Category Archives: Payors

The perks and perils of integrated healthcare delivery: a consumer perspective

In the face of recent economic pressures, healthcare providers have been urged to seek out more cost effective methods of providing care. The pressure to treat a greater number of individuals with fewer resources has forced many providers to consolidate in order to cut costs. Consolidation has enabled smaller groups of providers to take advantage of increased buying power and shared operational and administrative resources. Larger groups of providers, contained within broader systems, have opted to join forces with large employers to participate in narrow networks or provide preventative services in the hopes of mitigating more expensive critical care.

And while many of these actions have helped reduce the expenses associated with care provision, both the government and the general public continue to criticize these organizations for the cost of healthcare services. As a method of addressing these costs, healthcare systems have been urged to transform into Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).

While we have heard the term ACO thrown around more and more recently, they are only a small subset of the massive new health legislation. An ACO, in simple terms, are groups of doctors, hospitals and other health care providers who come together voluntarily to give coordinated, high-quality care to their Medicare patients. But providers won’t stop talking about ACOs. Moreover, while the definition of an ACO is technically only based on the approach for Medicare patients, the organizational transformation required to serve Medicare patients would inadvertently change the approach for all other patients as well.

The benefits to becoming an ACO are not just financial. Considering the pressures surrounding these organizations to decrease costs, there may also be a perceptual benefit among institutions that lead the way, particularly among their peers.

But the single most important stakeholder – the patient – may not have the same opinion. Consumers, while eager to see the cost of healthcare reduced, tend to be forgotten in the conversation around whether to become an ACO. Yes, consumers want to save money, but the value of the ACO has not been made clear to patients. They’re rarely accounted for in the discussion, as the focus is mainly set on the financial benefit to the provider.

The reality is that these lower costs are seldom passed on to them, and in the face of universal coverage, will be even less accessible to them. Instead of cost concerns, consumers should be more interested in how an ACO may impact the care they receive or the access they are provided.

Universally, both providers and consumers agree that quality is important. But the importance of quality is not up for debate. The most important factor to consider is how each party defines ‘quality’ care. Providers define quality based on a set of metrics, usually linked to outcome data. Consumers, on the other hand, judge quality on the provider’s competence and compassion, inherently combining the experience with the outcome to define ‘quality’. This becomes an issue in how consumers may perceive ACOs. When care is provided by a party that also has financial stake, it may signal conflict of interest.

Part of becoming an ACO is better managing the provision of services for a patient across a variety of needs in order to deliver more cost effective care. For an organization to have the breadth of control and perspective that is needed to function as ACO, they need to be able to provide all healthcare services for each patient. This creates increased visibility but drastically reduces provider choice for consumers. Healthcare providers have traditionally considered themselves to be exempt from being seen as a consumer service in a capitalistic market, but consumers are slowly removing the exemption. They see their co-pay as their currency for a right to choose a provider, on credentials, recommendations or reviews. ACOs are meant to restrict this choice by providing consumers with more limited options, which may impact a consumer’s view of the ACO as a whole.

As providers consider the pros and cons of becoming an ACO, they should not only look at the financial impact of the decision but also what it says about them to consumers. Despite the fact that 700,000 Americans are forced into bankruptcy every year due to medical bills, they are willing to pay more in order to retain their right to choose a provider and not be treated as a financial liability.

Should providers choose the ACO route, transparent communication will be critical in assuring consumers that their best interests are also in mind.

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The dead end road for innovation

I wrote my honors thesis on the interdependence of patients, payors, providers, and the folks that pay for innovation to happen.  At the time I was focusing on the role venture capitalists played in the world of medical devices, but looking back, it may as well have been the role of pharmaceutical companies in developing new molecules or the NIH in studying epidemiology.  The point of my thesis did not depend on who the actual financial player was, but the fact that the rate and direction of innovation were invariably tied to their existence.  While many organizations claim to focus on specific ailments for the greater good, the truth is that the dollar amount tied to reaching each target justifies the strategy.  The patient, payor, and provider were merely metrics in the calculation.

However, the point of this post though is not to argue about the business end of research.  We all know about the disparity that goes on in the pharma world – the fact that some illnesses get more favorable grants, or that media and celebrity enable certain issues to get more attention than others (think the attention Michael J Fox has put on Parkinson’s), while other illnesses that affect a smaller, less well known population are left behind.  The point of this post is to shine light on how today’s reimbursement model, left unchanged, sets us up to fail.

Today’s reimbursement model sets us up to fail. That’s a loft statement, I know. Let me be more specific. Innovation is the drivetrain that will enable us to actualize full coverage. Skype appointments, SMS-based scripts, email diagnosis, and smartphone-enabled annual physicals will mitigate physician shortages, but more importantly, will allow us to cut costs and deliver healthcare to many that are currently underserved. These examples are just the beginning of how technology can be employed to deliver more efficient, more affordable healthcare, but they may not go very far. Why? Today’s physician is not set up to be reimbursed for services rendered outside of the traditional model. I’ll follow up further on this topic, because I think it’s an important one, but for now, I’ll just leave at this: innovation can not be constrained to a single sector of healthcare – in order for the healthcare delivery model to change, innovation must be be born from a collaboration between payor, provider, (pharma), and technology to be successful.

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Filed under Life sciences, Other Rants & Raves, Payors

Did you just use the ‘C’-word?

