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Opinion Column

It’s Time For A Chronic Health Care Bailout

About $3 in every $4 spent on health care in the U.S. goes to treat chronic conditions like diabetes, heart disease and asthma. That was about $1.7 trillion of the $2.2 trillion spent on health care in 2007. Since bending the health cost curve is a key objective of health reform, it stands to reason that targeting chronic conditions should be a basis for changing how health care is paid for in the U.S.

Covering more Americans who are uninsured without payment reform will be a wasteful pursuit both in fiscal and clinical terms. Fiscally, about 30 percent of health spending is clinically wasteful taking the forms of overuse, underuse, misuse and medical errors. The New England Healthcare Institute, a nonprofit that focuses on issues like quality improvement and cost containment, estimates that $800 billion in care is wasted each year.  According to NEHI, that money could be cut out of health spending and at the same time would improve quality for those who receive care.  

It's Time For A Chronic Health Care Bailout

Put in context, about the same amount of money (plus or minus $100 billion) was spent on the banking bailout in 2008 as was wasted in health care. Furthermore, as the chart above illustrates, nearly $600 billion was spent by the federal government’s Medicare and Medicaid programs on care for chronic conditions.

To get to universal coverage in a fiscally sound way, we need to come up with a “chronic care bailout” plan. The way to do this is through health payment reform.

One of the traditional approaches to reforming payment isn’t really a reform at all: it’s freezing the level of payments to providers. Typically, providers work in a fee-for-service payment environment; that is, providers get paid on the basis of patient visits, each of which gets a specific code depending on the service provided (for physician visits, a “CPT” code).

All freezing payments to providers does is to compel providers (physicians and hospitals) to increase utilization to make up the difference in total compensation.

Health economic history has shown, time after time, freezing payments to providers drives use of services up. Increased utilization builds on clinically wasteful processes that lead to higher morbidity and mortality and, ultimately, to a lower level of quality. That means poorer patient outcomes.

The sage Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care has demonstrated for over two decades that more care is not better care. Better care is better care.

Establishing global payments for health services can get to the root of the increasing health cost curve, drive innovation in chronic care delivery and improve quality.

How do global payments work? A global payment methodology gives a lump sum of dollars to doctors for managing a group of patients. This budget can be used however physicians see fit. There is, however, a transparent understanding of clinical and patient outcome standards that, if met or exceeded, reward the best physicians.

This approach is particularly well-suited for managing a chronically ill population because it frees physicians to adopt innovations that can be used in optimally managing their patients on a 24×7 basis.

Most physicians are currently rewarded to see patients in episodic visits. A doctor may see a chronically ill patient eight times a year for seven minutes, roughly equal to an hour a year. What of the other 8,759 hours of the year?

The conditions of diabetes and heart disease are heavily lifestyle-driven: think food intake, exercise and monitoring (a.k.a. “knowing your numbers”) as basic behaviors that drive health and wellness – or illness. These behaviors can be bolstered outside of the physicians’ offices using enabling technologies like the Internet and mobile phones, which are ubiquitous among American health citizens. But in most current payment modalities, physicians aren’t even compensated to respond to a patient’s e-mail message.

Global payments would also provide further incentive for physicians to adopt electronic health records systems that can help them more effectively track patients’ conditions and health status in real-time and provide counsel on an ongoing basis.

In today’s health payment schemes, physicians aren’t rewarded to reach outside of the exam room. By implementing global payments coupled with a medical home, physicians could eventually re-deploy staff from the health insurance business function toward care and clinical support that would benefit patient care and outcomes.

A chronic care bailout in the form of global payments would help bend the cost curve far more effectively than freezing payments to providers. Furthermore, this approach would drive innovation and health care quality and, ultimately, American citizens’ health outcomes and satisfaction.

Jane Sarasohn-Kahn is a health economist and management consultant with THINK-Health. She writes the blog Health Populi. Her report, Participatory Health: Online and Mobile Tools Help Chronically Ill Manage Their Care, was recently published by the California HealthCare Foundation

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