Posts Tagged ‘primary care’

April 9, 2010

ACOs: The New Kid to Watch With Health Reform

It’s time to remember ACOs, the latest acronym on many lips in Washington and included in the recently passed health reform legislation.  The idea—reward providers for bringing high level quality and cost-efficient, coordinated care to communities.  ACOs are envisioned as community-based entities accountable for comprehensive healthcare services.  They’re supposed to promote accountability and develop patterns of practice considered to be the best and most effective.  Additional Medicare payments will be given to those groups of providers that work together to manage and coordinate care for Medicare beneficiaries—of course, if they can show that they  met certain quality criteria, achieve specified cost savings, and meet structural requirements for reporting and governance (to be outlined by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

 You’ll find ACOs under section 3022 of the new Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (that’s the PPACA), which calls for the establishment of the ACO program no later than January 1, 2012. The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services  will determine the policies and procedures that will apply to ACOs. 
 Who’s eligible?   An ACO may be formed by a wide range of professionals, including physicians in group practice arrangements, networks of individual physician practices, hospitals, and partnerships or joint ventures between hospitals and physician groups, that are willing to be held to the accountability standards. 

Among the qualifications: Providers must agree to participate in the program for at least three years  and they have to have the HHS Secretary assign it at least 5,000 Medicare beneficiaries and include a sufficient number of primary care physicians for serving those patients.  The Secretary can give preferences to  ACOs that participate in similar arrangements with private third party payers.

The ACO is not a new idea, but rather builds on ideas and models (from Mayo to Kaiser health) that have been discussed for years. Cost savings and quality improvement are key.  How that will be achieved, measured, and evaluated is still open to question, with critics noting this could be managed care in disguise.  And if the patients sense a “warmed over” product focused on cost-savings, the hopes for real success could be dimmed. The division of savings could make some family physicians uncomfortable with ACOs, according to the American Academy of Family Physicians. As the degree of risk borne by ACOs increases, the need for regulation of the financial security of these organizations will also increase, which could influence patient care decision making. Financing and regulatory policies will still continue to create pressures in ways that may take the focus off the patient.

But that gets to the cost issues again.  If the focus is on how to best coordinate the care of Medicare beneficiaries—and they may mean more connections rather than less connections to a host of other providers and community and social service agencies than envisioned in this plan. Whether this will be a successful evolution—or revolution—remains to be seen.

October 2, 2009

Congress: Listen to the Academic Health Center Leaders on Health Reform

I heard today that congressional staffers are “punch drunk” from logging in so many hours working on health reform.  I am not comforted by that thought given they are trying to  write one of the most significant pieces of legislation in decades.  I am  wary of the urgent rush to produce something—good or bad—to show that Congress is not twiddling its thumbs.  Does the Congress really have all the facts?  Or are they also developing legislation based on minimal or biased information, evidence, experience, or truth?

 I would point to an opinion piece in the LA Times by Dr. Philip Pizzo, dean of the school of medicine of Stanford University and chairman of the board of the Association of Academic Health Centers, where he wrote, “Undertaking such an important shift in how we deliver healthcare requires a robust national debate.” With the members of Congress getting ready to say yea or nay on health reform,  we still have not had sufficient debate from all sides.  The nation has heard too much from those leaders who, as Dr. Pizzo says, “choose to rely on fear instead of facts to make their case.”

 Before the votes get counted, we need to hear from the patients who really use and have experience with the health care system as it exists today.  We need to hear more from the leaders of the nation’s academic health centers–some of the most experienced experts on health care in the nation.  Most are physicians who not only have practiced medicine for decades but also have had distinguished careers in academe (and sometimes government).  Most of all, they know what it means to lead and operate an institution, without which our communities–and the health system–cannot function. 

These leaders, who also include nonphysicians, can tell us about patient care, the impact of health on communities, the health and economic consequences of  having no insurance,  and the problems with the current reimbursement system.  They can tell us what it is like to run health professions schools–from medicine to allied health,   major departments at a children’s or other teaching hospital, or an entire teaching hospital or  health system–and what facilitates or impedes care delivery.  

Academic health center leaders are the people at ground zero, making sure that the nation can provide health professions education, biomedical research, and patient care.  They are sustaining the infrastructure that may determine the nation’s future.  Congress should be listening to these voices of experience and reason.

Academic health center leaders know what it takes to provide patient care and sustain a health system in challenging economic times. They not only know the problems but also how to resolve them.  Academic health center  leaders for example, will tell the Congress why we need to establish a permanent workforce planning entity or board so we can resolve primary care shortages and rural health problems–and  ensure the nation has a health workforce for the future.  

Congressional staffers—stop running on empty and get MORE input, advice, and recommendations from the academic health center community.