HOW EMPLOYERS ARE FIXING HEALTHCARE

https://hbr.org/cover-story/2019/03/how-employers-are-fixing-health-care

https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/strategy/how-employers-are-fixing-healthcare?utm_source=silverpop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ENL_190314_LDR_FIN_resend%20(1)&spMailingID=15292235&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NTg1MzQ4S0&spJobID=1601132792&spReportId=MTYwMTEzMjc5MgS2

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A 56-year-old man who works at Walmart — we’ll call him Bill — had been suffering from mild neck pain for years. Recently the pain had worsened, and his wife noticed a subtle tremor in his hands. An MRI showed some narrowing of the spinal column along with disc degeneration. A local surgeon explained that Bill’s best option was spine surgery.

 

Alternative Payment Models: Unintended Consequences

https://www.medpagetoday.com/blogs/ap-cardiology/76490?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2018-11-24&eun=g885344d0r&pos=&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily%20Headlines%202018-11-24&utm_term=Daily%20Headlines%20-%20Active%20User%20-%20180%20days

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The way we pay for medical care is changing. In this second episode of a two-part podcast series with Karen Joynt Maddox, MD, MPH, of Washington University in St. Louis, she delves into the unintended consequences of alternative payment models. She has also written in the New England Journal of Medicine on the topic here.

A transcript of the podcast follows:

Perry: … In your editorial, you mentioned that some of these quality metrics can have the unintended side effects of resulting in underutilization for vulnerable populations. Can you elaborate on that?

Maddox: Yeah, so there’s a couple different ways that policies can have negative impacts, and actually, harkening back to a prior question about “Did we roll these out in a systematic fashion and study their effect?” No. When policies are rolled out, we sometimes look for efficacy, we rarely look for unintended consequences, which we’d never do with a drug or a device or something else we were putting out into the ether. If you imagine that every policy is going to have both positive and negative effects just like a drug would or a device would, you would never approve … a medication that reduced heart attacks if it increased bleeding by six times the amount it reduced heart attacks or increased mortality.

We don’t actually hold policies to those same standards. We don’t even measure the positive and negative effects. What are the negative effects of policy? I think there are a few. First, there’s risk aversion. That can be seen in a number of ways. Your example of having a sick patient who was having these complications raises questions of risk aversion. Would that person even have gotten access to a cardiac procedure if someone was very worried about what adverse outcomes were going to be tracked and then paid on?

The concern would be that if we put a lot of money behind PCI [percutaneous coronary intervention] outcomes, mortality after PCI, and we don’t adequately account for how sick or how poor or how vulnerable certain patients are, hospitals are going to look bad, lose money, have negative billboards about them on public reporting for no fault of their own. It’s just not going to be fair, and it will create risk aversion. But then someone is going to say, “We really shouldn’t be doing caths on high-risk patients because we’re just going to get in trouble for it. We really shouldn’t be taking on these people who are going to bleed, because if we have to give them a transfusion, our quality is going to look bad.” That means you’re closing off access to an entire group of people who very well could benefit from a procedure. That’s an obvious unintended consequence, so risk aversion is a big one.

Closely linked to that is the consequences of taking care of very sick patients and then being penalized. If risk adjustment is inadequate, then hospitals that take care of really sick patients are going to look a lot worse than they really are, and hospitals that take care of a lot of really simple patients are going to look better than they are, and you’re going to move money all over the country based on severity of illness as opposed to quality of care.

Perry: Could we actually spend a minute and maybe dig into some of the minutia on that, because I think that’s an important point about different hospitals, different locations, serving different risk populations. How does CMS [the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid] currently adjust for risk currently, because my impression is that the attempt to adjust for your baseline risk is, perhaps, insufficient as how it currently stands?

Maddox: I would agree. Now when you think about the things that we measure hospitals on, some things shouldn’t be risk adjusted. Those are the easy ones. Aspirin for a heart attack. I keep going back to that one because it’s just such a basic quality of care element. It doesn’t matter if you’re poor. It doesn’t matter if you’re black or Hispanic. It doesn’t matter if you’re frail. If you don’t have a contraindication to aspirin and you are having a heart attack, you should receive aspirin. We don’t have to risk adjust that. You can exclude people who have just had a bleeding ulcer. But if you qualify for the measure, you should receive the quality measure. That’s standard care and there we don’t need to adjust. We just need to hold people to high standards.

