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CARE COORDINATION An Approach for High Risk Patients Goals for Today • Discuss unique heath care needs of individuals with disabilities and the frail elderly. • Learn about two models of care delivery targeted at high risk patients • Understand how health reform affects the development of care coordination models • Describe provider engagement and it’s importance • Define “relevant response” and “life geography” in the context of care coordination. Changing Landscape • Health care reform is driving new models of care – Lessons learned in case management and MSHO care coordination are being replicated in the broader Medicare and commercial settings. • Face to face assessments • Community based services • Care giver support Health Care Reform Continuum Delegated Care Coordination Heath Care Home/Capitated Models Quality Based TCOC Making the Transition 5 Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes >50% medical spend Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost High Utilization 87% Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes >50% medical spend 13% Year 1 Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost High Utilization Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes 87% >50% medical spend 13% Year 1 Year 2 Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost Clinic Medical Home High Utilization Regression to mean -acute episodes -well-managed chronic disease 87% 13% Year 1 Year 2 Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes >50% medical spend Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost Clinic Medical Home High Utilization Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes 87% >50% medical spend Bluestone population 13% Year 1 Year 2 Complex social/behavioral/medical Chronic High Spend Higher % on public programs Frail/elderly/vulnerable High incidence dementia Underserved Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost Clinic Medical Home High Utilization Patients with Chronic Disease and Acute Episodes 87% >50% medical spend Bluestone population 13% Year 1 Year 2 Complex social/behavioral/medical Chronic High Spend Higher % on public programs Frail/elderly/vulnerable High incidence dementia Underserved Care on the Continuum Patient Population Risk/Frailty and High Cost Facility Partners Clinic Medical Home Assisted Living and Group Homes NP/PA Services MD Services Care Coordination Services Social Support High Risk Care Coordination Care Coordination PLUS On-site Primary Care Bluestone Vista Bluestone Physician Services was established in 2006 in Stillwater, MN to meet the needs of patients who were not being well serviced in the traditional medical system. Bluestone Physician Services is the largest provider to Assisted Living Facilities in Minnesota, • Provides primary care and care coordination to 4,500 residents in over 150 assisted living communities, group homes and in their own homes. • The first Geriatric Certified Health Care Home in the country. • 17 providers, 26 nurses including a full time psychiatrist. • Designed customized technology including online orders, family email and monitoring systems. Bluestone Bluestone Solutions Bluestone Physician Services Bluestone Consulting Care Coordination Bluestone Technologies Bluestone Care Coordination High Risk as Organizing Principle • MSHO/SNBC – MSHO-Primary care model-Residential Care – SNBC-Community Model-Disability/income • Health Care Home-Residential Care – Integration with Primary Care – Integration with facilities • Medicare Advantage/At risk contracting – Predictive modeling Patient Identification-Who’s in? • High Risk Patients – Life Geography-HCH • Where they live-Residential Care • Life events • Socio-economic • Diagnosis- i.e. Dementia – Assignment by payer-MSHO/SNBC – Self selected-all – Claims/predictive modeling-Risk contracts Care Coordination Across Systems • Residential Care – Facility based • Engage the true decision maker – One care coordinator across facility • Staff education • Waiver and HCH services • Community Based – Coordination with “external” case management • How to find other care coordinators Medical-Behavioral Integration • Interdisciplinary Team Meetings (IDT) – Based on hospice model • “assure” primary care – Regularly scheduled case consultation meetings • Best practice • Medical advice-follow up at next IDT • Triggers – Population specific Patient Engagement • • • • • • Timely communication Accurate communication Trust built on “small” accomplishments Realistic expectations Role clarity Persistence Care Coordination Plus Model Self-care Care Plan Optimized Empowerment Pt. and family WellnessBehavioral Change Life skills/Education Chronic Care NeedsPhysician Engagement DM/MH/MTM/Care Team Pt Engagement through basic needs(rarely medical) Trust/Housing/Safety/Equipment Needs Hierarchy Action Hierarchy Optimized Care Plan • • • • • • • Comprehensive Medically sound Realistic Relevant Accessible Transferable Integrated Health Care Home • Bluestone Physician Services was certified as HCH in 2010. • Care Coordination-”A function not a person” • RN care coordination added 2012 • Use of technology for care team communication across systems – Bluestone Bridge Health Care Home in the Geriatric Setting • Unique residential model brings unique care coordination challenges. – Facility based – Responsible parties – Complex health issues – Quality measures do not consistently apply Positive Changes in Geriatric/Disability care • MAPCP Demonstration • Resource Toolkit • MNCM – Upcoming care coordination