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Employers Adaptation & Acceptance of Predictive Models

This article explores how employers are adapting and accepting predictive models to understand their workforce's future healthcare costs and make changes in benefit designs. It also highlights the importance of using data to identify healthy populations at risk, understand vendor effectiveness, and control chronic disease costs.

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Employers Adaptation & Acceptance of Predictive Models

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  1. Not Peer Reviewed September 23, 2008 Employers Adaptation & Acceptance of Predictive Models Russell D. Robbins, MD, MBA, Norwalk, CT

  2. Employers have been trying to predict the future based on current knowledge for thousands of years. Increased desire to identify healthy population who may be at risk Need to understand data to make changes in future benefit designs and offerings Use of predictive models to understand effectiveness of vendors Predictive Models: Are We Getting Better?

  3. Agenda • What employers are currently facing • How employers perceive predictive models • Uses of predictive models to change marketplace • Pharmacy compliance and chronic disease costs

  4. Current State The Headlines • Costs are still rising, even with managed care and cost shifting • The workforce is aging, adding 2.5% -3.0% higher medical costs and higher disability incidence for each year over 40 years of age • Business competition is getting tougher with increased pressures to control cost and enhance productivity • Piecemeal solutions generally just shift costs and promote narrow expense control The Drivers • People with chronic diseases often drive 50% of costs – 70 million people have a chronic disease • 20% of the members incur 80% of the healthcare costs • Those with lifestyle risk factors can cost 10% to 70% more than those not at risk To make matters worse….. • 1 of 2 people with a chronic disease don’t comply with their treatment plan resulting in: • Disease progression and increased use of healthcare resources • Costs between $100 billion and $150 billion annually in the U.S.

  5. What Employers Expect from a Healthcare Predictive Model • The ability to understand the current workforce and trends in order to make business decisions on future healthcare costs • Desire to provide the right information and programs to the employees to keep them motivated, productive, and healthy

  6. Employers Are Interested in Using Their Data 22% 15% 15% 80% 52% 20% 10% 5% • 20% of your claimants drives 82% of total costs 100% of all claimants 100% of costs $972 per claimant 82% 67% 52% $36,985 per claimant 20% of all claimants This % of Claimants… Drives… This % of Costs

  7. 20% members = 82% cost 80% members = 18% cost Employees are Heterogeneous Population • Target programs to address needs of each segment of the population • Member engagement and behavior change will drive ROI • Goal: Move population “down” the health care continuum At Risk Obesity High Cholesterol Acute Illness/Discretionary Care Doctor or ER Visits Chronic Illness Diabetes Coronary Heart Disease Catastrophic Head Injury Cancer Well No Disease Appropriate benefit plans and providers based on needs, quality and cost • Prevention • Screenings • Awareness • Health risk assessment • Targeted risk reduction programs • Risk modeling • Nurse advice line • Web tools • Care options • Diseasemanagement • Incentive design • Self managementtraining/tracking of compliance • Case management • Decision support • Predictive modeling

  8. Inertia Drives Risk A population can be sub-divided into four groupings of health status Acute 12% prevalence 44% cost Chronic 23% prevalence 39% cost 2% At Risk 22% prevalence 10% cost Healthy 43% prevalence 7% cost It is important to do “Something” for every grouping.If you do nothing, then 2% of your population gets sicker every year. Cigna Data 2008 Prevalence and cost percentages based on 2006 CIGNA book of business and industry statistics.

  9. How One Employer Responded to Generic Health Plan Information Total Costs: $46M for 12,000 Employees

  10. Understanding the Relationship between Health & Productivity • Address the costs associated with lost time that result from medical conditions and illnesses The Hidden Costs of Illness1 Significance of Lost Productivity2 Additional Staffing Expense Disruption of Workforce Reduction of Customer Service 1:Active employee health care costs from Mercer National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health Plans 2006, Large Employers (500+). Absence program costs from 2005 Survey on Health, Productivity and Absence Management 2: Mercer Health and Productivity and absence management programs, 2006

