Accountable Specialist Care: a Transformational Alternative to Fee For Service Medicine

 

Healthcare reform focused on our primary care providers is doomed to fail because most US healthcare spending is driven by specialists.

Quick-take:

  1. US healthcare spending is excessive, wasteful and unsustainable, given the aging of the US population.
  2. Specialists drive the bulk of US healthcare spending.
  3. To rein in US healthcare spending, specialists must be committed, aligned and engaged.
  4. Specialists will not be committed, aligned and engaged unless their interests are protected or enhanced.
  5. Accountable Specialist Care (ASC) is a feasible proposal to fundamentally transform specialist reimbursement, eliminate waste and can be embraced by specialists.
  6. Savings come not from cutting specialists’ income, but by eliminating unnecessary procedures, and recouping the much higher, “technical component charges,” from eliminated procedures.

“Our core belief is that about 40% of what doctors and hospitals do is wasteful. If you can extract that percentage of crap, you can redistribute it into savings and profits but also into procedures that actually help patients,”says Dr. Glenn Steele, Geisinger’s former president. 

Reducing healthcare waste requires that those who control the bulk of healthcare costs (specialists) must be incented to become true partners, directionally aligned and absolutely committed to waste elimination. If not, the United States will continue our unsustainable trajectory to ever higher healthcare costs, worsening federal budget deficits, flat or declining real incomes (as increasing healthcare costs vacuum up all of the money otherwise available for raises) and declining competitiveness in the world market.

With 10,000 baby boomers entering Medicare every day, Medicare’s trustees note that the US Medicare Hospital Insurance trust fund will become insolvent in 2026, in 8 years. We have three choices to prevent Medicare insolvency:

  1. Relentless fee cutting, which I posit cannot be sustained by most hospitals and physician groups,
  2. Rationing, which may be politically and socially untenable, or
  3. Eliminating wasteful and potentially harmful practices, through aligning incentives of providers, patients and society.

Problem Statement

Most experts agree that 30% to 40% of the “healthcare” we deliver is unnecessary. “Our core belief is that about 40% of what doctors and hospitals do is wasteful. If you can extract that percentage of crap, you can redistribute it into savings and profits but also into procedures that actually help patients,”  says Dr. Glenn Steele, Geisinger’s former president. The Dartmouth Atlas studies have demonstrated that high cost Medicare care can be associated with a lower quality of care.

There is an old saying, to a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

Background:

There are huge “gray zones” in medicine where no established best practice is clear. For example, when I fractured my own shoulder (which is demonstrated on the CT images below) I was offered a choice of a $7000.00 to $10,000 surgery to immediately bolt the broken bone back together, with the potential of surgical complications such as infected hardware… or I could choose to place my arm in a $50 dollar cloth sling until the broken bone healed.

 

 

Different surgeons I spoke with had differing opinions on which option was best, but most suggested surgery. After my last surgeon consulted several of his mentors, he recommended, and I chose, the $50 dollar sling.  I fully recovered, avoided the unnecessary expense and risk of surgery and I now enjoy full shoulder strength and a completely normal range of motion.

There is an old saying, to a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.  In the current fee for service (FFS) world, a surgeon is paid much more for operating on someone than for recommending conservative therapy. This contributes to an unconscious bias towards surgery in such gray zone cases.

ASC, savings do not come from reducing specialist payment, but rather from specialists eliminating unnecessary and costly tests and procedures.

Accountable Specialist Care (ASC) is a feasible proposal to fundamentally transform specialist reimbursement. ASC totally removes this unconscious bias by eliminating specialist fees for doing stuff to patients and aligns specialist payment with performance, population health, value and outcomes. ASC, savings do not come from reducing specialist payment, but rather from specialists eliminating unnecessary and costly tests and procedures.

Unlike ASC, in today’s alternative payment models such as the Medicare Shared Savings Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), the more patients a surgeon operates on, the more he gets paid. This drives waste.

Most of the expense for such unnecessary tests, procedures or surgeries actually go to pay for the “technical component” of the test or surgery. This “technical component” payment pays for the operating room, the MRI scanner, the surgical implant, etc.  Under ASC, specialists are fully paid, regardless of how many procedures or surgeries they perform, as long as the patients’ outcomes and experiences are good. Unlike ASC, in today’s alternative payment models such as the Medicare Shared Savings Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), the more patients a surgeon operates on, the more he gets paid. This drives waste.

