1 / 48

Person Centered Care in Managed Care – Myth or Reality?

Person Centered Care in Managed Care – Myth or Reality?. YAI Conference Monday May 6 th , 2013 Presentation by Jerry Huber Deputy Commissioner OPWDD. The Amazing Race. Care Coordination. Case Studies. RFA. Front Door. ICS. DISCO. Coordinated Assessment System (CAS). RFI.

ely
Télécharger la présentation

Person Centered Care in Managed Care – Myth or Reality?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Person Centered Care in Managed Care – Myth or Reality? • YAI Conference • Monday May 6th, 2013 • Presentation by • Jerry Huber • Deputy Commissioner OPWDD

  2. The Amazing Race

  3. Care Coordination Case Studies RFA Front Door ICS DISCO Coordinated Assessment System (CAS) RFI People First Waiver InterRAI Pilots CQL Managed Care Personal Outcome Measures

  4. THEMES Equity Balance Person Centered Needs Based Outcomes Driven Incentivized

  5. OFF TO THE RACES • Improving how we meet needs - expanding self direction and employment to provide opportunities for everyone, launching CAS • Improving quality of our care through workforce support and measuring individual outcomes • Participating in NYS Olmstead Plan – creating more housing opportunities & moving people out of institutions • Launching managed care through pilot DISCOs – moving toward integrated, holistic care • Continuing health and safety reforms –

  6. AGENDA FOR TODAY • 1. Discuss 4 Essential aspects of Person-Centered Practice as a Foundation for Managed Care • 2. Discuss similarities and differences within managed care for people with ID/DD as compared with mainstream managed care • 3. Outline milestones and time tables for the transition in managed care here in NY

  7. Assessment Planning Access Evaluation

  8. Goals of Needs Assessment

  9. New York State-specific InterRAI DD New York State OPWDD Coordinated Assessment System (CAS) interRAI Intellectual Disability (ID)

  10. Coordinated Assessment System

  11. CAS and the Case Study • 18 Assessment Specialists hired to complete CAS for the case study • Assessment Specialists received extensive training specific to the CAS • CAS summary and CAPs will be used by agencies to inform care planning • Ongoing review of the CAS, protocols and manual will continue throughout the case study • Reliability and validity testing will be conducted

  12. Long-Term Vision • New Coordinated Assessment System will be phased in thoughtfullyover the next several years: • Beginning with year long case studies, • Moving next to DISCO pilot projects, • Next into use with all newcomers to the service system, • Eventually, over time, will be used with those currently receiving services. • We will be careful not to disrupt lives, but instead identify opportunities for greater integration and independence based on needs, strengths and desires.

  13. For More Information… InterRAI Integrated Assessment Suite: www.interRAI.org CAS specific questions: coordinated.assessment@opwdd.ny.gov

  14. Assessment Planning Access Evaluation

  15. Essential Elements of Person Centered Care • Person-Directed • Person-Centered • Outcome-Based  • Information, Support and Accommodations • Wellness and Dignity of Risk • Participation of those that individual selects • Community Integrated

  16. FUTURE • The DISCO will be responsible for ensuring that they have organizational characteristics that support person centered planning • Person centered planning is expected to be part of and integrated into the entire culture of an agency and managed care entity

  17. Assessment Planning Access Evaluation

  18. What Is the Front Door Initiative? • The Front Door Initiative is: • A person centered approach to developing plans of support for people - not a program or a service • Part of the fundamental process by which people access supports and services through OPWDD - providing a broader array of individualized service options to give individuals and families more flexibility and choice of supports and services that meet their needs

  19. Why Now? – 3 Factors • The sustainability factor - how do we sustain appropriate service provision within fiscal realities? • The relevancy factor - are the services we currently offer those that families and individuals coming into our service system are seeking? • The compliance factor - in light of Olmstead and recent federal decisions on ADA, will the menu of service options we provide allow us to meet the goals of Olmstead and federal requirements?

  20. OPWDD’s Front Door

  21. Facilitate OPWDD’s approach to the delivery of services based on: • A focus on the values of self determination and self-direction • Resources to individuals based on needs, rather than the programs currently available • More informed choice of supports and services • Holistic use of paid and community supports • Statewide consistency and availability of individualized and self-directed service options Front Door Goals

  22. 3 Approaches to Achieve Goals

  23. OPWDD & Provider Partnership Through Change

  24. Areas for Increased Partnership

  25. Reinvestment Reinvestment is one or more methods for individuals to maintain service dollars but change service type to be able to purchase services in a more integrated setting.