Perry: Okay.

Maddox: When you move one notch down the line, now let’s think about something we consider an intermediate outcome, so diabetes control, hypertension control. Clearly that, to some degree, is controlled by the clinician. I decide whether or not I recommend someone get insulin or I titrate up their calcium channel blocker or I add on some other agent. It’s also under control of the patient, and it’s also partly determined by how sick the patient is to begin with. It’s pretty easy for me to control high blood pressure in someone who started out with a systolic pressure of 142. I have many, many choices. Almost no matter what I do, I can get that person under better control.

That’s very different than a dialysis patient who’s had 15 years of persistent resistant hypertension like the gentleman I admitted this afternoon who comes in with a blood pressure of 260 systolic. Me getting that guy down to a controlled blood pressure would take probably some sort of divine intervention.

Perry: Yeah.

Maddox: In addition to a whole lot of hard work on his part and his dialysis facility. It’s a complex undertaking. Now we should all be working together to do it, but if we don’t take into consideration the fact that treating those two people was very, very different, we are going to not really be looking at quality. We’re just looking at how sick the patient is. If you take that one step farther to something like readmissions, which is largely a product of what happens to someone outside the hospital walls and has a ton to do with social determinants of health and access to care and access to exercise and food and the ability to afford medications, you can sort of see how the farther away from a clean process measure you get, the more the ultimate outcome is driven by things out of your control.

If we don’t take into account the things that make those patients different, then we’re not really measuring quality. Right now, CMS does, I think, a reasonable starting point job of trying to control for risk. When they look at a patient, they have claims. They don’t go talk to the patient. They don’t know where they live. They don’t know if they can read. They don’t know if they speak English. They have claims, and so they use the claims to try to adjust to the degree they can for outcome measures. They don’t actually adjust process measures or those intermediate measures, but for outcome measures, they do. If you take something like readmission, they make a logistic regression model and it has patient characteristics on it. Age, gender, whether or not there’s a history of kidney problems, whether or not there’s any history of liver disease, sort of a list of things. There’s somewhere between 70 and 80, depending on which list you’re using, which year. Those elements all go into a risk-adjustment model.

With something like in-hospital mortality, you can actually do a pretty good job of risk adjusting. We think about C-statistics and we think about logistic-regression models. You can get a C-statistic in sort of the 0.8 range. 0.5 would be a coin flip. You’re right half the time. The C-statistic basically compares the probability that your model said something would happen with whether it did or didn’t. 0.5 would be coin flip — model didn’t do anything beyond random. Under 0.5 would be the models worse than random. 0.8 is pretty good. You get some ability to differentiate. For readmissions, the models are closer to 0.6, so just better than a coin flip — probably because so much of what matters to readmission is things that we’re not measuring and whether or not someone has kidney or liver disease, but it’s where they live, do they have access to care, all the things that we just talked about.

You can also imagine that the models work pretty well for people in the middle of the distribution. They do not work well for people who are very sick. A yes/no diabetes, a yes/no kidney function is only going to predict a certain level of risk. We both know from rounding in the hospital that you have people who are at exorbitant risk. They have really poor functional status. They have comorbid substance abuse disorder. They have extreme frailty. They’re institutionalized, whatever the stuff is. Or they’ve had seven admissions this year already for heart failure. The models don’t account for that. What the models typically fail to do is account for that type of risk.

If you had two 75-year-old men, one with diabetes and one not and they otherwise looked the same, the models would be completely adequate. That’s not who we serve, and so right now the models do a reasonable starting point job, but they’re, I don’t think, anywhere near where we need to be if we’re going to actually predicate millions of dollars moving around the country based on them.

We’re really lacking sort of the basic science of risk adjustments in some ways. We’re running logistic regression models because they were the height of technology in the early 2000s. We’ve not moved forward with this data management and data use and modeling in the same speed with which we’re moving forward in devices and cloud-based technologies. We can do crazy things for people, but we can’t systematically measure hospital quality well, yet. I think we really need this sort of big data movement that’s happening. There’s a lot of hype around artificial intelligence and natural language processing and these sort of buzzwords, but somewhere in that hype is real improvement in how we manage data and how we measure quality and how we measure patients, how we compare them to each other and how we use what we know about patients to measure quality and ultimately to incent quality, right? This shouldn’t all be about being punitive. It should be eventually about feedback and improvement and let’s get everyone high-quality care.