In the ASC model, specialists are rewarded for creating value for their stakeholders, not for doing more “things” to patients. The creation of this value will require the specialists to perform additional real work: research, stakeholder meetings, discussions with patients and referring physicians and administrative work for implementation. The value created will far outweigh the costs of this additional work. But unless the incentives are realigned, and specialists are protected from harm, specialists will remain reluctant participants in healthcare reform, rather than innovative leaders of disruptive value creation.

In exchange for a salary guarantee, and ASC specialist must identify unnecessary, low value and potentially harmful care they were previously delivering and eliminate it.  

What is ASC?  A key component is specialist group subcapitation, that is each specialist group (such as orthopedic surgery, cardiology, radiology) receives a fixed fee per patient per month regardless of how many procedures the patient receives. Also included in ASC are identification of best practices, implementation of best practices and benchmarks for patient satisfaction, population health and referring physician satisfaction.

Specialists salaries: One way to look at how specialists are paid is to look at the current Rube Goldberg fee schedule, the contractual discounts offered to over 500 different insurance plans, the alternative payment models specialists may be engaged in and the supplemental payments for hitting quality targets, budget targets, etc.

The ASC way to look at specialist salaries: Look at the total number of patients a specialist group was responsible for last year, look at their total income for last year and divide the payments by the number of patients.  This yields a per patient per year figure. This is in fact what the specialist group was paid. If this figure is divided by 12, it yields a per patient per month fee.

Key to ASC payment methodology is to continue paying the specialist group the same per patient per month fee, in exchange for certain deliverables.  In exchange for this salary guarantee, the specialist must identify unnecessary, low value and potentially harmful care they were previously delivering and eliminate it.  This generates huge savings as the technical component fees are eliminated. This enhances patient well being and paradoxically will enhance the specialists’ well being. Going forward with wasteful procedures eliminated, the specialist will receive the same income and more time off.

Example specialty, Radiology: Nationwide, the volume and cost of medical imaging has skyrocketed during my 32 year tenure as a radiologist. Some of this has accrued to our patients’ benefit.  With modern cross sectional imaging, highly accurate and specific treatable diagnoses are generated by the radiologist, so that the patient can be triaged to the most appropriate care plan.

This has been a mixed blessing however.  On the one hand, the cause of a myriad of symptoms from every body part can be non-invasively and quickly diagnosed with medical imaging. On the other hand, given our litigious society, failure to image a patient with a significant condition can result in some of the highest medical malpractice awards. Understandably, if a doctor believes there is even a remote chance medical imaging will benefit the patient, a scan is requested, often unnecessarily. This results in wasteful, low value care. Making matters more challenging, the very same symptom which can and should lead to advanced medical imaging, can in its less severe forms, be a common and ubiquitous condition.  How then are the ordering clinicians to determine when imaging is appropriate? With help from an ASC radiologist.

ASC radiologists will be held accountable for:

  • Improving patient satisfaction.
  • Improving population health, for example ensuring patients receive screening mammography.
  • Improving physician satisfaction.
  • Improving report turnaround time.
  • Periodically reviewing the world’s literature to ensure only indicated studies are performed.
  • Calling critical exams and reports to referring physicians.
  • Standardizing the imaging follow up of incidental, probably benign findings, utilizing evidence based best practices.
  • Reducing over-utilized, high-cost, high-volume examinations, such as CT pulmonary angiography.
  • Implementing computer assisted Clinical Decision Support (CDS).
  • Ensuring that all suggested follow-up studies made by a radiologist in a subspecialty that they don’t not have fellowship level training in (or its equivalent in experience) be double read by a subspecialist radiologist to ensure the follow-up imaging is appropriate.

For any proposal to have a significant effect in the real world, it must be designed in such a way that the specialists making the decisions which drive healthcare costs can enthusiastically embrace this change.

Currently, radiologists’ financial incentives under the current fee for service (FFS) model encourage increased provision of services and punish any process which thoughtfully reduces scan (procedure) volume. This is inherently inflationary, and is a contributing factor to the unsustainability of our current healthcare system, and it is generalizable to other specialties.