  11. Managing Health Risks to Mitigate Onset of Future Illnesses • Health behavior accounts for 50% of medical costs1 • Across all ages, higher risk individuals generate higher healthcare costs2 • For this population, a 10% reduction in risk would result in 2% lower costs3 1 IFTF, Center for Disease Control and Prevention 2 Staywell data analyzed by University of Michigan (N=43,687); 1997-1999 annual paid amounts 3 Assumes 70% population have 0-2 risks, 20% 3-4 risks and 10% 5+ risks; also, assumes distribution across age ranges from <35 through 65+ of 24%, 27%, 26%, 17% and 7%, respectively

  12. Employer Expectations from Predictive Models • Recognition that companies are unique • Willingness to use benchmark and normative data for comparison • Need to stratify employees into different cohorts based on risk • Create programs based on their data to improve work environment • Desire to use appropriate tools • Understanding that traditional models need to change • Improve access to healthcare for employees

  13. Reducing Barriers to Healthcare Access • Employers recognizing that early intervention is a key to preventing escalation of costs due to chronic diseases • Providing services at on site clinic • Lowers costs • Reduces absenteeism • Increases productivity • Provides opportunities • Educate employees about health • Increase compliance with treatments

  14. Treat primary and urgent care needs to reduce costs and absenteeism, and improve productivity Referrals to high quality community physicians and specialists when outside care is required Drive preventive health and wellness programs to manage health risks and maximize member benefits Provide health coaching and care management and serve as onsite information/education center, including personal review of HRA findings Dispense commonly prescribed prescription drugs to improve generic use and formulary compliance Provide initial on-site mental health triage, counseling and integration with EAP services Treat and manage travel medicine program to minimize direct medical costs and lost work time Build employee loyalty, morale and well-being Onsite Clinic Services: More than just Occupational Health Health Promotion and Wellness Health Plans/ Community Care Workers’ Comp. Disease Mgmt. On-Site Clinic Disability Medical Care Employee Assistance Programs Travel Exams

  15. Predictive Modeling Tools to Help Employers • Health Risk Questionnaires • Evaluating Disease Management Companies • Changes in Plan Designs based on Predictive Models • Biometric Screenings & Monitoring • Educating Employees • High Performance Networks • Combinations

  16. Health Risk Questionnaires:Predictive Models Before the Claims

  17. Early Identification of At Risk Employees • Health risk questionnaire (HRQ) is the gateway to determining health risk status of a covered population • Health coaching for the 20% - 30% of the population with high risks is a critical component to modifying risk • HRQ sheds light on potential issues before claims Source: Mercer Predictive Risk Analysis diagnostic results; determined in conjunction with University of Michigan database and Health Enhancement Research Organization (HERO)

  18. II: Using Predictive Models to Assess Disease Management Program

  19. Evaluating Vendor Efficacy • Employers are paying high costs for DM services and want to know if the vendors are finding and engaging the right employees • List of all employees in DM programs provided • Comparison made based on: • A member is grouped into one or multiple condition buckets depending upon their Episode Treatment Group (ETG) assignments • The member’s severity is based upon their ETG assignment for that specific condition • Episode Risk Group (ERG) scores applied at member level • Matching done to see if DM vendor identified same individual that predictive model did

  20. Methodology to Identify Members • We received vendor data, with a unique identifier and diagnosis/program for each member that was identified to be part of a vendor program • Mercer used ETG software to assign each member to condition categories • We targeted 22 conditions (a combination of the conditions that are being managed by the vendors)

  21. Methodology to Match Claims • Broad Technique- • SSN, • DOB • Gender alone • Narrow Technique • Broad Technique • Plus a match on the identified condition

  22. Using Predictive Models for Disease Management Assessment

  23. Medical Management Review Identification by Condition

  24. Diabetics Matching to Any Program • This represents members that were grouped (by ETGs) into one or multiple condition categories AND were found on the combined vendor file as being identified by any program • Members are being matched by a unique identifier alone • Comparison done to see what % were being managed by vendor

