Wednesday, April 30, 2014

P4P PAY FOR PERFORMANCE.......WHOSE?

P4P is a term that has been around for several years and is being adopted throughout the health care industry for providers and hospitals.  Accountable Care Organizations are meant to provide the tools for improving outcomes, and reducing cost of health care.

CMS has already discovered that performance and cost vary greatly across the United States.  The range of cost for hospitalizations varies from McAllen, Tx to Omaha Nebraska, two extremes in the analysis.

A newly recognized phenomenon will take place as the newly insured enter the risk pools and effect costs and outcomes.  Cost will surely be driven upward, and statistical figures for outcomes will decrease.

  • Those entering the market will be sicker and have more chronic disease. They are less informed about prevention and health diets.
  • Their outcomes, length of hospitalizations, and readmission rates will also reflect the lack of compliance, lack of understanding of health care process, lack of socioeconomic power to chose wisely.
  • Many ACA provisions look to boost care by linking Medicare payments to the performance of doctors, hospitals and health plans.  Doctors and hospitals that treat “poorer people” are more likely to face financial penalties, which will diminish resources providers need to administer and improve care.

Healthcare experts say the payment system must evolve and adapt to the changing market so that payments and volume based reimbursement can change to value-based benefits.

In a recent study, sixty-five percent of 170 C-levelpayer executives said they will launch pay for performance programs over the next three years (this according to Fierce Health Players in a Health Edge Survey released last fall (2013)

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Travels In Hyperreality: What If Bipartisan ACA Fixes Were Possible? – Health Affairs Blog

Travels In Hyperreality: What If Bipartisan ACA Fixes Were Possible? – Health Affairs Blog:



'via Blog this'



Bipartisan amendments to the Affordable Care Act already occurring



Since enactment of the Affordable Care Act in March 2010, a strange, relatively unnoticed phenomenon has occurred: Congress has passed bipartisan changes to it. These amendments were generally to such esoteric components of the law that they dodged the political block-aid that otherwise surrounds it.
But what would happen if things were different? If Congress could act to change the ACA in a meaningful way, what would it do? Here we briefly review the previous sub rosa changes to launch into a broader examination of macro ACA reforms that have a fighting chance of enactment in the not too distant future.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

PERSONALIZED DESIGNER HEALTH INSURANCE PLAN NOT YOUR ORDINARY OBAMACARE




Associated Press, Judy Lin writes a post enrollment critique of Obamacare. Criticizing is all too easy now that the law is in full effect following the initial enrollment. All that needs to be done is to fine those not in compliance.  Unfortunately there are many who cannot fulfill  the requirement because the subsidized premiums are still unaffordable.  Then there are those who can buy coverage but cannot afford the copayments, or deductibles.  Some who only qualify for medicaid may be fortunate relative to those needing a subsidy.

Reporters find it easy to discover people who fall out or are in a ‘gap’ for the ACA.  

There is little doubt that the law will fail and/or require much fine tuning.

Clinical medicine takes place as  personaly designed treatment for individuals. It is not an assembly line process. In an era where treatments for cancer are personally designed using DNA guided therapy, why not Personally Designed Health Insurance?

Few if any potential patients fall into a category that is meaningful. The federal poverty level is an  easy way to categorize people, but it does not allow for different needs for many.

MORE TO  DO.

  • The share of adults without insurance shrank from 17.1 percent at the end of 2013 to 15.6 percent for the first three months of 2014 according to a Galllup-Healthways Well-Being Index released this month. In California This decrease translates to about 3.5 million people gaining insurance coverage according to the study.
  • Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California, says the work is not finished. ”California has made huge progress with the benefits of the Affordable Care Act.”

WHAT ARE THE GAPS?

  • Cost remains a particularly high hurdle for low-income people who are most likely to be uninsured.
  • Some are eligible for discounted policies but say they still can’t afford their share of exchange plans.
  • Others earn too much for subsidies.
  • Undocumented immigrants living in the U.S. illegally can’t obtain care under the law.
  • Dozens of states have not expanded Medicaid. (24 states have opted out of the federal plan to expand medicaid. The federal program funds the expansion for up to three  years. The states refusing this option say they don’t trust the federal government to live up to the promise and will be stuck with huge overruns. The promise is based largely upon unknown costs and risks.
  • Some employers have reduced staff hours to avoid being mandated to provide insurance.
  • Some will buy minimal coverage which does not fulfill the ACA requirement for less, however they will face the fine for non-compliance.  These policies are bare bones and do not allow broad protection.

