nearly twice the size.

This three-part series, which previously explored the limited impact of primary care innovators and the struggles of U.S. hospitals, now concludes with the search for a hero – a disruptive cure for what ails the U.S. healthcare system.

Highlighted here are three possible directions the industry could turn and three trailblazing companies hoping to guide the way.

CareMore: In The Direction Of High-Touch Patient Care

Today’s healthcare is extremely people dependent. From receptionists, billing clerks and housekeepers to nurses, technicians and physicians, people account for more than 40% of all healthcare expenditures.

Therefore, one might assume lowering the cost of medical care means slashing headcount. Not at CareMore. The company spends twice as much on staffing as the typical healthcare organization – part of an approach that has proven remarkably successful.

Founded in 1993 as a medical group, CareMore was acquired by Anthem in 2011 and rapidly expanded its services across eight states. The company’s president and CEO Sachin H. Jain believes the best way to lower healthcare spending is to invest in the health of patients.

To do that, Jain hires large numbers of nurse practitioners, social workers, physician assistants and pharmacists. Located in care centers, these multidisciplinary teams help seal the cracks of America’s fragmented care delivery system.

In a recent Forbes editorial, Jain explained his hire-more philosophy: “Given the false choice between ensuring that I have the right processes and technology in place or the right people … I would choose the latter every day of the week.”

Indeed, people are central to CareMore’s strategy. But to understand why the company may prove disruptive, let’s dive deeper into its model, one that prioritizes disease management, limited specialty referral and reduced hospitalization:

  1. CareMore focuses on caring for the relatively sick, particularly low-income seniors enrolled in Medicare Advantage. This government-run program differs from traditional Medicare in that doctors receive a lump-sum prepayment for the expected cost of care, rather than receiving “fee-for-service” payments for each visit, test or procedure. Further, Medicare Advantage offers financial incentives to providers that keep patients healthier and avoid expensive hospital care. This is how CareMore is able to invest in a larger staff.
  2. The company invites the community doctors with whom it contracts to refer patients to CareMore care centers at no added expense. This controlled care-management process is a win-win for overburdened primary care physicians and for CareMore, whose nurse practitioners get to direct specialty referrals within their narrow network of providers.
  3. Today, 20% of elderly patients consume 80% of Medicare resources. That’s why CareMore hires “extensivists” to oversee complex patient cases both inside the hospital and on an outpatient basis. And because extensivists are trusted by their patients, they’re able to manage specialty referral, hospitalization and admissions to skilled nursing facilities in the most efficient ways.
  4. CareMore’s multi-disciplinary teams offer individualized programs for patients living with complex (and expensive) medical problems such as chronic lung disease, diabetes, heart failure and kidney dysfunction. And because chronic diseases are often associated with high levels of stress and depression, CareMore provides extensive mental and behavioral health services.
  5. The distinct power of CareMore derives from its synergistic approach, an end-to-end care model that not only maximizes quality outcomes and avoids complications from chronic disease, but also effectively controls specialty referrals and inpatient utilization.

This last point may be the most important. In some ways, CareMore’s model resembles other cutting-edge primary care programs that serve patients with chronic illnesses. But by using nurse practitioners and extensivists to personally manage referrals within CareMore’s cost-effective specialty network, the company goes a step beyond.

As a result, CareMore achieves 20% fewer hospital admissions, 23% fewer hospital days per patient and a 4% shorter inpatient stay compared to traditional Medicare beneficiaries.

The biggest question for CareMore is whether it will hit a ceiling. Its people-dependent approach could prove too difficult to replicate on a nationwide scale. As it tries to expand to new markets, CareMore may also encounter resistance from patients and the broader medical community given the narrowness of its specialty network.

Forward: In The Direction Of High-Tech Patient Care   

Adrian Aoun, who created Forward in 2016, takes a decidedly different approach to solving healthcare’s biggest problems. With a background in artificial intelligence (AI), Aoun previously created Sidewalk Labs, an urban innovation project for Google and, before that, a news-aggregation startup that Google purchased for more than $30 million.

