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Adirondack Medical Home Summit 2013: NYS Reform Foster Gesten, MD, FACP Office of Quality and Patient Safety Overview • • • • • • Medicaid Reform Health Exchanges Primary Care: PCMH and beyond State Innovation Model (SIM) Quality and Patient Safety Prevention Agenda 1 Overriding Themes • • • • • • • Integration Care Management Care and Payment Reform Alignment Data (to information to action) Transparency Triple Aim 2 Medicaid Reform 3 Medicaid Reform • Managed Care for All – – – – SPMI LTC Duals Foster care • Care Management for All (that need it) – Health homes • Global Cap • Value Based Benefit Design – PCI – Preterm births – Evidence based review of benefits 4 Health Insurance Exchange New York State of Health 5 What is NY State of Health? • Organized marketplace – One-stop shopping for subsidized and unsubsidized coverage – Easily compare health plan options – The only place to check eligibility and apply for financial assistance – Enroll in qualified health plans • Two programs – Individual Marketplace – Small Business Marketplace 6 Who Will Enroll In NY State Of Health? Health Plan Marketplace enrollment is estimated to be 1.1 million New Yorkers Individual Marketplace (58%) Small Business Marketplace (42%) 7 http://www.nystateofhealth.ny.gov/PlansMap 8 Health Plan Highlights • Choice of plans in all areas of the State • Increased competition gives consumers new health plan options • Premiums for people who buy coverage for themselves and their families decreases by an average of 53% compared to today’s premiums • You will not be denied health insurance on the basis of a preexisting condition • All plans are required to have adequate networks 9 Required Ten Essential Health Benefits Preventive services will be offered at no cost to you 1. Ambulatory patient services 2. Emergency room services 3. Hospitalization 4. Maternity and newborn care 5. Mental health and substance abuse disorders 6. Prescription drugs 7. Rehabilitation and habilitation services and devices 8. Laboratory services 9. Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management 10. Pediatric services, including oral and vision 10 Financial Assistance • Many individuals and families will be eligible for financial assistance to reduce the cost of coverage • Financial assistance is available in 2 forms: – Tax credits will reduce the cost of premiums for most single adults earning less than $45,960 and for families of 4 earning less than $94,200 – Cost-sharing reductions will lower co-payments and deductibles for single adults earning less than $28,725 and for families of 4 earning less than $58,875 • Tax credits and cost sharing reductions are estimated at the time of application and applied immediately 11 Primary Care 12 Primary Care • Medicaid Incentive – Impact – Future direction • Hospital Medical Home Demonstration • Multi-payer Demonstrations – ADK – CPCI – SIM 13 State Health Care Innovation Plan • CMMI challenge to states: beyond ‘demo’ and pilot • Value based model of care/payment covering 80% of population within 5 years – Multipayer – ‘transformative’ care delivery and payment innovation • Disseminate and ‘connect’ demonstrations and innovations – – – – ACO Waivers HIT/HIE PCMH • Basis for Testing Grant application (up to ~$60 million) 14 Proximate Goals • Refine coherent, more detailed plan with internal and external stakeholder engagement – Interagency alignment (DFS, DOH, Civil Service, OMH, etc.) – Payers, providers, associations • Review with wider set of stakeholders • Finalize and submit SHIP • Convert SHIP into application (early 2014) 15 Core Elements • • • • • • • Care model HIT/HIE Metrics/reporting Payment model Transformation support Benefit design Workforce strategy 16 Quality and Patient Safety • ‘New’ Office of Quality and Patient Safety – Hub for department on Q/S initiatives – Advance use of data for improvement, evaluation, prioritization, transparency, accountability • LTC • Physician practices – APD – Sepsis – Cardiac services, Stroke, Office Based Surgery 17 Make New York the Healthiest State New York State Prevention Agenda 18 Prevention Agenda 2013-2017 • Goal is improved health status of New Yorkers and reduction in health disparities through increased emphasis on prevention. • Call to action to broad range of stakeholders to collaborate at the community level to assess health status and needs, identify local health priorities and plan, implement and evaluate strategies for local health improvement. 19 CHAs & CSPs • Local Health Department Community Health Assessment & Community Health Improvement Plan – Due November 15, 2013; covers years 2014-2017 • Hospital Community Service Plans – Due November 15, 2013, covers years 2013-15 • LHDs and Hospitals asked by Comm. Shah to work together to assess health status, select common priorities including one to address a health disparity, and develop and implement a plan to address priorities. 20 Prevention Agenda 2013-2017: Ad Hoc Leadership Group • Six members of Public Health Committee and other leaders from Healthcare, Business, Academia, Community-based & Local Health Departments. 21 Background Ad Hoc Committee considered: • Urgent Health Issues and Disparities in NYS • Experience with first Prevention Agenda • Factors that contribute to health 22 Leading Causes of Death, New York State, 2000 - 2009 300 Heart Disease, 207/100,000 Rate per 100,000 250 200 Cancer, 160/100,000 150 100 CLRD, 31/100,000 Stroke, 26/100,000 Pneumonia/flu 20/100,000 50 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Unintentional Injury, 20/100,000 2008 2009 Heart Disease Cancer CLRD Stroke Pneumonia/Influenza Unintentional Injury 23 Estimated Number of Deaths Due to Modifiable Behaviors, New York State, 2009 30,000 26,222 25,000 22,021 20,000 15,000 10,000 5,071 5,000 4,521 3,315 2,592 1,748 1,206 Incidents involving firearms Unsafe sexual behaviors 0 Tobacco Poor diet and Alcohol physical Consumption inactivity Microbial agents Toxic agents Motor vehicle crashes Estimates were extrapolated using the results published in: “Actual Causes of Death in the United States, 2000", JAMA, March 2004, 291 (10) and NYS 2009 death data 24 Age-Adjusted* Heart Disease Death Rate per 100,000 by Race/Ethnicity, New York State, 2000-2009 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 2000 2001 2002 White/NH * Age-adjusted to U.S. Census 2000 population 2003 Black/NH 2004 2005 AsianPI/NH 2006 Hispanic 2007 2008 2009 25 Framework for Improving Health 26 Frieden T., A Framework for Public Health Action: The Health Impact Pyramid. American Journal of Public Health. 2010; 100(4): 590-595 Five Prevention Agenda Priorities 1. 2. 3. 4. Prevent chronic diseases Promote a healthy and safe environment Promote healthy women, infants and children Promote mental health and prevent substance abuse 5. Prevent HIV, sexually transmitted diseases, vaccine-preventable diseases and healthcare associated infections 27 For each priority area: • Focus Areas • Goals • Measurable Objectives • Interventions • By Sector • By Health Impact Pyramid 28 http://www.health.ny.gov/prevention/prevention_agenda/20132017/indicators/2013/indicator_map.htm 29 Statewide Update • Communities completing community health assessments and community health improvement plans due November 15th • Technical assistance being provided by statewide and regional organizations • Communication tools being distributed to local partnerships for use in engaging stakeholders • Meeting with foundations to seek funding to support local partnerships. 30 Priorities identified by Region September 2013 16 15 14 1313 NA 12 Prevent Chronic Diseases 10 8 9 7 Promote a Healthy and Safe Environment 7 6 Promote Healthy Women, Infants and Children 6 4 4 4 4 2 222 2 2 2 1 1 2 1 22 1 2 22 1 0 0 4 Promote Mental Health and Prevent Substance Abuse Prevent HIV, STDs, Vaccine Preventable Diseases and Healthcare Associated Infections 31 Questions? 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