Title: The California Right Care Initiative
1The California Right Care Initiative
- Robert M. Kaplan
- Wasserman Distinguished Professor
- UCLA Schools of Public Health and Medicine
- AHRQ Conference
2The Translation Problem
3NIH View of Translational Research
- According to the National Institutes of Health,
in order to improve human health, scientific
studies must be translated into practical
applications.
4Where is this going
- Cardiovascular disease is common
- Risk factors have been known for 50 years
- Evidence clearly shows that modifying some risk
factors reduces events - Population level modification of risk factors has
been disappointing - Several strategies show promise for risk factor
modification in group practices
5Prevalence of CVD in adults age 20 and older by
age and sex
More than one in three adults have prevalent CVD
Prevalence of CVD in adults age 20 and older by
age and sex (NHANES 2005-2006). Source NCHS and
NHLBI. These data include coronary heart
disease, heart failure, stroke and hypertension.
6CVD deaths vs. cancer deaths by age.
There are more than 850,000 CVD deaths per
year 1/3rd before age 75, 50 higher than cancer
deaths
CVD deaths vs. cancer deaths by age. (United
States 2005). Source NCHS and NHLBI.
76 Year CHD Mortality by Total Serum Cholesterol
356,222 Men Screened for MRFIT, Aged 35-57 Yrs
8LDL-C Lowering With Statins Reduced CHD Events
9Clinical Event Reduction in Clinical Trials
Clinical Event Reduction in Clinical Trials
(Superko, H. R. et al. Circulation
2008117560-568))
10From Prospective Studies Collaboration61
studies, 1 million Adults
Lancet 2002, 360, 1904
11BP Lowering TrialResults
Collins Peto. Textbook of Hypertension 1994
Blackwell Scientific Publications p1159.
12Evidence Based Opinions
- Most people with HTN will need 2 or 3 medications
to control BP. - Diuretic/ACEI, Diuretic/ARB, CCB/ACEI, CCB/ARB
likely good first choices for combination Rx. - Diuretic/CCB combination of uncertain
effectiveness. - Reserpine underused, but probably a good third
line agent.
13The Payoff is Potentially Large Benefits of
Lowering BP
Average Percent Reduction
Stroke incidence 35-40
Myocardial Infarction 20-25
Heart Failure 50
14Mortality and AHA Get with the Guidelines Awards
Heidenreich, AHJ (In Press)
15But, BP Control Rates Remain Disappointing
Trends in awareness, treatment, and control of high blood pressure in adults ages 18-74 Trends in awareness, treatment, and control of high blood pressure in adults ages 18-74 Trends in awareness, treatment, and control of high blood pressure in adults ages 18-74 Trends in awareness, treatment, and control of high blood pressure in adults ages 18-74 Trends in awareness, treatment, and control of high blood pressure in adults ages 18-74
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
II 1976-80 III (phase 1) 1988-91 III (phase 2) 1991-94 IV 1999-2000
Awareness 51 73 68 70
Treatment 31 55 54 59
Control 10 29 27 34
16Extent of Awareness, Treatment and Control of
High Blood Pressure by Age
Extent of Awareness, Treatment and Control of
High Blood Pressure by Age (NHANES
2005-2006). Source NCHS and NHLBI.
17Why Focus on Lipids and Blood Pressure Even for
People with Diabetes? (Ray Lancet 2009, 373,1765)
18California Problem
19Question Is health care in West LA as unusual as
the people who live there?
- The LA-San Diego Contrast
San Diego
Los Angeles
20Figure 1. Total 2005 Medicare expenditures in Los
Angeles and San Diego
21Total Reimbursements(Part A Part B)
22Hospital Admissions During Last 6 Months of Life
23California Pay for PerformanceClinical
Performance Variation Composite Clinical Score
(from Williams 2008)
24California Pay for PerformanceA Tale of Two
Regions (From Williams 2008)
25Berwick's Rules for Dissemination
- Seven rules' for translating research into
practice require an implementer to - 1) find sound innovations
- 2) find and support innovators
- 3) invest in early adopters
- 4) make early adopter activity observable
- 5) trust and enable reinvention
- 6) create slack for change
- 7) lead by example
Berwick, JAMA. 20032891969-1975.
26History of RCI
- In 2007, Governor Schwarzeneggers health reform
proposal called for healthcare quality
improvement - In response, NCQA and the California Department
of Managed Health Care (DMHC) collaborated in
launching a statewide effort known as the Right
Care Initiative (RCI) to improve the quality of
care delivered to commercial HMO members in
California.
27RCI Goals
- To improve clinical outcomes through enhancing
the practice of evidence-based medicine and
management in a collaborative, expert-based,
public-private, multi-year effort - Targets
- diabetes,
- heart disease,
- HAIs
28Californias HEDIS Scores
- Californias HEDIS rankings are surprisingly low
relative to the best plans in the nation - No California health plan other than Kaiser
Permanente ranks among the top ten plans in the
nation or above the 90th percentile for heart and
diabetes performance measures
29California Right Care InitiativePercent of
Plans Meeting HEDIS LDL Standard 2009
30California Right Care InitiativePercent of
Plans Meeting HEDIS Blood Pressure Standard 2009
31Emerging web-based GIS social networking tools
will also facilitate multi-stakeholder QI efforts
32Reasons to Support MTM
- Cochrane review ( 2000) The Cochrane group found
pharmacist-based interventions encouraging - Increasing evidence form controlled studies that
the Ashville principles can be used to control
CHD risk factors. The effect on health outcomes
awaits evaluation (Carter et al 2008).
33Evidence of Effectiveness for CDSMP
- 2008 (CDC) review of published studies (Gordon
and Galloway 2008). - Four studies reported lower ER visits,
- three studies demonstrated reduced
hospitalizations - four studies reported reduced number of days in
the hospital, - two studies reporting statistically significant
reductions in outpatient visits. - significant reduction in health care costs
34What is ALL?
- ALL stands for
- Aspirin 81 mg,
- Lisinopril 20 mg,
- Lipid lowering with simvastatin 40 mg/day
- ALL is a Polypill (but delivered in 3 pills)
- Suggested that the clinical and cost
effectiveness of increasing ALL use in - CAD and
- diabetic (55) populations
35Evaluation of ALL (Polypill)TIPPS Trial 50
Centers in India (ACC 2009)
- Double-blind study, enrolled 2053 patients aged
45 to 80 years without cardiovascular disease but
with one risk factor, type 2 diabetes, high blood
pressure, smoker within past five years,
increased waist-to-hip ratio, or abnormal lipids - Pill well tolerated, but
- Lower than expected reductions in
- LDL
- SBP
- Compliance lower than expected
- No health outcome data available at this time
36Steps from A to B
37Right Care Proposed Strategies
- Greater use of electronic technologies
- Greater of pharmacist managed care
- Departure from reactive, appointment based care
38RCI Collaborators
- Government- California Department of Managed
Health Care - Health Plans-Medical Directors -Kaiser, Blue
Shield, United, Aetna. - Academic- UC Berkeley, UCLA, UCSD, USC
- Research Organizations- RAND, VA, Lumetra
- Medical Groups- California Association of
Physician Groups