Posts Tagged ‘CMS’

What it ACTUALLY takes to impact healthcare cost and quality

Friday, August 12th, 2011

Earlier this week, CMS reported the 5th year performance impact for the Physician Group Practice Demonstration (PGP Demo). The PGP Demo has served as the learning laboratory for 10 organizations across the country seeking to improve quality and reduce costs of care for the Medicare population. We are privileged to have worked closely with Park Nicollet Health System as they navigated the journey to success. (Park Nic received a substantial bonus payment from CMS this year). We’ve had a bird’s eye view on this effort over the past 5 years, and have MUCH to share!!
But before I tell you more, please take the time to see the CMS press release:
https://www.cms.gov/apps/media/press/release.asp?Counter=4047
And while you are at it, you may want to read more about Park Nicollet’s approach as covered by the Minneapolis Star Tribune:
http://www.startribune.com/business/127283643.html
In the coming days, visit the Collaborative Forum to hear more about the lessons learned, the impact seen, and the challenges faced to get there. I promise it will put you several steps ahead on the journey from fee for transactional care to transformational care coordination!

Underserved Populations and Hospital Pay-for-Performance

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

In the healthcare reform debate, hospital pay-for-performance has received plenty of discussion—how it could impact health outcomes, how it could promote efficiency, how it could change care coordination. In 2013, we’ll see the first step toward hospital pay-for-performance: hospitals will have some revenues withheld by Medicare and then returned if they meet specific clinical targets.

According to a new study published in the Journal of Public Library of Science, there are economic and human resource issues that may hinder some hospitals from meeting those pay-for-performance targets. And if that happens, the study’s authors are concerned that funding will be taken away from hospitals that provide care in poor and underserved communities.

The study’s lead author, Jan Blustein, MD, PhD, a New York University professor of health policy and medicine, analogizes hospital pay-for-performance with the “No Child Left Behind“ initiative for education that was started several years ago. In an interview earlier this month with HealthLeaders, Dr. Blustein said, “’One of the problems is we know very little about what helps and what works.’ In education, schools are told to do better—‘but there is no science there.’”

Dr. Blustein goes on in the interview, “’And the same thing is true in healthcare. We know a lot about what works to improve a patient’s health, but we really don’t know about what works to improve organizational performance.’”

And this is where I part ways with Dr. Blustein and her colleagues. Read the rest of this entry →

Setting the Record Straight: Chronic Care Management CAN be Successful

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Clearly, the need to reduce healthcare costs without affecting the quality of healthcare delivered is at the center of our country’s healthcare debate.  However, a recent BusinessWeek article of February 4, 2010, by Chad Terhune and Arlene Weintraub, makes the mistake of lumping together all disease management programs and then goes on to cite examples in which particular programs have demonstrated no cost-savings nor any apparent increase in the health of patients. 

That is not, however, true of all programs that aim to manage chronic disease and demonstrate reduced costs.

As a cardiologist and CEO of Pharos Innovations, a company that focuses on managing chronic disease while demonstrating real reductions in avoidable hospital admissions and overall healthcare costs for Medicaid, Medicare, the VA, commercial health plans and provider systems, I think it’s important to set the record straight. There ARE well-proven ways to reduce costs AND keep patients healthier. Read the rest of this entry →

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