I hope we’re going to move into quality measurement 2.0 or 3.0 or whatever we are as we move into these payment models, because the more money we put on the line, the more important it is that we avoid unintended consequences and the bigger those unintended consequences are ultimately going to be if we don’t start doing this a little better.

Perry: Gotcha, okay. Thanks. Now I think I had interrupted you when we were discussing about how these bodies measuring quality outcomes have kind of led to an underutilization. There was one paper that you had cited in your editorial about I think it was specifically about myocardial infarctions in New York and I think they used PCI during that time. Could you give us a summary of what that study showed?

Maddox: Yep, so when someone is coming in for a PCI, it’s a decision whether or not to give them or not give them the procedure. It’s not like when someone gets admitted for heart failure. They kind of show up and they get admitted and that’s that. You have to select into getting a PCI. Someone has to give it to you. In the mid-2000s in Massachusetts, earlier than that in New York and Pennsylvania, there was a big public reporting push. This is actually pre pay-for-performance. This is all just public reporting.

Perry: Okay.

Maddox: Hospital performance, and in some cases, individual interventional cardiologist performance was posted on a website for PCI. We did a research project looking at over time in Massachusetts when this program went into place, and then looking cross-sectionally in New York, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania versus other states, what did people do in response to that program? What we found is that people got risk averse. The rates of use of PCI for people having heart attacks dropped off significantly in Massachusetts when they started publicly reporting performance. The people who stopped getting the access were the sicker ones.

I think it’s hard to think about how as a physician you would turn away someone who needs something. Certainly, my experience in seeing that and coming to Massachusetts as a fellow from North Carolina as a resident where there were no such pressures was what led us to start thinking about this project, because it really was pretty emotionally striking to see that people weren’t getting access to this procedure because of the concern about their publicly-reported performance.

But then I saw on the front page of the Boston Globe, Massachusetts General cath lab closed because of performance report. Then BI, Beth-Israel, cath lab closed because of performance report. In both of those cases, once they did the deep-dive into why the mortality rates had exceeded their threshold for saying that there was bad things going on, it was because they had accepted very sick patients as salvage from other hospitals who had tried to save them and had been unable to do so. Those deaths counted against them and their cath labs were then shut down for quality-improvement purposes.

They were ultimately found to have no wrongdoing, but it was extremely disruptive, canceled our cases. You’re on the front page of the Boston Globe being outed as this low-quality program when, in fact, that wasn’t true in either case. But that is the effect of making even very, very good people very risk averse. Massachusetts has actually done a lot of good work in trying to make their risk adjustment models better and in trying to carve people out of those programs, so if someone is coding, they’re no longer counted against you. Things like that to really try to be thoughtful about how we can use these programs to measure quality but try to reduce the unintended consequences that goes along with them. They have seen the rates start to go back up. New York has done some similar stuff with shock, having shock as a separate category and not counting folks in shock against you for doing PCIs. And they’re seeing a rebound in the proportion of patients having access to that procedure.

In public reporting, in this case, I think was so dangerous because it was so specific. It was a single procedure. It was attributed to either a hospital or even a person. Many of the other pay-for-performance programs are so broad, I think they are probably both less powerful in incenting change and less dangerous. If you’re looking at a hospital program, value-based purchasing, for example, it’s got multiple domains. It’s looking at multiple different conditions. It’s got 26 measures or something like that. No one of those measures is going to be driving someone’s behavior to try to keep someone out of the hospital or to try to be sort of guarding against performance, whereas a very targeted program like public reporting and public shaming for PCI, I think, really probably had some pretty profound negative consequences. It also really drove people to work on quality. It was a program that terrified lots of people, so that’s the tradeoff.

It’s where do you draw the line between trying to incent quality and doing things that are really going to change access and hurt patients. What ultimately should be the goals underpinning every single one of these programs should be how can we use these financial incentives to drive better outcomes for patients? If we don’t look for the unintended consequences, we’re going to miss that. If you don’t give PCI to sick people, your mortality for PCI looks great.