In the past, many plans to decrease utilization have been developed, without the input or true buy-in of practicing radiologists, none of which have had substantial success in reining in the costs of unnecessary and wasteful radiology imaging. Historical utilization management techniques have included command and control mechanisms by the regulatory authorities, such as Certificate Of Need programs, pressure put on radiology groups by Physician Hospital Organizations and ACOs and prior-authorization requirements instituted directly by insurers.

I would argue the reason these prior processes have largely failed is that they did not involve the radiologists, a key stakeholder, in their development and they ignored the financial ramifications on, and incentives of, this key stakeholder group.

ASC incents radiologists to become enthusiastic supporters of the transition to pay for value, rather than reluctant foot draggers. As an example of the foot dragging mindset, the chair of one of the most prestigious radiology departments in the US noted in his presentation about the recently enacted Affordable Care Act (ACA)  in 2010, “Alternative payment systems will take years to implement -thank goodness… they have the potential to hurt radiologists if current attitudes toward the specialty are maintained.” (Emphasis added by me.)

For any proposal to have a significant effect in the real world, it must be designed in such a way that the specialists making the decisions which drive healthcare costs can enthusiastically embrace this change. Only with such buy-in can we fundamentally transform specialty reimbursement, focus our resources on care that matters and align incentives toward improving patient care.

Within today’s ACA enabled ACOs, all other things being equal, the specialist will gain more revenue if he provides more services, as specialists are still reimbursed by FFS with today’s Medicare ACOs. Specialists might hope the other specialists decrease their utilization appropriately, so that there would be shared savings. But they have little financial incentive to cut their own utilization. Cutting specialist utilization directly and disproportionately cuts that specialists’ income. This results in the perverse incentive to deliver more services, rather than healthy outcomes, and is an example of the tragedy of the commons. This perverse incentive is completely mitigated in the ASC model, as specialists’ salaries are not dependent on the volume of services they provide, but rather on waste elimination among other quality metrics. Without the ASC model, this tragedy of the commons is a sizable barrier to fully realize the potential of the ACO model.

Brandeis Professor Stuart Altman coined  Altman’s law; “While a majority of people desire healthcare reform in the abstract, their second choice, if they personally have to make a sacrifice to accomplish the reform, it to maintain the status quo.” The ASC model respects Altman’s law by aligning specialist, patient and societal incentives. It improves patient care and drives specialist commitment toward dramatic elimination of wasteful healthcare spending.

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Crowdsourcing Solutions to Physician Burnout

(Your help is needed to influence CEOs nationwide.)

Physician burnout is a public health crisis. Yet many healthcare CEOs don’t fully appreciate the significance of this silent epidemic. Only prioritization by CEOs can bring about the cultural change necessary to address the systemic causes of physician burnout.

 

Recently I had a thought provoking conversation with a successful healthcare CEO. He had read the Health Affairs blog PHYSICIAN BURNOUT IS A PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS: A MESSAGE TO OUR FELLOW HEALTHCARE CEOS. Yet he wasn’t convinced this global statement was sufficiently backed up by enough facts in the brief article.

 

Through years of personal experience I know that this CEO cares deeply about his patients, his staff and his physicians. He noted as CEO, he already has many priorities. Before his organization takes on an additional priority (addressing physician burnout) he needs to better understand why this issue should displace other pressing concerns. He has been hearing more about the issue in the past couple of years, and he wonders if it deserves the attention it is receiving. He said that he assumed if he could tell me what he was thinking, I could more effectively change his mind on the subject.

 

He raised a dozen important questions. In order to convince him, and other healthcare executives to expend significant attention and resources to combat physician burnout, I suspect we need to clearly and convincingly answer his questions, heavily supported with evidence based literature.

 

Your answers to his questions will help CEOs and board members across the country effectively prioritize this silent epidemic.

 

A dozen questions related to physician burnout (posed by a thoughtful hospital CEO)

1. What can the literature on physician burnout teach us about what will work to resolve this issue?

 

2. What is the underlying etiology of burnout; is physician burnout an individual response to stimulus versus an industry-wide systemic issue?