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE?

  • A careful analysis of those in the gap itemizing the reason for each person falling into a gap
  • A PERSONALLY DESIGNED PLAN can be designed for these individuals from the ground up based on their individual situation and medical needs rather than a top down plan that often is worthless.
  • The current system of standards, while well meaning sabotages any real attempt to make insurance affordable for many citizens.



WHO WILL DO THIS?

  • Any program requires a post introduction review by competent personell experienced in the area. This is a form of quality assurance, one that is in common in most industries, and actually is required by hospitals and HHS.
  • Non-qualiifying patients will require personal interviews regarding their income, expenses. Once a base line sample is obtained a plan can be designed that would benefit.
  • Local insurers,  providers, hospitals,  pharmacies, home health companies must be involved in planning for this group of patients.
  • The review and analysis should not be done by the federal government, but rather at the local level (state or county). The medical records should be reviewed (and this may also be beneficial for those who do qualify for a subsidy.
  • This will be labor intensive, however it may also be very cost effective and result in  a much lower expenditure for subsidies.  
A ‘shot-gun’ approach, which is what the Affordable Care Act provides is inadequate, and is a ‘roulette wheel’ solution to a complex problem. Poorly designed and poorly executed programs are designed to fail and increase cost.

Commentary is welcome.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

KLAS Report: ACOs Turning to Third-Party Vendors Over EHR Vendors

KLAS Report: ACOs Turning to Third-Party Vendors Over EHR Vendors

Friday, April 18, 201
Click on topic to receive periodic emails.
The majority of physician-led accountable care organizations are using third-party ACO vendors because electronic health record vendors are not yet meeting their needs, according to a new reportfrom KLAS Research, FierceEMR reports.
For the report, researchers surveyed 46 physician-led ACOs about their software use.

Report Findings

The report found that:
  • 68% of physician-led ACOs reported using a third-party vendor rather than an EHR vendor;
  • Third-party vendors ranked higher than EHR vendors in all functional categories including care management, connectivity and reporting; and
  • Third-party vendors ranked higher than EHR vendors for risk stratification.
According to the report, EHR vendors on average rated only a 6.3 on a 9-point scale for meeting the needs of ACOs. Just two EHR vendors -- Epic and eClinicalWorks -- ranked above the average, with scores of 7.3 and 7.0, respectively.
Meanwhile, the report found that Optum was the most popular third-party vendor, being used by four different ACOs. According to the report, seven other third-party venders were used by more than one ACO, and no other vendors were used more than twice (Durben Hirsch, FierceEMR, 4/16).

Patent filing reveals Google may be developing a contact lens camera - FierceMobileHealthcare

Patent filing reveals Google may be developing a contact lens camera - FierceMobileHealthcare: "Patent filing reveals Google may be developing a contact lens camera"



'via Blog this'



report on Google patents claims the search titan may be making a contact lens featuring a computerized camera along with a sensor and an integrated, thin silicon chip.
"One of Google's many patent applications regarding future smart contact lenses generally relates to systems and/or methods for capturing image data representing a scene in a gaze of a viewer via a thin image capture component integrated on or within a contact lens, processing the image data, and employing the processed image data to perform functions locally on the contact lens or remotely on one or more remote devices," states the patent report.
The camera component can track and generate image data of an image of a scene corresponding to the gaze of the wearer, without obstructing the wearer's view, notes the report. 


