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Clinical Integration:

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John Marren Thomas Babbo. jpm_at_hmltd.com tjb_at_hmltd.com. Hogan Marren, Ltd. Chicago, Illinois ... 1. Update on Clinical Integration the national health care ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Clinical Integration:


1
Clinical Integration a Strategy for Physician
Alignment, Better Quality, and Collective Payer
Contracting
John Marren Thomas Babbo jpm_at_hmltd.com
tjb_at_hmltd.com Hogan Marren, Ltd. ? Chicago,
Illinois (312) 946-1800
March, 2009
2
Agenda
  • 1. Update on Clinical Integrationthe national
    health care perspective
  • The FTC perspective
  • MGOs efforts to date
  • What it takes to be Clinically Integrated
  • Contracting with payors

3
Lets be specific
  • Physicians can align with each other and
    hospitals to
  • (1) distinguish themselves in the market on the
    basis of quality
  • (2) justify higher reimbursement
  • (3) conduct collective negotiations with health
    plans

4
What do we know about todays health care
environment?
5
The solution is physician alignment
  • Through employment
  • Through management models
  • Through clinical integration

clinical integration
Combining the efforts of employed, managed, and
independent doctors
5
6
What does CI achieve?
  • Fosters collaboration among doctors and hospitals
    in a way that increases the quality and
    efficiency of patient care
  • Presents doctors and hospitals a powerful
    business and clinical strategy to thrive in the
    advent of consumerism, pay-for-performance, and
    quality report cards
  • Allows physician networks to assert themselves
    forthrightly in collective negotiations with
    health plans and/or employers

6
7
What do we know about CI?
  • If Clinical Integration is defined as

... an active and ongoing program to evaluate
and modify practice patterns by the network's
physician participants and create a high degree
of interdependence and cooperation among the
physicians to control costs and ensure quality .
. .
then we know at least three things
8
What do we know?
  • First, CI is not
  • The messenger model
  • Risk contracting redux
  • Payor-driven P4P

8
9
What do we know?
  • the FTC has said a lot about Clinical
    Integration.

Second,
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11
  • The FTC staff considered the "explicit
    admission" by GRIPA that one objective of the
    plan was to contract at higher fee levels for the
    services of physician-members.
  • Ordinarily, such an objective would raise
    concerns that higher prices would result from the
    exercise of market power, the FTC staff said.
  • "Here, however, GRIPA's higher fee levels are
    anticipated as part of a program that seeks, and
    through the participants' integration appears to
    have significant potential to achieve, greater
    overall efficiency and improved quality in the
    provision of medical care to covered persons.
  • Based on the information provided, the FTC staff
    letter said, it appeared that GRIPA's joint
    negotiation of contracts, "including price terms
    with payers on behalf of its physician members
    who will be providing medical services to payers'
    enrollees under those contracts is subordinate
    to, reasonably related to, and may be reasonably
    necessary for, or to further, GRIPA's ability to
    achieve the potential efficiencies that appear
    likely to result from its member physicians'
    integration through the proposed program."

12
May 28, 2008 FTC Conference Center601 New
Jersey Avenue, N.W.Washington, DC 20001
13
antitrust laws forbid collective negotiations
In other words,
14
unless youre really clinically integrated
  • An analysis of any physician networks clinical
    integration program is essentially a three-part
    test which asks
  • whether the networks clinical integration
    program is real
  • containing authentic initiatives, actually
    undertaken by the network, which involve all
    physicians in the network, and apply to the
    physicians practice patterns relative to
    patients who obtain health benefits under
    fee-for-service health plans
  • whether the initiatives of the program are
    designed to achieve likely improvements in health
    care quality and efficiency and
  • whether joint contracting with fee-for-service
    health plans is reasonably necessary to achieve
    the efficiencies of the clinical integration
    program.

15
What else do we know?
Third,
  • many lawful, well-constructed CI programs have
    and are being developed across the country . . .

So, we need to get going!
16
Current Successful CI Models
  • Advocate Physician Partners
  • Brown Toland Medical Group
  • Greater Rochester IPA
  • MedSouth
  • St. Lukes Magic Valley
  • Memorial Hermann HNP
  • Covenant Health Partners
  • Etc.