So, rather than hiring more people, Aoun uses sophisticated technology to reduce healthcare’s massive headcount and costs. He thinks computerized systems can diagnose and treat humans more accurately and affordably. And because human employees are more expensive and less-reliable than computers, you won’t find many of them performing traditional office roles at Forward’s San Francisco location, nor at the one set to open in Los Angeles. Instead, here’s what you will see:

  1. An iPad, not a receptionist, checks you in. From there, you step up to a sophisticated, space-aged body scanner and place your left hand inside the reader. In less than a minute, the machine records your pulse, oxygenation, height, weight and body temperature. The data is immediately input into your medical record and compared to past measurements.
  2. Inside the exam room, a technician uses “near infrared” technology to draw your blood before running tests at Forward’s fully automated in-house laboratory system. Your blood count, chemistries and genetic analyses for key markers are made available in less than half an hour and graphed against prior results.
  3. When a physician enters the room, there’s no large computer to sit behind and, therefore, no barrier between you, the doctor and the problem at hand. Your medical information appears on a large wall monitor that’s powered by a combination of AI and predictive analytics, with easy-to-follow graphics and voice-recognition commands. And since Forward’s members pay a $149 monthly fee with no copays or deductibles, data entry is designed to support care delivery, not billing and coding.
  4. Then there’s the AI system itself. Unlike commonly used algorithmic care that requires manual revisions, Forward’s technology learns as it goes. By analyzing a multitude of patient problems and treatments, the system ascertains which solutions are most effective. And with patients staying connected through a variety of wearable devices and computer applications, nurse practitioners and physicians know when a patient is likely to have trouble, even when that person is sitting at home.
  5. Finally, every health measurement taken at Forward is uploaded to the patient’s smart phone, making it easy for individuals to obtain data on their laboratory and clinical results.

As a primary care model, Forward’s approach is interesting but unlikely to disrupt the $3 trillion healthcare industry. The company’s uniqueness is in its technology, which is designed to scale up. Through high-tech devices and AI programming, Forward’s model could expand into high-end specialties. Already, the company is introducing automated eye refraction and digitally enabled melanoma screening at little or no extra cost.

Ask most doctors, and they’ll tell you Forward is not the future of medicine. Then again, technology aversion is the very thing that undid industry titans like Kodak, Borders and Yellow Cab.

Ultimately, Forward’s disruptive ability depends on how far and how quickly the company can broaden its scope beyond primary care. For example, will Aoun seek to hire a select group of specialists to consult with patients via video? Imagine the benefit of having top cardiologists and oncologists checking in on that giant wall monitor or via a patient’s smartphone. More importantly, can Forward convince insurance companies to carve out dollars from premiums to pay for the patient care delivered and for the hospital or specialty care avoided? If not, Forward’s going rate of $149 per month may restrict its footprint to the nation’s most affluent areas.

Health City: In The Direction Of Off-Shore Patient Care

Take a one-hour plane ride from Miami to the Grand Cayman Islands and feast your eyes on the palm-tree-lined entryway of healthcare’s third potential disruption. Health City is a sophisticated, modern hospital, offering affordable cardiology, pediatric, orthopedic and oncology services with clinical results that rival the best in the United States. Adjacent to the hospital, you’ll see the future site of a five-star hotel. Dr. Devi Shetty hopes to fill it with hundreds of Americans each night, thus making his healthcare tourism plans a reality.

Shetty, an India-born and American-trained surgeon, sees the future of healthcare differently than the leaders of CareMore and Forward. He believes 50% of the costs swallowed up by traditional care providers can be eliminated through discipline and operational excellence.