  25. Diabetics Identified

  26. Diabetics Managed–Broad Technique

  27. Diabetics Managed– Narrow Technique

  28. Pilot Study Results • Employees in more severe ETGs or with higher risk scores were more likely to be targeted independently by DM companies • Employers satisfied that money is being spent wisely • Longitudinal outcomes studies need to be completed to assess programs on ongoing basis

  29. III. Plan Design Changes: Using Predictive Models to Modify Benefits

  30. Plan Designs Continue to Evolve Current Designs Progressive Designs • Split copays (e.g., PCP vs. SCP) • Coinsurance based design • Develop evidence based benefits design • Several tier-levels-preventive, acute, chronic, catastrophic, lifestyle, discretionary • Limited cost sharing • Members insulated from true cost and cost comparison • Exposure to true cost utilizing HDHP/HSAs • Broaden savings account opportunities for non-core health services (dental, vision, complementary care) and retiree medical • Most plan features treated identically • Differentiation of tier for prescription drugs • Tiering of provider networks • Cost sharing tied to compliance with appropriate treatment • Provide incentives to encourage use of high performing providers and centers of excellence (COEs) • No coordination between medical and disability design features • Create incentives within both medical and disability programs to encourage health management

  31. Employers are Using Data to Create Changes in Plan Design • Benefits should be supported by scientific evidence • Most benefit designs are not based in supportive “science” • Benefits need to be aligned with health management strategy • Realigning benefits to drive behavior change reduces immediate and long-term trend • Utilizes evidence-based medical findings and standards to design benefits - Examples: preventive services coverage; medication/medical supply coverage for certain chronic conditions; DxRx pairing Evidence-based design concepts are consistent with a strategic focus on maintaining a healthy workforce and engaging employees in behavior change

  32. Combining Predictive Models with Evidence Based Plan Design • Employers are using their data to understand risk of employees and dependents • Disease Management • High Cost Claimants • Employers are beginning to adopt new benefit models based on clinical evidence • Simple across the board changes • Complex models requiring integration with multiple sources

  33. Evidence-Based Design a New Offering Based on Predictive Models • Mercer’s EBD recommendations fall into three value categories • Highest EBD Value • Lower net direct medical spend (net of added benefit costs), and • Either improve or not affect clinical outcome Example: Diabetes and ACEI/ARB medication • Intermediate EBD Value • Improve clinical outcome, and • Not increase net direct medical spend Example: Immunizations and preventive screenings • Lower EBD Value • Improve clinical outcome • Increase net direct medical spend, but • Increase will be offset by reduction in indirect spending Example: Procedure – Bariatric surgery

  34. Implementation of EBD Moderately Difficult Easy Complex Benefit design for preventive services Objective: Identify risks early, avoid illness and increase health awareness Benefit design for procedures or chronic conditions Objective: Effectively manage potentially high cost events or conditions Benefit design for pharmacy and specific DxRx pairings Objective: Improve health status and avoid/reduce medical costs The over-riding goal of EBD is to eliminate barriers to service, increase compliance with evidence-based medicine, improve health status and reduce net health-related costs (both direct medical and indirect costs)

  35. Why Employers are Using Pharmacy Benefits and Predictive Models • While this is the most complicated to administer, it can lead to the best outcomes • Higher risk population takes prescribed medications • Improved quality of care • Less absenteeism • Greater productivity • Employers will see an increase in pharmacy spend and need to be aware of this cost

  36. Can Every Medical Condition be Managed this Way? • Independent, third party studies show that for certain chronic conditions increased compliance to an appropriate pharmacy regimen results in improved health and lower overall medical costs • Key chronic conditions include diabetes, high cholesterol and asthma

  37. High Costs of Medications Lead to Low Rx Compliance • Recent studies show high drug prices have caused patients to cut back on their medications, which can be very costly for patients and employers in the long run. •  Only 50% of patients typically take their medicines as prescribed. •  Poor prescription adherence costs $1.77 billion annually in direct and indirect health care costs. •  31% had not filled a prescription they were given. •  24% had taken less than the recommended dosage. • In addition, in the past year: • 20% of adults had not filled at least one prescription. • 16% of adults said they had taken a medicine less frequently than prescribed. • 14% of adults admitted taking a smaller dose than prescribed. • Among those with health insurance, 10% of individuals under age 65 and 33% of those over age 65 do not have prescription drug coverage.Source: National Council on Patient Information and Education, 2007.

