1 / 8

uhcanohio

Consumer Advocate Beginners’ Guide to Transparency: Using Data to Win Policy Change. Cathy Levine Executive Director UHCAN Ohio clevine@uhcanohio.org. www.uhcanohio.org. Why Should Consumer Advocates Care About Transparency? Really , do you want them deciding what’s good for us ?.

leyna
Télécharger la présentation

uhcanohio

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. Consumer Advocate Beginners’ Guide to Transparency: Using Data to Win Policy Change Cathy Levine Executive Director UHCAN Ohio clevine@uhcanohio.org www.uhcanohio.org

  2. Why Should Consumer Advocates Care About Transparency? Really, do you want them deciding what’s good for us? • Health care costs too much • US health care quality/outcomes below other nations - disparities • If you don’t measure it, you don’t know what to fix • Current cost controls disproportionately fall on backs of consumers – especially highest needs and lowest income • Payers/employers, providers, policymakers doing reforms • Should consumers have a voice in reshaping payment and delivery of health care?

  3. Case Example: Ohio • Governor Kasich, 2011, creates Office of Health Transformation • Website for “greater transparency” • Regular reports on what they are doing – little or no data • Much alignment happening in private sector initiatives, with OHT input – no consumer involvement • Governor’s Advisory Council on Payment Reform - ceremonial • Major decisions being made behind closed doors

  4. What We’ve Done Successfully in Past • Established broad, diverse coalitions for organized consumer voice • United around principles • Developed recommendations • Supported administrative, legislative proposals when aligned • Building relationships with stakeholder groups • Built consumer voice in new models of care • Patient Centered Medical Homes • Integrated Care Demonstration for Dually Eligible Ohioans • Local Initiatives, e.g. Health Collaborative of Greater Cincinnati • “Make the Right Call” – education campaign

  5. Successes Thus Far • Seat on Ieadership body of Ohio Patient Centered Primary Care Collaborative • Two “Learning Centers” focus on Consumer Engagement • Seat on Gov’s Council on Payment Reform • Requirement in Ohio’s integrated care demonstration that MCOs must have consumer advisory councils tied to governance • Foot in the door

  6. What You Can Do – Build Campaign • Form policy team of consumer advocates • Find state-based expert help – public employees/retirees unions, think tanks, universities • Find out what’s going on – build on what’s underway • Form coalition • Organize around Payment Reform and models of care Principles • Issue reports and develop proposals from broad coalitions • Build strategic alliances on specific issues • Wage grassroots campaign w/stories

  7. Resources • Catalyst for Payment Reform – http://www.catalyzepaymentreform.org/how-we-catalyze/special-initiatives/price-transparency • National Conference of State Legislatures: http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/transparency-and-disclosure-health-costs.aspx • CMS.Gov- http://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/state-innovations/: state innovation models • http://consumersunion.org/topic/health-care/health-care-costs/ • www.uhcanohio.org

  8. Contact Me! Cathy Levine UHCAN Ohio clevine@uhcanohio.org 614-456-0060 x222 www.uhcanohio.org UHCAN Ohio 370 S. 5th St Suite G3 Columbus, OH 43125 Find us on:

More Related