Shetty’s approach, like the other two, is complex. It includes:

  1. Highly efficient operating rooms. Health City completes more than twice as many surgeries per day as the average U.S. hospital. And rather than using the ORs five days a week, they’re scheduled for six. Instead of an eight-hour block, they run for 12. To accomplish this, Health City matches supply to demand to an exacting degree, quite unlike American facilities with their inadequate volume, inconsistent staffing and wasted capacity.
  2. Hyper-specialization. Higher patient volume per physician drives higher clinical quality at lower costs. That is, the more surgeons focus on a limited number of procedures, the better their performance and results. And by limiting number of procedures per physician, the more likely Health City is to achieve operational efficiency and innovate surgical techniques.
  3. Technology. IT needs to support clinicians, not vice-versa. At Health City, nurses and physicians carry their mobile devices everywhere, entering data on touch-screen interfaces to improve patient care, not to keep track of billing codes. The system is locally designed to analyze and provide immediate hospital data. As a result, physicians and administrators can see reports today on how to improve patient care tomorrow.
  4. Little to no delays. Walk into the administrative area of Health City and the first thing you’ll notice is a large computer screen reporting how long it takes physicians to respond to an elevation in a patient’s heart rate or higher than usual post-operative bleeding. In U.S. hospitals, delays in addressing patient problems often run an hour or longer on nights and weekends. Inside Health City, the average delay is eight minutes, with an aim of reducing it to six.
  5. A powerful mission. Health City is committed to “delivering world-class healthcare that is accessible and affordable for all.” It’s a core value built into the hospital’s culture, believed by all and evident in its outcomes.

Health City’s biggest challenge is getting patients to travel to the Cayman Islands for care. The objective data affirms the hospital’s clinical excellence and lower costs, but Americans distrust the medical care provided in other parts of the world. With most of its patient population hailing from the Caribbean and South America, Health City’s best hope is to contract with large, self-funded U.S. companies that want to cut their medical costs in half, particularly those organizations willing to offer employees incentives to combine their medical care with a tropical island vacation.

Will Healthcare Disruption Happen? How?

American healthcare is inefficient, ineffective and expensive. In other words, it’s ripe for disruption, which could happen a number of ways. It may be through highly personal care that effectively manages utilization and helps sick patients get healthier. Perhaps high-tech systems will replace expensive humans and create far better outcomes for patients. Or maybe an operationally efficient, off-shore solution will disrupt America’s bloated delivery system, just as it did the manufacturing and IT sectors.

CareMore, Forward and Health City represent three possible approaches to healthcare disruption, but it’s far too early to declare a hero among them. Combined, these companies care for a fraction of 1% of American patients. Should that number grow, it will likely come at the expense of the doctors and hospitals who benefit from today’s broken system. Unless healthcare providers in the U.S. are willing to embrace new solutions and care delivery models soon, they risk being disrupted. The cautionary lesson taught by other industries is that once disruption begins, it’s already too late for the old model to save itself.

 

How One U.S. Clinic Disrupted Primary Care, Made Patients Healthier And Still Failed

https://www.forbes.com/sites/robertpearl/2017/10/24/primary-care/#49ba8eee2c0f

Turntable Health launched in Las Vegas in 2013 and looked to turn the traditional primary care model on its head.

Zubin Damania has a face for television, a mind for medicine and the sort of fearless personality required to be one of the internet’s most famous MDs.

Damania’s celebrity began in earnest not long after someone posted a clip from his 1999 UCSF Medical School commencement address. In his opening, Damania jokes that he’s on a “time delay,” given his reputation as a “loose cannon.” The rest of the clip, which has been viewed over 130,000 times on YouTube, takes you briefly inside the mind of a versatile entertainer and healthcare visionary.

From UCSF, Damania completed his internal medicine residency at Stanford University. He spent the next 10 years as a practicing hospitalist by day and a healthcare satirist by night – writing, performing and filming musical parodies about the frustrations of being a doctor. He’s best known today by his online persona, ZDoggMD, and for his nightly Facebook show, covering the latest medical news with his trademark wit.

The rise and fall of Turntable Health

In 2013, Zappos.com CEO Tony Hsieh asked Damania to launch a next-generation medical clinic in Las Vegas as part of a $350 million downtown revitalization project. Founded as a primary care practice, Turntable Health looked to turn healthcare delivery on its head.