  26. Steps to Achieve Reinvestment Models • Review and modify existing processes, procedures and templates or develop new ones that enable providers to reinvest dollars associated with existing services that support more choice and better outcomes for people while also serving more people • Develop consistent policies, procedures and reports that OPWDD Regional Offices can utilize to better manage base resources • Create policies that can be put in place that shift management of current resources away from vacancy management and toward capacity management and more integrated settings

  27. Communication in Service Planning OPWDD and partners must communicate about individual level of need and how that need impacts service planning. Services in traditional supervised IRA and day habilitation settings will not be authorized by OPWDD simply because a program opportunity is available. An individual must have a level of need significant to require the level of support offered in these services and must choose these options as opposed to an option in a more integrated setting

  28. Assessment Planning Access Evaluation

  29. HCBS Quality Framework

  30. CMS Increasing Expectations Using Data to drive systems improvements Evidence Based Performance Measures for Federal Waiver Assurances Regulatory Compliance Health and Safety

  31. How do we make this Shift? “The measure of Quality is not the delivery of a support or service, but the results that services or supports provide for each person” Source: Designing Quality—Responsiveness to the Individual. CQL 1999 • Evolving system • Historically – Compliance/QA focus • Shifting from site-based “bricks & mortar” inspections to reviews focused on individuals and achievement of outcomes

  32. What are CQL Personal Outcome Measures? Valid and reliable personal outcome measures that focus on what is meaningful to the person served. Provides a methodology to assess how well the organization’s provision of supports and services facilitate outcomes that are meaningful to each individual. Different than National Core Indicators (NCI) which are system outcome measures.

  33. CQL The Council on Quality and Leadership My Self My Focus My World My Dreams My Focus: What is most important to me now.

  34. CQL The Council on Quality and Leadership My Self • 1. People are connected to natural supports. • People have intimate relationships. • People are safe. • People have the best possible health. • People exercise rights. • People are treated fairly. • People are free from abuse and neglect. • People experience continuity and security. • People decide when to share personal information.

  35. CQL The Council on Quality and Leadership My World 1. People choose where and with whom they live. 2. People choose where they work. 3. People use their environments. 4. People live in integrated environments. 5. People interact with other members of the community. 6. People perform different social roles. 7. People choose services.

  36. CQL The Council on Quality and Leadership My Dreams • People choose personal goals. • People realize goals. • People participate in the life of • the community. • 4. People have friends. • 5. People are respected.

  37. Proposal for Operationalizing POMs in DISCO Pilots – Components

  38. CARE COORDINATION • WHAT TIES IT ALL TOGETHER: • ASSESSMENT BASED ON NEEDS • PERSON CENTERED IN THEORY AND IN PRACTICE • ACCESS – RIGHT SERVICES AND THE RIGHT TIME • EVALUATION – FOCUS ON REAL OUTCOMES FOR THOSE SERVED

  39. CARE MANAGEMENT AND MANAGED CARE • Concepts of care management are rooted in the development of managed care principles • Care Management has a focus on the best outcomes for individuals served • Managed Care’s history has had a focus on cost containment • Each rely on concepts of health promotion and disease prevention

  40. CMS’s “Triple Aim” Better Health for the Population Lower Cost Through Improvement Better Care for Individuals

  41. Where does Person Centered Planning Fit In? • Since much of the Medicaid cost for those with long term care needs is outside of traditional health care, the emphasis needs to be on planning for all aspects of the individual needs for each person enrolled in a managed care plan

  42. Variations in Managed Care Strategies for those with LTC Needs • 1. Population already has complex medical and social needs • 2. Due to these needs utilization of resources including specialty care is often quite extensive • 3. Cost for services most often tied into daily living needs, including housing and day activities in addition to medical needs

  43. Integrated Care is a Must • To really provide comprehensive Person Centered planning and care to the DD population, there is a need to integrate good care coordination that includes all aspects of medical, behavioral and social needs of the individual

  44. Where Does Self Directed Care Fit In? • Different models of Self-Direction under Managed Care: • Carved Out Models (ex. WI) • Carved In Models (ex. Michigan) • With either model, MC organizations in NY will need to provide Self-Directed Options for those enrolled

  45. Person Centered Care in Managed Care – Myth or Reality? • It will be what we make it • Concepts of good care coordination, Person Centered Planning and quality Managed Care are not mutually exclusive concepts • Managing one’s complete care is the requirement of the individual, his or her circle of support and the provider network • It Takes a Village but we need to create that Village

  46. Enhancing Individualized Services in New York – A RECAP • The Need for Reforms of Financial and Service Platforms prior to going into Managed Care: • 1. The Sustainability Factor • 2. The Relevancy Factor • 3. The Compliance Factor

  47. OPWDD Transformation As OPWDD pursued development of the People First Waiver, we worked with CMS to define priority elements of system transformation: • Expanding opportunities and supports for EMPLOYMENT • Expanding COMMUNITY SERVICE OPTIONS – supportive housing, community-based services • Expanding SELF DIRECTION options • OLMSTEAD PLAN- Creating opportunities for people to move from institutions to integrated settings

More Related