These are not easy things to think through. For a bunch of policymakers in D.C. or Boston or Jefferson City or wherever, who are not clinicians, it’s not easy. Health care is complicated as we learned. It’s actually not easy to think through what the best way to design these programs is to really try to move the needle on quality and say, “We do not accept substandard care,” while at the same time not hurting providers that care for vulnerable populations or those patients themselves.

Perry: I’m going to ask, probably, an impossible question, but if you could rewrite how hospitals are reimbursed starting from scratch, throw away everything that we have now and just say, “Some magical person is going to reimburse the hospital to ensure the best quality,” how would you write that? How would you design that? Then maybe later we’ll talk about what things are being done now on a local and national level.

Maddox: I’ll give you two scenarios. One scenario under our current health care system, meaning that hospitals have all the money and the power, and most decision-making around healthcare that really impacts healthcare dollar is still directed at hospitals and one scenario in which we would actually rethink the system entirely.

Conditional on the current system, I think we could do a lot with the quality programs to make them more equitable and to make them have stronger positive effect and weaker negative effect by doing things like rewarding improvement, which is done in some programs, but not all, by judging hospitals against their peer groups as opposed to assuming that we can judge large economic centers against small rural centers against small safety net hospitals in the south versus big urban centers. Those are not all the same. The patients are not all the same. We don’t have the data, as we discussed, to adequately risk adjust, so we need to make some decisions about what fair comparison would look like. Within the current system, I think we could make things better just by being more thoughtful about how we make comparisons and how we drive quality, and then putting money behind that to incent people to actually do something about it.

But ultimately, why do we care about readmissions and not admissions? Why do we care about bleeding after a PCI and not whether or not someone had a heart attack in the first place? The reset to how we really ought to be trying to do this is incenting more care out of the hospital. We should be trying to keep people out of the hospital, for one thing. There’s no reimbursement for the kinds of sort of multidisciplinary team-based care that we know can help people who are chronically ill. Until recently, there was almost no reimbursement for telehealth. We sort of grossly underutilized community health workers and other low-cost ways that we could really start to improve health in the community to keep people out of the hospital.

A payment program that focuses on a hospital is never going to succeed in keeping people out of the hospital. You wouldn’t pay Apple to not sell people iPhones, right? That’s both odd and actually highly economically inefficient. You’re paying to not do something. Many of these programs that start to shift towards alternative payment models are functionally saying we’re going to pay you not to do things. That doesn’t make a ton of sense to me.

Perry: No.

Maddox: But reimagining the system as one that rewards health is not so simple because it probably involves taking a lot of things out of the hospitals. Why does someone have to come to the hospital and stay in the hospital when they have heart failure? In Australia and in a few other countries, there’s a lot of use of what they call it hospital at home. When you think about our heart failure patients that we see for 5 minutes every morning, and then they diurese all day long, and we check a lab in the afternoon, and then we see them for 5 minutes the next morning. There is no reason they couldn’t be doing that in the comfort of their own home with some sort of a patch taped to their chest that gives us their telemetry monitoring with labs being drawn a couple times a day, with the nurse visiting to help out.

That would be fundamentally disruptive to the system in the kind of way that would promote all sorts of cost reductions and probably much happier patients and better outcomes, certainly a lot less of in-hospital infectious disease transmission. But there’s absolutely no reason that a hospital would ever sign up for that program unless we change how they’re paid.

Perry: It’s because it’s eliminating the cost for the bed in the hospital itself is the most expensive thing. The nebulous bed, whatever it is so magical about that really uncomfortable, poorly-functioning bed.

Maddox: What if you have a heart failure, I keep using heart failure as an example. I should think of something else. Let’s say you’re a dialysis facility. Why do you not have a monitor at every patient’s home on their scale or something that tells you when people are missing dialysis or when their weight starts to go up or if their potassium is 6 and lets you do something about it, that lets you get people in early if you need to or postpone? Maybe not everyone needs exactly the same amount of dialysis three times a week.

Why when we’re monitoring our diabetics do we say, “Come back in a year or come back in 6 months?” There’s no basis for come back in a year or come back in 6 months. This is an incredibly diverse group of people that need different management strategies. Some need intensive weight loss. Some need counseling on nutrition. Some need a ton of insulin. Figuring out how to sort of manage people to keep something bad from happening requires a total rethinking of how we actually deploy health resources. It’s probably not a lot of doctor time, for one thing, which is obviously the most highly reimbursed thing. It’s probably not as much hospital time as we have right now.