 

3. What is the evidence to suggest that physician burnout is a significant and compelling issue warranting the level of attention it is getting?

 

4. Regarding physician suicide, the rate is higher than that which is reported in the general public. Is the rate of physician suicide statistically different from that of other highly paid professionals?

 

5. Is the reporting of only one symptom of physician burnout truly a manifestation of moderate or severe burnout?

 

6. The Health Affairs blog states that the consequences of burnout threaten our US health system. Some may find the link between having one symptom of burnout and a real threat to the entire health system a pretty big jump. What is the evidence to support this conclusion?

 

7. If it is the push from outside regulators, legislators, public and private payers, EHR manufacturers, etc. which is the main force contributing to loss of physician autonomy and happiness, won’t we need to effectively address these stakeholders underlying concerns in order to successfully convince them to alter their policies?

 

8. The Health Affairs blog’s list of responses is heavily weighted to what everyone else needs to do to unburden doctors.  If one steps back 20 steps and looks at this from a historical perspective; physicians and providers are being told what to do, because cost is too high and  outcomes too poor. We, the insiders in this system, have not effectively convinced the public that:

  • we are as safe as we can be
  • we don’t waste resources
  • we don’t have unwarranted variation
  • we are not motivated too frequently by money (with supply creating demand,) and that
  • we are producing outcomes equal to other countries that have much lower costs.

Until we internally fix the healthcare delivery system we will continue to see the push for more oversight, more quality measures and more use of data.    Won’t pushing back at regulators ultimately fail, unless the underlying reasons for their concern/activism are also successfully resolved?

 

9. Is the call to alleviate physician burnout due to a significant threat to the entire healthcare ecosystem, or due to the fact that physicians are more powerful?  (In that they are highly intelligent, historically autonomous, socially powerful and able to push back against change more successfully than other groups facing similar industry change.)

 

10. What is the responsibility the individual physician to develop and improve individual resilience (possibly through lifestyle changes related to diet, exercise, sleep, healthy habits etc.) versus what is the responsibility of those of us who oversee large segments of the entire healthcare ecosystem to address systemic causes of physician burnout?

 

11.  Is physician burnout a manifestation of resistance to necessary change within the healthcare ecosystem or something more than that?

 

12. Will a big public push to address the systemic causes of physician burnout create value, be neutral or create harm for all stakeholders, most importantly the public?

 

We all want the same things, safe and effective care for our patients, patient satisfaction and cost effectiveness. None of this can happen without a healthy, resilient workforce.

 

Would you please help by answering a few of these questions? Please feel free to comment or send me an email at  Steve@DefoSays.com

 

I will be sharing the answers to these questions, one or two per week as your answers become robustly convincing.

 

Thanks in advance and enjoy your summer!

 

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Geisinger’s “Fresh Food Farmacy” – What You Need to Know

 

Fast take:

At the Fresh Food “Farmacy,” healthy food is dispensed to food insecure diabetic patients resulting in:

  • Strikingly lowered patients’ average blood sugar (much better than medications alone)
  • Improved lives of the patients and their families
  •  Healthcare savings

Healthy Food: Better than Medication, Who Knew?

How does it work?

In Geisinger’s groundbreaking program, diabetic patients who are food insecure receive a prescription for free food. The food pantry is embedded right within the clinic. Patients can pick up their food conveniently, at the time of any medical appointments.

The food pantry provides the patient and their entire family with enough healthy food (and tasty recipes) to provide their family five days worth of fresh healthy meals, each week. This food includes fresh fruit and vegetables, whole grains, fish, and lean meats. In addition to standard diabetes  treatment, the Fresh Food Farmacy patients also participated in 15 hours of diabetic education.

The Geisinger food pantry operates differently from other food pantries. While most food pantries accept any donated food, including such things as cupcakes and chips, Geisinger’s food pantry does not accept or distribute unhealthy donations.

Why is this important? Expense and devastating complications

Food insecurity increases the odds of developing diabetes, obesity and poor health.

Diabetes is one of the most expensive medical conditions to treat in America. According to one study in 2013, US healthcare spending for diabetic patients cost $100 billion. 10% of Americans currently suffer from diabetes, and experts believe by the year 2050 33%  will suffer from this scourge

But as Geisinger demonstrated, diabetes is amenable to treatment with compassionate, low cost, simple solutions.