It’s not what you think – well, not exactly. I’m actually referring to the word “customer.” But within the healthcare industry, using it to describe patients is sacrilegious.  We are perfectly comfortable using it to describe the folks that buy other goods and services, so why is it such a dirty word in healthcare? More importantly, what are the implications if patients are, in fact, customers?

A customer, by definition, is a recipient of a good, service, product or idea obtained from a seller, vendor or supplier for a monetary or other valuable consideration. When it comes to hospitality, retail, packaged goods, electronics and travel, we have gotten used to defining the individuals that purchase as customers. So why not healthcare? After all, a patient by definition is a person receiving or registered to receive medical treatment. A patient is someone that makes purchases in the healthcare space.

But in reality the word patient implies so much more, which is why we have yet to update the nomenclature and our thinking about what it means. Fundamentally, the term patient signals a relationship – a human element of care – that is not represented by the term “customer.” Customer implies transaction – something cold and empty, replete of human emotion.

By acknowledging that patients are customers of healthcare, we can start approaching the system in a different way. Rather than subjects of medicine, as customers, these individuals need to be served.

Customer is more than just a word; it’s a state of mind. A state of mind that has been slow-going in healthcare. Shifting the power from clinicians to customers has implications.

1. Customers have choice

Insight: According to the 2012 Census, there are nearly million practicing physicians in the US. Most Americans choose from a selection of doctors, making a decision based on recommendation, insurance network, location, availability, certification and presumed quality. No different than shopping for a TV, as of 2012, consumers will also be looking at Consumer Reports: Health to facilitate the decision.

Implication:   Quality is not enough. A friendly smile is not enough. The departure from the all-too traditional doctor-patient relationship model means that healthcare will need to step it up.  No different than picking an airline, safety is considered tablestake, and customer service will be the way to differentiate and attract a new patient population.

2. Customers are resourceful and informed

Insight: This is the digital age. WebMD and Mayo Clinic Symptom Checker have enabled individuals to get smarter about their health. And while some medical professionals might find self-diagnosing irritating, it’s a reality. Patients are coming to their physicians with printed out diagnoses and skipping their general practitioner altogether (according to research from the Archives of Internal Medicine, 41% of appointments are with specialists, for many of which as the first point of contact). Access to information has also created an excess of content, difficult to digest and even more difficult to navigate. At the end of the day, consumers are equally overwhelmed as they are (mis)informed.

Implication: No different than a concierge at a hotel, we need to curate the healthcare experience. Rather than fighting against the information, we need to empower. When I am buying a TV, I want someone to tell me which specs are important and which are not important. Healthcare providers will no longer be limited to diagnosing and treating, but extending their role in curating information

3. Customers seek value

Insight: I recently listened to a TedMed talk that disputes the idea of patients as customers, in part because they cannot discriminate on price. While it is mostly true that paying more does not imply better quality (few physicians charge a premium or choose not to accept certain forms of insurance in light of their credentials in a particular specialty), we forget that a majority of individuals aren’t just deciding on which doctor to go to, but whether they even need to go. A study conducted by American Physical Therapy Association found that 40% of the population that suffers from lower back pain never sees a medical professional!  As patients – they are already in the door. As customers, they don’t always get to the door. Not every ailment is worth a doctor’s appointment, or rather, not every ailment is worth paying a co-pay.

Implication:  We need to reevaluate the value proposition and re-imagine the delivery of care. This means making sure that customers are both getting what they pay for and understanding the value of what they are getting. Beyond that, it is also necessary to deliver more ‘a la-carte’ care, with choice-based services through a wider variety of access points. For example, if I can only afford $20, what can I get for that? On the flip side, if I am willing to pay more, what more can I get – can I get it digitally? Can I text a doctor? In other words, what is the business lounge of healthcare, versus the economy class fare?

4. Customers exist outside of healthcare

Insight: Unlike the word “patient,” which lives within the confines of healthcare, “customer” is a universal term. Recognizing patients as customers shines a light on the fact that individuals who seek care from a healthcare provider are also being served by hotels, restaurants, mobile carriers and airlines. As customers, they have developed a higher set of expectations.

Implication: Waiting an hour for an appointment is no longer acceptable, nor will it be rewarded with repeat business. Transparency will play a greater role in how consumers choose. I’ve heard the lack of transparency at a hospital being compared to that at a car mechanic – “It’ll cost $100 for me to take a look and I don’t know what it will cost to fix until I’m in there.”

It’s not about talking transactions – because at the end of the day, clinical care will always boil down to the little things a nurse does to make the experience better. But it is about embracing the fact that patients have more choices now more than ever. We need to not only anticipate their wants and needs, but also think outside the box.

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Filed under Other Rants & Raves, Payors, Providers

Implications of the Supreme Court decision

Last week, the Supreme Court decided that it was constitutional for ObamaCare to require every American to have health insurance. Not in a while has a Supreme Court decision been able to impact every single American. While this ruling has a significant political impact, the impact on the healthcare system is more worrisome. Not only will this change healthcare consumption, but it will also create changes in the offer. Insurance companies will not be able to discriminate against high-risk consumers, and have to find ways to cover those that can not afford to pay. In order to meet market demands, payors will likely have to develop a set of products to meet emerging needs, undifferentiated from one another. As a result, it will be more important to optimize and differentiate on the customer experience to reach the expanding addressable market. What about the providers, that are already understaffed, and eating losses on charity care and declining reimbursement rates? Will universal coverage also change healthcare consumption, encouraging more people to seek care, and if so, can our system handle it?

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