I think the industry is moving in that direction, so if you follow the JP Morgan health conferences and the Amazons of the world and the business side of the world is coming out and saying, “This is crazy. This system is insane.” We’re paying just absurd amounts of money to support this infrastructure that for a lot of what we do isn’t necessary. Every time someone comes to the emergency department and gets treated for something that doesn’t need to be in an emergency department just gets paid.

Part of that payment is going to the fact that there’s an ECMO team on call, right? That’s part of the fixed cost of maintaining a big academic medical center. There’s a helicopter. All these costs are built in to so much that we do that the hospital, then, is sort of required to pay for all of that fixed cost to provide a set of services that are essential. But somewhere in there is a real loss of efficiency, because we’re no longer connecting services to cost to prices to people. It’s all just sort of the system we have built right now, and it doesn’t make a ton of sense.

Dismantling that is not straightforward and I think the kind of disruptions that are going to really change things are not going to come from the hospitals. They’re probably going to come from insurers and I include in insurers the self-insured large companies. Most large companies self-insure, meaning that rather than pay for a plan, rather than pay for everyone to get Blue Cross and then Blue Cross assume all the risk…

Perry: They just pay the cost of the hospitalization themselves.

Maddox: They just pay for what happens, so they’re essentially acting as the insurer and they have a middleman processing claims, but they essentially take on all the financial risk. It makes more sense for most big companies to do that. Their incentives are therefore in line to keep people out of the hospital and to say, “You can have your MRI at a community-based MRI building that will charge you $500 instead of $3,500 to go have it in the hospital where all these extra sort of fixed costs are built in to the payment for that.” That kind of disruption is not going to come from payment models from Medicare, ultimately. It’s going to come from disruptions in industry and in innovation from some of the payers and potentially from patients who are increasingly recognizing this is not a very patient-centered system, and I think appropriately demanding a more holistic patient-centered approach to how this is all going to work.

But that’s the many years down the road of how a health system could be better, and in the short term, we’re living with the system that we’re living with, so we need to work on this one while we look toward the future for someone to really dismantle it.

Perry: What are things that are being done now?

Maddox: Some of it I mentioned. Some of the real innovative, some of the real disruptive stuff, who knows what Amazon and Berkshire Hathaway or whoever else will do. I think Medicare is in a bit of a holding pattern right now. They had been pushing towards more alternative payment models. They have now more and more financial incentives for people that get into these alternative payment models. That would be something like a bundle or an accountable care organization where you’re on the hook for spending for a year, which then gives you incentive, obviously, to reduce spending. They had planned to push out a lot of experimental models from the innovation center, from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, or CMMI. A lot of that got put on hold when we had a secretary of HHS [Health and Human Services] who then was no longer the secretary of HHS, and the initial secretary under this administration, Tom Price, as the surgeon, had been a very outspoken opponent of essentially meddling with the doctor-patient relationship. He had done all these payment models, all these changes, anything that gets in the way of doctors making decisions independently about what they’re going to do is not okay. His big thing was to rollback a lot of this type of stuff.

The good thing that comes out of that is that people are thinking a little more consciously about burden and about the burden that we’re putting onto clinicians by all these measures and payment models and all this sort of stuff, when most people just want to take care of patients. But the bad thing that came out of it was a real slowdown in what was coming out of CMMI around testing some of these things.

In contrast to what a lot of the policies have been in the early 2000s and through the early teens, the last administration put a big push over the last term, basically, around trying to use this innovation center as a test ground, so to do what you had suggested. Let’s roll this out in a limited sense. Let’s learn. Let’s figure out what works and what doesn’t, and if things work, then let’s push them out more broadly. A lot of that stuff has slowed down. The ones that had already started in the prior administration are still running, so there’s some neat models for cancer care, for dialysis, but we haven’t seen much new coming out of them. There’s now a new head of HHS who has actually been quite outspoken about the need to keep moving toward value in health care. Also pushing burden reduction, which I think is good, and a new CMMI director was just named. We’ll see in the next year whether or not we start to see more of these experimental kind of models coming online.