Complications of diabetes can be reduced with good blood sugar control.

Given their improved blood sugar control, the Fresh Food Farmacy patients are much less likely to suffer from:

  • Peripheral vascular disease and subsequent amputations of their feet
  • Diabetic nephropathy and renal failure necessitating dialysis
  • Diabetic retinal apathy resulting in blindness
  • Neurovascular disease and subsequent stroke
  • Cardiovascular disease and subsequent heart attack

All this and their sex lives improve.

At the recent Becker’s Hospital Review CEO + CFO Roundtable, Geisinger CEO David Feinberg dryly noted, “Oh and by the way, if you’re allergic to any of that, don’t take it.”

Results:

Prior to participation in the Fresh Food Farmacy program, these complex patients’ average hemoglobin A1c (a measure of their average blood sugar) was 9.6.   After 12 months in the program, their hemoglobin A1c dropped to an average of 7.5. That’s a 2.1 point reduction. One patient’s hemoglobin A1c went from 13 to  normal 6.5!

To put that into perspective, for every point reduction in hemoglobin A1c  the risk of death or serious complication is reduced by 20% in these patients.  The FDA will approve a new multi-billion dollar drug if it can reduce hemoglobin A1c by 1 point.

Given the educational component to the program, some patients participating in the Food Farmacy program lost weight, some quit smoking and there were improvements in serum cholesterol and triglycerides.

Cost effective?  It more than pays for itself!

Stunningly, by providing free food along with the patients’ medications, not only did the patients become healthier, but the total cost of these patients’ healthcare was dramatically reduced, even accounting for the cost of food.

It costs Geisinger about $2,200 per family per year to provide the food prescriptions and diabetic education to this complex group of diabetic patients. This is largely a human resource expense as much of the food is donated. During the year, Geisinger saved over $20,000 dollars per family.

Why are such innovative programs relatively rare?

Today, incentives are misaligned:

In our fragmented healthcare system, often no one is incented to provide innovative solutions which make a difference in people’s lives. Such care requires time, upfront expense and effort.  This effort falls squarely on the shoulders of physicians, hospitals and other clinicians, while any cost savings often accrue to a remote insurance company; insurers who may be less than excited about sharing such savings with the patient, premium paying employers, physicians, hospitals and other providers; hence our national focus on pivoting from fee-for service to pay for value health care. When the health insurance plan, the hospital and the doctors all work for one entity, such as at Geisinger, any money they can save stays within the provider community.

Challenge:

If your accountable care organization is thinking of duplicating this great work, Geisinger does have a bit of advice:

  1. Be on the lookout for dangerous drops in blood sugar at the outset. Patients switching from glucose rich diets to healthy food will need their insulin doses adjusted.
  2. Patient engagement is crucial; requiring the patient education classes is integral to their success.
  3. Make use of dietitians, pharmacists,  registered nurse health managers, community health associates, coaches etc, so that each member of the care team is functioning at their top of their license.
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Wasteful healthcare spending hurts us all: Report from the National Affordability Summit

 

Healthcare leaders, policy experts and pundits recently gathered in Washington DC at the National Affordability Summit hosted by NRHI.

Twin themes driven home effectively at the Affordability Summit were:
1. Overspending on US healthcare damages our society.
2. Lots of unnecessary, potentially harmful, and wasteful care is happening and it is fostered by the fee-for-service system.

Overspending on US healthcare can be defined as growth in US healthcare spending greater than the growth of the US Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The US spent approximately $3 trillion on healthcare expenditures last year. As government spending currently accounts for about 2/3 of all US healthcare spending, allowing healthcare spending growth to go unchecked could make the recent Greece debt crisis look like a bump in the road.

This rapidly growing healthcare spending is the driving force behind our federal deficits. Princeton economist Alan S. Blinder has written: “The implication for budgeteers is clear: If we can somehow solve the health care cost problem, we will also solve the long-run deficit problem. But if we can’t control health care costs, the long-run deficit problem is insoluble.”