Inside a waiting room that resembled a sleek Silicon Valley startup, Turntable members passed the time by spinning records, playing Xbox and practicing yoga. As part of their membership, patients had access to an entire “wellness ecosystem,” complete with same-day visits, 24/7 doctor access (by email, phone or video), along with a dedicated health coach. Doctors at the clinic spent 45 minutes or more with their patients, quite unlike the 13 to 16-minute visits that have become standard in U.S. doctors’ offices.

Damania credits the vision for his clinic to a partnership he forged with Rushika Fernandopulle, CEO of another innovative primary-care organization called Iora Health. With Fernandopulle’s guidance, Damania focused on population health and disease prevention to improve patient wellness and, over time, lower costs. And rather than charging for each visit, test or procedure, Turntable patients who were not covered by traditional insurance paid a flat fee of $80 a month.

Unlike any other primary care clinic in Las Vegas, Turntable Health was a success, medically. By emphasizing prevention and doctor-patient relationships, Damania’s practice achieved superior quality outcomes, while providing rapid access to care and high patient satisfaction. But from an economic perspective, the clinic was a bust. Insurers shied away from member fees, insisting on more traditional reimbursements, which directly contradicted Damania’s long-term health strategy. Turntable Health was forced to close its doors in January 2017, just three years after opening.

In a public statement, Damania explained: “We flatly refused to compromise when pressured by payers to offer fee-for-service options, or to begin charging a co-pay. We firmly believe that healthcare is a relationship, not a transaction.”

Unfortunately for Damania, most health insurers are too impatient. Investing in primary care and chronic-disease management is proven to reduce and even avoid medical problems. But it can take five to 10 years for the improvements in the health of patients to offset the added upfront costs of providing the necessary care. Health plans worry patients will switch insurers before they can recoup such a long-term investment.

Primary care doctors can and do play a critical role in preventing disease, spurring lifestyle changes and warding off complications from chronic illness, when they have the time to do so. Today’s fee-for-service payment system doesn’t adequately reward these efforts.

Today’s insurers are systematically reducing primary care reimbursements, forcing doctors to see 20 to 30 patients a day while spending the bulk of their time in front of a computer, entering patient data for billing purposes. This backward approach to care delivery is wreaking havoc on the nation’s health and economy. As the incidence of chronic disease grows, the cost of American healthcare continues to rise more rapidly than the nation’s ability to pay.

The closure of Turntable Health was a major loss for Las Vegas, where residents joke that the best place to go for healthcare is the airport. Compared to people with access to integrated and coordinated medical care programs, Las Vegans are less likely to be insured, get the recommended cancer screenings and receive other necessary preventive care interventions.

Pushing primary care: Iora Health and One Medical

Damania’s partner in primary care, Iora Health, is experiencing relative success nationally, with 30+ clinics in 11 metropolitan areas. Using the same model of patient engagement and prevention that Turntable adopted, Iora has shown 35% to 40% drops in hospitalizations compared to their community peers, with 12% to 15% lower total healthcare costs. They’ve also established contracts with insurance companies who are willing to invest in primary care, thus solving one of ZDogg’s biggest challenges.

And they’re not alone. One of Iora’s leading competitors, One Medical, operates out of San Francisco under the leadership of Dr. Tom Lee. Labeled by some as a “concierge” medical practice, the company’s network includes 250+ doctors in 40 cities coast to coast. One Medical offers patients the ability to schedule same-day appointments, access their health records online, and fill prescriptions using the One Medical app – all for a relatively affordable yearly fee of about $149. With a promise that “your care is our highest priority,” the company makes the primary care experience more convenient and user friendly, a mission that’s been paying off since 2007. One Medical’s subscriber base continues to grow by tens of thousands of patients each year, particularly within the tech industry.

Although these extremely well-run primary care systems have improved outpatient quality and patient satisfaction, their impact on overall healthcare costs remains minimal. If Americans want to make healthcare affordable again, the scope and pace of change will need to accelerate at every point of care. This will require innovative approaches that rein in the rapidly escalating costs of specialty and hospital care, where most added national healthcare expenditures (NHE) exist.