Augmedix gets $3.2 million to bring Google Glass to doctors

Augmedix gets $3.2 million to bring Google Glass to doctors



Augmedix gets $3.2 million to bring Google Glass to doctors

By: Brian Dolan | Mar 24, 2014     43   51   6

Tags:  |  |  |  |  |  | |  |  |  |  |  |

AugmedixDoctor2San Francisco-based Augmedix, which has developed a Google Glass clinical documentation offering for physicians raised $3.2 million last week in a round led by DCM and Emergence Capital Partners. Other investors included Great Oaks Venture Capital, Rock Health’s LPs (Kleiner Perkins, Mohr Davidow Ventures, and Aberdare), and various angels. Emergence had previously invested in Doximity and Welltok, while Great Oaks is also an investor in Healthtap.
Augmedix, founded in 2012, now has 36 employees. Its CEO and co-founder Ian Shakil told MobiHealthNews that Augmedix software is already deployed at “numerous different sites”, including one “top five national health system”.
“We are going after one of the biggest pain points in healthcare: The fact that doctors spend 30 or 40 or 50 percent of their day on the computer documenting the EHR — toiling away — pushing and pulling information,” Shakil said. “They often do it right in front of the patient — back turned — and typing. Then when the patient leaves even more type, type, type — feeding the beast.” 
Shakil said Augmedix will help outpatient clinic doctors reclaim that clinical documentation time and improve their patients’ overall experience by helping them have more time to care for patients.
“When doctors use Augmedix and Google Glass, they don’t spend 30 or 40 or 50 percent of their day on this they spend about 1 percent of their day at the computer,” Shakil said. “In the process we have re-humanized the doctor-patient interaction and it, actually, believe or not, yields better patient records in terms of clinical documentation quality.”
While Shakil won’t yet explain how Augmedix goes about automatically capturing information during a patient visit, he framed the experience of using Augmedix it from the physician’s perspective.
“We can’t go too terribly deep on this but I can unveil a few layers of this onion,” he said. “It really boils down to the doctor wearing Google Glass, going into the clinic, interacting with the patient and having that humane, high touch conversation that they always wanted to have. At the end of the visit, all of the structured data, all of the EHR information, is in the EHR where it belongs. The way he wants it. Following a visit, doctors [go to their computer] and check that the information entered into their EHR doesn’t need any edits and then click confirm.”
Shakil said while pushing structured data to the EHR is Augmedix’s core offering, it also helps doctor’s call up information from a patient’s record, too. The doctor might ask Glass to find the patient’s last three blood pressure readings from their record and Glass will present them in the heads up display.
Of course, Augmedix users are not sending these requests via Google, Shakil’s company has “carved out” much of the off-the-shelf features of Google Glass for when it is in “healthcare” mode. Its healthcare facility customers have also required it to offer various mobile device management features so that administrators can track, for example, where each and every Augmedix-powered Google Glass is in its facility.
“All the audiovisual stream capture is not going through Google’s infrastructure, it is going through HIPAA-compliant infrastructure that we have certified with our doctor customer groups,” Shakil said.
Augmedix customers pay monthly subscriptions per physician in exchange for the modified Google Glass unit, Augmedix software, support, and the HIPAA-compliant infrastructure. Shakil says that Augmedix is, in effect, a reseller of Google Glass.
The patients who visit a clinic where physicians use Augmedix’s offering are given information about the Google Glass units their doctor might wear during the visit. The front desk provides them with information about the security and privacy aspects of Augmedix and then are given the option to request that their doctor not use the device during their visit if they aren’t comfortable.
“So far, Glass stays on 99 percent of the time — at least,” Shakil said. “And we have replicated this test with so many sites, including right here in San Francisco and in the middle of nowhere Texas. It goes well beyond Glass just staying on – patient satisfaction scores actually go. That’s true for young and old patients as well as rural and urban areas.”
In addition to better eye contact with their doctors and fewer visit where doctors are entering data on their computers with their backs to them, patients get more out of the Augmedix-enabled doctor visit.
“There is also the sense that your doctor is on the cutting edge and an early adopter of technology,” Shakil said, “which even further improves those perceptions scores. I think those will fade away once people are more used to seeing Glass or hearing about it.”

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Respite from the ACA

It’ Time for a new Hot Topic for the Media

The Ukraine and Vladimir Putin now will share the stage with Tax Reform.



Policy makers will shift from health reform to Tax Reform.  Media is already filling up column space with articles about the American  tax  system.

“To Tax the Community for the advantage of a class is not protection, it is plunder” -Benjamin Disraeli

“People who complain about taxes can be divided into two classes: men and women”-unknown

“The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax”-Albert Einstein,physicist



What comes next?  My best bet is reforming the tax code, and restructuring the IRS.  Not much will occur until President Obama is out of office. There have been many Congressional committees examining the code, that have made recommendations, including one by G.W.H.Bush that  quietly disappeared

The Healthcare portion of the GDP is said to be about 16-18%, prior to the ACA. In 12 months or at the calculation of GDP what will the healthcare GDP look like. Will it go up, stay the same, or decrease.?

The Federal and State tax portions of the GDP is It differs from state to state, however it hovers at about 15-16% of the GDP, an amazingly similar number as the Healthcare GDP. Tax reform following the affordable care act may be the perfect storm to reduce costs.

Any consideration of a repeal or major amendments to the code are overshadowed by pervasiveness of taxes, deductions, credits designed to stimulate business growth, and stimulate mortgages and home-ownership.  An entire industry feeds on the complexities of tax law.

“Income tax has made more liars out of the American people than golf” -Will Rogers, humorist