Overspending on US healthcare damages society by:

  • Driving impending insolvency at every level of government (federal, state, county and municipal).
  • Crowding out spending on all other government priorities (social services, education, national defense, public safety, transportation, etc.).
  • Squeezing employer profits, reducing American competitiveness in world markets.
  • Raising the cost of US labor, thus discouraging US firms from hiring US workers and encouraging outsourcing jobs overseas.
  • Raising the cost of US made goods and services in comparison to overseas goods and services.
  • Capping wage growth. (Healthcare insurance premium growth has sucked up what employers otherwise could have devoted to increased wages for the middle class.)
  • Causing some citizens to skip necessary, or preventative medical care, resulting in patient harm and larger medical bills down the road.

As healthcare spending consumes an ever increasing portion of the federal budget, the very principle of our representative democracy is at risk. How can our elected officials make decisions regarding allocating resources if nearly all of those resources have already been committed by previous administrations? George Will recently noted: “Most alarming is American democracy becoming a gerontocracy. The Steuerle-Roeper Fiscal Democracy Index measures how much of the allocation of government revenues is determined by current democratic processes and how much by prior decisions establishing permanent programs running on autopilot. The portion of the federal budget automatically spent by choices made years ago is approaching 90 percent.”

Lots of unnecessary, potentially harmful, and wasteful care is happening, and it is fostered by the fee-for-service system.

The Institute of Medicine suggests that 30% of healthcare spending is avoidable. Unnecessary care is not just wasteful, it actually hurts people. More than one speaker noted that if you want affordable care, “here’s an idea… Stop wasting 30 to 40 cents of every dollar we spend.”

The drivers of medical waste (unnecessary, and potentially harmful care) in the fee-for-service world include:

  • A fragmented, uncoordinated delivery system.
  • Misaligned incentives between patients, physicians, payers and society (which create artificial demand for unnecessary care).
  • Lack of routine access to clinical decision support.
  • Imperfect knowledge, both on the part of physicians and patients.
  • Unconscious and conscious bias to provide unnecessary care.
  • Lack of price and quality transparency, to both physicians and patients.
  • Under-investment as a society in the social determinants of health.
  • Poor transitions of care from one setting of care to another.
  • Unnecessary administrative burden, usually driven by insurers and government.
  • Defensive medicine, in an effort to ward off medical malpractice lawsuits. (One study suggests the US wastes 200 billion dollars each year on wasteful and unnecessay medical testing alone.)
  • Aggressive, unnecessary, and often harmful end-of-life care.
  • A failed behavioral health system.
  • Self-enriching self-referral. (This only exists in the fee-for-service world.)
  • Direct to consumer marketing of pharmaceuticals.
  • Inappropriate utilization by patients due to our third party payment system.
  • Medical errors.
  • A medical arms race of unnecessary, underutilized, and overpriced shiny new toys; surgical robots, proton beam machines, cyclotrons and high end imaging machines often bought to, “keep up with the Jones.”
  • Pharmaceutical price escalation. (If the pharmaceutical industry wants to price their miracle drugs at $475,000.00 per patient, as if they were a monopoly, then they should be regulated like a monopoly utility, but that’s a post for another day.)

How can we get to affordability? By eliminating wasteful healthcare spending.

Dr. Glenn Steele, Geisinger’s former president notes, “Our core belief is that about 40% of what doctors and hospitals do is wasteful. If you can extract that percentage of crap, you can redistribute it into savings and profits but also into procedures that actually help patients.”

Under the fee-for-service system, we won’t pay for a patient to call their doctor to ask if something is a true emergency, yet insurers will pay for their ambulance ride to the ER and for an unnecessary ER visit. Our current incentives are misaligned and incent unnecessary care. Fee-for-service is the enemy of population health.

Path to the future:

We won’t solve this problem by tinkering around the edges. We need an all-in, bold, new approach to healthcare reimbursement which rewards improving the health of the population. Today’s well-intentioned but hopelessly misaligned population health strategies and alternative payment models are built on the chassis of specialist fee-for-service payments. It’s specialists who drive most of the healthcare spending within the US. No physician’s salary should be volume driven. In a future post, I will explore what I call Accountable Specialist Care; a healthcare payment reform which can be embraced by specialists and has the potential to dramatically reduce wasteful healthcare spending.

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