measures-an opportunity for collaboration! • Follow up after hospital discharge • Advance Care Planning Bluestone Measurement Framework • Quality indicators: -advanced care plan completion -appropriate chronic disease management -optimal medication management • Cost indicators: -ED/Hospital utilization Aging in place: -Days out of home (AL) setting -%deaths in home (AL) setting Utilization Management • Acute/ER Reduction – Action Plans – Contracts – Accompanied visits – Scheduled primary care visits • Pharmacy – Internal med reviews • Advance Care Planning – POLST Residential Care Utilization Facility ER Visits Hospital days Length of Service Number of Beds with addition of nursing service 78% reduction 72% reduction 1 years 39 1 90% reduction 96% reduction 5 years 15 2 50% reduction NA 5 years 40 /MC 100/AL 3 10 visits 0 5 years 62 ( psych beds) 4 0 0 5 years 16 Care Coordination Utilization Bluestone-next steps • Assist other health systems implement residential care models – Fairview • Continue to develop dementia care model – Identification End of life care. • Residential care forums – Targeted to entire residential care community • High risk care coordination provision/consulting Courage Center Primary Care Clinic: Health Care Home for Persons with Disabilities Courage Center Guided by the vision that one day, all people will live, work, learn and play in a community based on abilities, not disabilities. 31 Courage Center • A comprehensive rehabilitation and resource center for persons with disabilities service individuals with lifelong and newly acquired conditions at every point in the life cycle since 1928 • Largest nonprofit provider of rehabilitation services in Minnesota 32 Courage Center • Serves 12,500 people with disabilities and complex health conditions annually at 4 sites in the Minneapolis and St. Paul metropolitan area • Has long recognized the unmet need for primary care for our patients • Research staff are located within the Public Affairs and Research Department, a unique linkage to advocacy and public affairs. Target Population Identified for our HCH • Persons with disabilities or complex health conditions • Require combination of medical and social services to live successfully and participate fully in their home communities • Require multiple services that span the continuum from acute to long-term medical care Cost of Care for Individuals with Disabilities • 16% of people reporting a disability accounted for • Nearly half of all hospital discharges • 62% of hospital days • 34% of all adult physician visits • 41% of all adult drug prescriptions (Anderson, et al., 2011) • This population is expensive, but does not experience good health. 30 Health Care Costs Across the Population Percent of the Population 25 20 15 10 The 50% of the population that costs the least. The 5% of the population that costs the most. 5 0 Low Cost High Cost Health Care Costs Why do this at Courage? • Co-locate primary care with physiatry and psychiatry, which are the two common specialties seen by this population • “Reverse engineer” primary care into a setting designed for this population, and where medical and social supports are already present, rather than trying to take an existing primary care clinic and add social supports Percentage of Clients with Charge 60% 53% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 28% 26% 18% 14% 13% Percentage of Clients with Charge Planning for the Clinic Per Member Month Costs by Number of Conditions Cost per Member Month $60,000 $49,701 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $24,097 $20,000 $10,000 $12,710 $3,570 $4,833 $5,893 $9,055 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 Number of Targeted Conditions 6 Other things we knew • Using the model put forth by DHS for reimbursement (FFS with care coordination fee calculated on complexity of clients), this clinic will never break even • We would need some kind of shared savings to make the clinic self-sufficient • We needed to include new payment methods as we built the clinic Clinic Staffing • • • • • • We serve a relatively small population Primary care physician .4 FTE Nurse Practitioners 2 FTE RN Care Coordinators 3 FTE LSW Care Coordinator 1 FTE CMAs 3 FTE Care Coordination • • • • • Each client is assigned a care coordinator Care coordinator develops care plan with client Care coordinators make quarterly contacts Assist clients with managing day to day conditions Care coordinators are first contact if there are problems, although they can also call triage line • Providers available 24/7 through office number • We encourage clients to stop by when they are at Courage for other reasons Different kinds of Care Coordination • Extended Primary Care – care coordination to provide coordinated care, connect with social supports • SNBC Care Coordination – contracts with private insurers to manage their SNBC clients – puts all care coordination in one spot, although they may still have other coordinators/case managers • We provide both types of care coordination at Courage, and one doesn’t look much different than the other, except SNBC has documentation for the insurance company Designing the Clinic • The clinic is fully accessible – Fully accessible facility – Exam rooms have a full turning radius for a power wheelchair – 6X8 high/low matts for exam tables – Accessible OB/Gyn high low table – Hoyer lifts – Accessible scale Care pathways • Developed pathways prior to bringing on physicians or nurse practitioners • The care pathways have undergone revision – Pneumonia as an example – Seizures as another