I think one thing that has been really lacking in the development of these models is the engagement of the physician community, I should say not just the clinician community, not just physicians, but also nurses, therapists, all the sort of people that make up the clinician community have really not been involved in developing most of these models. We can sit here and say, “That model sounds crazy,” but if clinicians haven’t sort of stepped up to be part of it, it’s not clear why a policymaker would know that sounds crazy.

I hope that as things start ramping back up there’s more attention paid to finding models that people can agree on, that a group of cardiologists could come together and say:”Yeah, actually, as a profession, we think that anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, that appropriate secondary preventative medications for coronary disease, that this bundle of medications for heart failure, reducing admissions for heart failure, and I don’t know, reducing admissions for stroke are our core goals. We, as a clinical community, are going to put financial incentives in place or we’re going to accept risk or do whatever, but we agree that these things we all ought to be working on together. Let’s grow in the same direction and let’s improve cardiovascular care. Here’s a way we can design reimbursement to help reward that.”

That, to me, sounds much, much more reasonable than some of the stuff that has come out policy-wise that basically says here’s a Frankenstein payment model that’s going to pay you 1% more for sending in data on one of 270 quality measures, which is what the current outpatient payment program is. I think getting clinicians involved in actually designing things that incent innovation, that free up money to invest in monitoring or nurses or whatever we think as a group will make our patients better would be good. I just don’t know if this next year will show us moving in that direction or not. We’ll have to see what this group decides to do.

Perry: A lot of interesting ideas and things to chew on. I appreciate it. I want to be respectful of your time. Thank you so much for meeting with me.

Maddox: Sure, I always glad to talk about this stuff. Sometimes I wish it were less of what we had to deal with when we’re rounding or when we’re in the hospital or when we’re seeing patients in clinic, but ultimately, this stuff really does impact clinical care, so I feel lucky that I get the chance to work on it and think about it and hopefully help be part of the solution.

Perry: Thank you so much.

Maddox: Thank you.

Perry: To recap from today, we learned about how quality payment models have had an unintended consequence of limiting access to care for some vulnerable populations. Specifically, we discussed about the example of cardiac cath in Boston in the 1990s, when after quality measures had been reported publicly, it then resulted in hesitancy from providers to offer cardiac caths to their sickest patients. I think this is an important issue and I’m glad I was able to have the time to discuss with Dr. Maddox about some of the details of this. I hope you found it as useful and as interesting as I did. Thank you for listening to today’s episode and we’ll see you next time.

 

 

By the Numbers: E-Visits Not Hitting the Mark?

https://www.medpagetoday.com/PublicHealthPolicy/by-the-numbers/67379?xid=nl_mpt_DHE_2017-08-19&eun=g1061559d0r&pos=0

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Study shows more work, fewer new patients, little health benefit.

Telemedicine and other “e-visits” are supposed to be a win-win for physicians and patients alike. Doctors could spend less time on simple requests, patients would get frictionless access to their provider.

But a new study published in Management Science finds that all that access hasn’t translated into the outcomes so many had hoped for. Instead, e-visits lead to more office visits and more phone consultations without measurable improvement to patients’ health. And maybe most damaging for physicians’ practices, they’re associated with fewer new patients.

The findings may be surprising, but study leader Hessam Bavafa, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin School of Business, said they make sense when you consider the process of the usual e-visit. Patients can reach out with even the smallest concerns, he said, and that puts doctors in a bind.

“There’s an issue of obligation,” Bavafa told MedPage Today. “If you ignore the signal, who knows what’s going to happen next, right?”

The study used five years of data from a large health system with multiple hospitals and more than 2,000 total beds. It included all primary care encounters for 140,000 patients from 2008 to 2013, including office visits, phone calls, and e-visits, all cholesterol tests, and all blood glucose tests for the physicians with the largest panel sizes. It was limited, however, to those patients who had three or more office visits over the period analyzed, as the study was designed to focus on active healthcare users.

The results were stark. After adopting e-visits — in this instance, essentially an email with a subject line and generic box of text — office visits increased by 6% as physicians met with patients who had reached out online. Physicians also ended up spending 45 more minutes each month on those visits.