17
Achieving CI a phased approach
  • Evaluate CI Readiness
  • Build Physician Hospital Consensus
  • Establish Network Organization
  • Develop CI Initiatives
  • Select Deploy CI Infrastructure
  • Engage Regulators
  • Implement CI Program
  • Commence CI Contracting

18
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19

Health System


Physicians

Health Systems
CI
Operations
Company


Payors


Employer/

Community

20

Health



CI
Operations
Company


Payors


Employer/

Community

21
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23
Examples of CI initiatives MGO is considering
  • Clinical
  • Readmission within 30 days of patients discharged
    with a diagnosis of heart failure
  • Prophylactic antibiotic selection for surgical
    patients
  • Ambulatory management of patients with GERD

All of these can be measured now!
  • Non- Clinical
  • Electronic Connectivity high speed internet
    e-mail
  • Attendance at CI information meetings
  • Completion of on-line assessments and courses

24
www.advocatehealth.com Search for 2008 Value
Report (http//www.advocatehealth.com/physpartn
ers/about/employers/value_report.html) Or call
1.800. 3ADVOCATE
25
Infrastructure building on a solid foundation
  • Networks of independent physicians that are
    affiliated with hospitals or health systems enjoy
    a distinct advantage in the development of CI
  • Existing OhioHealth QI and patient safety
    initiatives
  • Established MGO/OHG medical management activities
  • MGO/OhioHealth/OHG investments in advanced
    clinical technologies and information systems
  • The presence of such infrastructure greatly
    accelerates the implementation of a comprehensive
    CI program
  • The CI activities of the MGO/OHG entail
    reorientation and realignment of this
    infrastructure, rather than building basic CI
    competencies

26
Hospital Systems
Ambulatory Claims
  • MGO billing program
  • Med3000 PMS
  • Aetna claims
  • OhioHealth benefits
  • MIDAS
  • MIDAS DataVision
  • EMR/CPOE
  • ORB
  • Existing QI Programs

Ambulatory EMR (good to have, but not necessary)
Med3000 Data Warehouse
Physician Profiling and Actionable Reports
27
Food for thought
  • Though creating clinically integrated
    organizations is difficult and expensive,
    physicians should recognize that clinical
    integration can help them both to gain some
    negotiating leverage with health plans and to
    improve the quality of care for their patients.
  • Lawrence P. Casalino M.D., Ph.D., University of
    Chicago
  • The Federal Trade Commission, Clinical
    Integration, and the Organization of Physician
    Practice, Journal of Health Politics, Policy and
    Law, 2006, Duke University Press, 31(3)569-585
    DOI10.1215/03616878-2005-007

28
MGO efforts to date
  • A brief history -
  • 2005 -
  • Representatives from OHC and MGO began meeting to
    discuss PHO contracting and market changes.
  • Clinical Integration was adopted as the go to
    market strategy of the PHO.
  • The OHG Board formed a PHO Strategy Team with
    representatives from OHG, MGO and OHC.
  • 2006 -
  • The PHO Strategy Team developed a clinical
    integration implementation plan.
  • A pilot program with OhioHealth as the employer
    was proposed.

7
29
MGO efforts to date(continued)
  • 2007 -
  • OHG populated a data warehouse with three years
    of OhioHealth employee and dependent claims data.
  • A pilot pay for quality (P4Q) program that
    incentivizes MGO physicians to support
    OhioHealthy initiatives was planned.
  • 2008 -
  • The MGO Board adopted clinical integration as the
    organizations primary strategic initiative
  • The pilot pay for quality program focused on
    OhioHealth associates and dependents was
    implemented.
  • Aetna, a payer, agreed to provide claims data for
    the data warehouse to expand the pay for quality
    program in 2009.
  • The PHO Strategy Team transitioned to the
    Clinical Integration Development and
    Implementation Team (CI DIT).

8
30
Clinical Integration Development
Implementation Team
CI DIT Core Committee
Chair Dr. ____________ CMO
MGO/OHG Vice Chair Bruce Vanderhoff, MD CMO
OH Interim Chair Tom Thompson
COO OHG
OH Reps Mike Louge Exec. VP and CFO
Paul Patton VP Human
Resources - Interim MGO Reps John Burns, MD
Ben Humphrey, MD
31
What it takes to be CI
  • Network of physicians committed to Clinical
    Integration
  • A set of initiatives that impacts all
  • An infrastructure that supports CI
  • And, most importantly,--the proper narrative

32
Next steps for MGO
  • Ask physicians to participate in the clinically
    integrated network
  • Begin marketing the program to employers and
    payers
  • Develop a strategy for engaging payors
  • Aetna Anthem Cigna
  • Medical Mutual UHC
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