example • Included Patient Activation Scores as part of the care pathways Healthy Days • Now thinking about your physical health, which includes physical illness and injury, for how many days during the past 30 days was your physical health not good? • Now thinking about your mental health, which includes stress, depression, and problems with emotions, for how many days during the past 30 days was your mental health not good? Patient Activation Measure • Measure of the knowledge, skills, and confidence a patient has that allows them to become engaged in their care • Assessment of patient activation is a way to structure the interaction of team members with the patient, to provide the “just right” amount of support for patients experiencing exacerbations in health conditions. Patient Activation Measure • Patients with high levels of activation are four times more likely to get care when they need it as patients with low levels of activation (AARP, 2009). • Patients with low levels of activation are also twice as likely to experience a medical error, and twice as likely to experience a hospital readmission within 30 days of discharge. Patient Activation Levels • Level 1 – individuals are starting to take a role, but don’t feel confident, and tend to be passive recipients of care • Level 2 – individuals are building knowledge and confidence, but lack understanding of their health or recommended changes • Level 3 – individuals have the key facts and are beginning to take action but need support to implement and maintain behaviors • Level 4 – individuals have adopted new behaviors, but may need help to maintain them in times of stress or illness Patient Activation Measure • A change of 1 point is associated with – 1.7% decline in hospitalizations – 1.8% gain in A1c control – 3.4% gain in A1c testing or LDL testing • We see an average of 12 point improvement over the first 6 months of enrollment in the clinic Utilization Data • High hospital utilizers – We have access to DHS encounter data with a three year baseline for hospital and ED utilization – 10.8 days per year during 3 year baseline period – Most common cause of hospitalization is UTI – ED utilization not that high, probably because they always got admitted Key Components • Extended clinic visits – 60 minute evals, 30 minute clinic visits • ~25% of visits are same day or next day • Clinical Pathways for 5 conditions • Disability knowledgeable providers and nurses • Work around transportation whenever possible telemedicine, UTI plan • Providers available 24/7 • Use Patient Activation Measure to identify those patients who need the most support • Each patient has an individualized care plan Our goals for the clinic were the triple aim • Improve population health • Reduce health costs • Improve client experience Goal Measure Better Health Improve patient’s perception Center for Disease Control of health and Prevention Healthy Days Decreased Cost Decrease the complexity of dealing with health conditions Secondary Conditions Surveillance Instrument Decrease severity of depression Patient Health Questionnaire - 9 (depression measure) Decrease the rate of hospitalizations Per member Year hospitalization days Better Improved patient Experience of engagement in their health care care Satisfaction Surveys Patient Activation Measure Courage Center Patient Satisfaction Surveys After 36 months • After 3 years, we have served 278 patients, with 207 active members in the clinic • Chart review on 50 patients found – Average of 12.5 health conditions – 80% of patients also have a major mental health diagnosis – Average of 12.4 medications (including OTC) Better Health Goal Measure Pilot Outcomes Improve patient’s perception of health CDC Healthy Days 45% of clients entered with 0/30 healthy days. After one year, average client had increased from 7 healthy days a month to 14 healthy days. No significant decrease in the number of secondary conditions, slight decrease in severity of conditions. Decrease the Secondary complexity of health Conditions conditions Surveillance Instrument Decrease severity of depression PHQ-9 Decrease in depression score in first year of enrollment Decreased Cost Decrease the rate of hospitalizations PMPY hospitalization days Better Experience of care Improved patient engagement Reduced hospital days by 75% after admission to HCH. Saved $19,100 per person per year, $3.4 million a year on 177 clients Increased PAM scores by 5 points in first year. Patient Activation Measure Satisfaction Surveys Courage Center 97% of clients would recommend Patient Courage Center Primary Care Clinic to Satisfaction others. Surveys Components of the CMS Grant • Expand the clinic from 200 to 500 clients • Implement a Chronic Disease Self-Management Program with our population • Develop low-cost in-home support for clients in the clinic who don’t qualify for waiver services (similar to Independent Living Skills) • Expand telemedicine program to provide on-going monitoring of chronic conditions • Implement Payment Reform to make the clinic viable Relevant Response • Key to impacting cost and quality • Requires care team identified in care plan/health record • The right person at the right time with the right information. – Physician – Care Coordinator – Decision makers Provider Engagement • Coordination with clinic HCH Care Coordinator • Identify common goals/pain points • Provide information • Empower client • Empower care coordinator – Specialized knowledge – Influence Questions Thank You! Nancy A. Flinn [email protected] Dr. Dave Moen [email protected] Sarah Keenan [email protected]