  38. Three Case Studies: Pharmacy Costs & Compliance

  39. How Employers are Reacting • By decreasing barriers to obtaining medications through plan design changes, employers are beginning to change the health care market • By using predictive models, employers are adopting programs that will offer greatest benefit to both employee and employer • By recognizing that certain medications are beneficial for some diseases, co-pay structure is being lowered for those individuals only

  40. Case Study I: Employer Creates a New Pharmacy Model • Looked at data regarding employees illness and predicted costs • Waived copays on generics and halved copays on brands treating diabetes, asthma and heart disease • Result: First-year savings from reduced non-pharmacy medical cost were equal to cost of copay reduction

  41. Case Study II: University Eliminates Copays Based on Employee Demographics • Initiate new program with holistic approach to diabetes care • Modeling showed that nearly half of certain diabetic populations do not follow pharmacy treatment regimen • Recognition of data suggesting diabetics at risk to become more severe if non compliant • Pilot program eliminated copay for any medication treating diabetes, including ACE inhibitors, antidepressants and blood-sugar control drugs • Program also includes educational material and focused outreach to improve their health • Ongoing measurement of results of healthcare risk, costs, absenteeism

  42. Case Study III: Diabetes Compliance and Healthcare Costs • Large employer engaged Mercer to assess its current compliance in the diabetes disease state • The primary goals were to: • Determine current compliance levels (several different iterations) • Determine whether increased compliance would help employer lower costs • Assess the effectiveness of diabetic supply program • Compare screening tests of the compliant and non-compliant cohorts

  43. Diabetes Compliance Diagnostic Methodology • Mercer team utilized Mercer HealthOnline (MHO) to gather the required metrics • The analysis looked at compliance as follows: • Population divided into low, medium, and high compliance and untreated based on medical possession ratio • Reports were compiled for 2005, 2006 and 2007 • Depending on the year, data on members with 12 months continuous enrollment for that year, and 24 and 36 months enrollment for 2006 and 2007 respectively were reviewed • The reports provided clinical performance indicators for the diabetic population as well as similar data on the entire employer population and low risk members for comparison purposes • The analysis included data on all diabetics and more severe diabetics based on co-morbidities

  44. Diagnostic ResultsExecutive Summary • Potential compliance issue as the percentage of high-compliant patients has remained in the low 60% range for three years • Results vary slightly by year but key findings are: • Even high compliant diabetics cost the plan approximately three times more than non-diabetics • Low compliant diabetics cost the plan up to four times more than high compliant ones ($36,000 versus $5,000) • Preventive services like Hb1Ac tests are utilized but could see improvements of 10-15% • The 2007/36-month continuous enrollment group had a pharmacy ROI of 13:1 as each dollar spent avoided $13 of non-pharmacy medical costs • The percentage of diagnosed but untreated patients remained at approximately 20% for three years

  45. Diagnostic ResultsOther Observations • The lack of compliance improvement over three years indicates that health plan can improve its management of this population • More severe diabetics (those in stages 2 and 3) show similar patterns, but conclusions are unreliable as sample size is small • The diagnosed but untreated population had the lowest cost but also had high physician utilization -- likely meaning that they see their doctor regularly and are being treated by diet and exercise • Pharmacy ROI was lowest in 2005 with a return slightly over 1:1 but increased over time—particularly for the 2007/36-month continuous enrollment group

  46. Diabetics with Three Years Coverage

  47. HbA1c Testing

  48. LDL Screening Rates

  49. Next Steps

  50. In Summary • Current structure appears not be yielding desired effect so changes may be needed • Review plan design to determine whether financial barriers impact compliance • Build a compliance-enhancing infrastructure with more coordination between prescription drug side and disease management to prevent “falling off the compliance bandwagon” • Continue to educate diabetics on importance of screening tests and medical care • Increase use of predictive models to identify higher risk non-compliant individuals to encourage adherence to therapy

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