Oh, and the extra work of responding to patients requests did not bring extra compensation. “God knows what happens if you start paying doctors for these,” Bavafa said.

And with the increased workload came a corresponding 15% drop in the number of new patients physicians saw.

Bavafa said the findings are a natural consequence of physicians’ limited time: if one patient group is getting more of it, another will feel the squeeze.

But Peter Yellowlees, MD, president of the American Telemedicine Association, said the findings go against his own experience and much of the literature.

He questioned the wisdom of excluding patients who had fewer than three office visits. That eliminated a large group of patients, he pointed out, and may have affected the outcome.

“Effectively they only looked at two-thirds of the patients, which is a bit odd to me,” he said. “It’s perfectly reasonable that those people had problems that could be managed with an occasional email and everything’s fine and they don’t need to come in.”

He also pointed to strong adoption of e-visits in the paper as evidence of their value. The study found fewer than 100 monthly e-visits in 2008. By the end of the period analyzed, that had ballooned to nearly 6,500.

“As a physician, we don’t do things that we don’t think are worthwhile. That level of adoption is strong evidence, from my perspective, that this is a really good idea,” Yellowlees said.

He also wondered whether some other change within the system analyzed could have led to the changes observed. He said the e-visits couldn’t be considered causative.

While he didn’t agree with the findings, he said he was happy to see a study try to examine their impact.

Bavafa, too, was hopeful about the future of e-visits and other telemedicine efforts. Already, he said, some providers are toying with pricing to see if they can affect the way patients communicate with their doctors. The experiments include charging a “subscription” fee for electronic access to doctors, or even a charge for each individual contact.

He compared the current process to Amazon in the 1990s, or taxis as opposed to Uber and Lyft.

“This is the future, we just have to think about how to do it,” he said. “The ideas may not be novel, but it’s about figuring out the whole ecosystem.”

Healthcare Triage News: Knee Surgery Doesn’t Improve Outcomes, but We Still Do A LOT of Them

Healthcare Triage News: Knee Surgery Doesn’t Improve Outcomes, but We Still Do A LOT of Them

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The news tells us that arthroscopic surgery for knee arthritis and meniscal tears isn’t worth it. Healthcare Triage told you that a while ago. What’s new? This is Healthcare Triage News.

 

Hennepin Health: A Care Delivery Paradigm for New Medicaid Beneficiaries

http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/case-studies/2016/oct/hennepin-health

On Lok Header

This case study is one in an ongoing series examining programs that aim to improve outcomes and reduce costs of care for patients with complex needs, who account for a large share of U.S. health care spending.

5 QUESTIONS TO ASK DURING TOUGH CONVERSATIONS

https://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/2016/08/24/5-questions-to-ask-during-tough-conversations/

the choice to avoid difficult conversations often masquerades as kindness

The tipping point between prolonged disappointment and renewed vitality is a difficult conversation.

Many leadership frustrations are the result of conversations that didn’t happen.

The choice to avoid difficult conversations often masquerades as kindness.

FL Health System on Path to Save Millions by Standardizing Surgical Practice

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/leadership/fl-health-system-path-save-millions-standardizing-surgical-practice?spMailingID=9394331&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=981810720&spReportId=OTgxODEwNzIwS0

Ongoing discussions with large employers including Disney have led Florida Hospital to examine granular surgical data in an attempt to wring out unnecessary costs.

VIDEO: Healthcare Economist & Futurist Dr. Bill McGivney

http://healthcareexecutivesnetwork.org/mcgivney/

Healthcare Executives Network

 

Is the CQO Position Needed?

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/quality/cqo-position-needed?spMailingID=9208161&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=961199903&spReportId=OTYxMTk5OTAzS0

“In a healthcare system’s most mature state, everyone owns quality,” says Baylor Scott & White Health’s chief quality officer. So if everyone owns quality, why have a CQO?

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/quality/what-makes-an-ideal-chief-quality-officer.html

 

IU Health Has a Different Leader, Different Strategy

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/leadership/iu-health-has-different-leader-different-strategy?spMailingID=9208161&spUserID=MTMyMzQyMDQxMTkyS0&spJobID=961199903&spReportId=OTYxMTk5OTAzS0

Self-Discovery

IU Health’s new top boss says the ability to withstand constant change will be a mark of success for top health systems.