1 / 57

The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project

The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project. PGIP Meeting Update September 12, 2014. Agenda. Welcome and Overview Evaluation Update Diabetes Performance and Practice Coaching Update Billing Collaborative, Payer Updates and CMS Response Letter Best Practice Workgroup Update.

ebony
Télécharger la présentation

The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project

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. The Michigan Primary Care Transformation (MiPCT) Project PGIP Meeting Update September 12, 2014

  2. Agenda • Welcome and Overview • Evaluation Update • Diabetes Performance and Practice Coaching Update • Billing Collaborative, Payer Updates and CMS Response Letter • Best Practice Workgroup Update

  3. Evaluation Update

  4. Topics • National Evaluation Update • Most recent cost and utilization analysis • Patient experience • Michigan Evaluation Update • Cost and utilization analysis • Key survey findings to date: multiple perspectives on Care Management

  5. National Evaluation Results from Research Triangle Institute

  6. Quarterly Trend Comparison: Medicare PMPM Payments

  7. Quarterly Trend Comparison: Payments to PC and Specialty Physicians

  8. Quarterly Trend Comparison: Hospital Admissions

  9. Patient Survey – PCMH CAHPS • Medicare Beneficiaries • Analysis adjusted for demographic and other factors for purposes of comparison

  10. Access to Care Composite

  11. Communication with Providers Composite

  12. Shared Decision-Making Composite

  13. Self-Management Support Composite

  14. Comprehensive Orientation Composite

  15. Michigan Evaluation Michigan Public Health Institute

  16. Status

  17. Survey Data Multiple Perspectives on Care Management

  18. Care Manager Survey

  19. Average Percent of Time Spent at the Following Locations: Min: 0% Max: 100% Min: 0% Max: 100% Min: 0% Max: 90% Min: 0% Max: 25%

  20. Physicians’ Availability

  21. Physicians Support for Care Management

  22. Staff Support for Care Management

  23. Provider/Staff Survey Preliminary Results, n=1,032

  24. Provider/Staff Survey Preliminary Results(questions not asked of Care Managers) Percent Agree/Strongly Disagree (5 point scale, remaining responses largely neutral)

  25. Please help us encourage response to the Provider/Staff Survey Deadline extended to end of next week

  26. PO Feedback:MiPCT should do differently next time • Clear and consistent expectations (n=13) • In general • Related to performance incentives • Consistency across payers • Consistency over time, fewer program changes • Better and more timely communication • More help (n=10) • Better data sooner • More access to data • Assistance with physician engagement • Assistance with care management implementation • More responsiveness to local variation and capacity(n=2) • Different model (n=2) • Over-reliance on Geisinger and/or nursing model

  27. PO Lessons Learned:PO should do differently next time • Care Management Embedment (almost everyone!) • Better define practice roles from the beginning, better planning • Physician engagement, incentives, requirements • Pair practice coaches with Care Managers • More oversight of Care Managers by POs, more meetings with practices, PO hire CMs not practices • Software investment • Develop alternatives to the MiPCT patient list • Be more selective, include fewer practices, assess practice readiness earlier (n=6) • Collaborate with other POs, contract for CM services (n=3) • We did it right! (n=1)

  28. Diabetes Performance and Practice Coaching Update

  29. MiPCT 2014 Annual Summits

  30. 2014 Summit Overview • Morning Session – Open to All • The morning session is an all-stakeholder meeting that is open to all. The theme for the morning is: “The Future of Primary Care:  MiPCT in 2015 and Beyond”. • Practice teams attending with a physician are eligible to earn 4 Practice Learning Credits • Afternoon Session – Care Manager Training • Designed for MiPCT Care Managers though other interested team partners are welcome to attend as well • Topics include a Palliative Care RN Expert Presentation and Update on the MiPCT Care Management Best Practice Work Group Update. • The MiPCT 2014 Summit Care Manager Session has been submitted to the Michigan Nurses Association for approval to award contact hours. The Michigan Nurses Association is an approver of continuing nursing education is the State of Michigan Board of Nursing.

  31. 2014 Summit Logistics • Morning Summits – Two in-person locations: • Ann Arbor – University of Michigan North Campus Research Center (NCRC), October 7, 2014 – 8:00 AM to Noon; and • Grand Rapids – Frederik Meijer Gardens, October 9, 2014 – 8:00 AM to Noon (this location will also have a live webinar link allowing those who cannot travel to participate). • Afternoon Care Manager Education – Three in-person locations: • Ann Arbor – University of Michigan North Campus Research Center (NCRC), October 7, 2014 – 1:00 pm-4:30pm • Grand Rapids – Frederik Meijer Gardens, October 9, 2014 – 1:00 pm-4:30pm • Gaylord –Ostego Conference Center October 1, 2014 – 11:30am – 4:30 pmNote: The Gaylord morning Summit session will not take place this year. Instead, Gaylord afternoon Care manager training will begin with a special hour-long briefing session with MiPCT Leadership on MiPCT evaluation and 2015 sustainability/continuity. The Grand Rapids morning summit on October 9th will also be available via webinar link and will be recorded and available on the mipctdemo.org site soon afterward.

  32. 2014 Summit Registration • Register by visiting the mipctdemo.org website and clicking on the “2014 MiPCT Annual Summits” tab. • Registration is key to practices receiving Practice Learning Credits • Tab contains detailed information on locations, hotel block codes for travelers, parking information • Meeting material will also be posted here in advance of the summits • To allow for processing time for materials registration will close on September 30th so register now! • Registration is at no cost to attendees; lunch is provided

  33. Billing Collaborative, Payer Updates and CMS Response Letter

  34. MiPCT Multipayer Billing and Coding Collaborative • Led by Mary Ellen Benzik • Practice Learning Credits Awarded: Four credits • Focus: Accelerated support to POs and practices for robust billing and coding infrastructures and processes • Structure – Each PO is invited to join with one to three practices for: • A half day in-person session • Monthly Webinars • Sign up by emailing micptdemo@michigan.gov by 9/17 with: PO name, practice participants and roles (practice manager; billers and coders; Care Managers, etc.)

  35. MiPCT Multipayer Billing and Coding Collaborative • Payer-led briefings • The business case for care management • Learning from the leaders: Best processes and practices

  36. MiPCT 2015 Plan Care Management Funding Recap (regardless of CMS demonstration period extension decision) • Medicaid: $7.50 PMPM continues • BCBSM: E&M Uplift and G/CPT Codes • Priority Health: $3.25 PMPM Care Management Incentive and G/CPT Codes • BCBSM Medicare Advantage: G/CPT Codes • BCN evaluation in process Medicare FFS payment will continue as $9.50 PMPM (with demo period extension) or at the $41.92 PBPM for engaged chronic patients)

  37. CMS Chronic Care Management Monthly G Code: The MiPCT Response • Submitted on September 2, 2014 • Main themes: • Insufficiency of payment rate proposed to fund effective care management • Non-Face-to-Face Care Management not included • Patient financial liability may pose barrier to patient engagement • EHR certification level • Clarification needed regarding definition of clinical staff

  38. Best Practice Workgroup Update

  39. MiPCT Care Management Best Practice Work Group – Background • Care management activity across the state is varied. • Statewide the volume of care management encounters are lower than expected. • Care management best practices do exist and it will be beneficial to gather and analyze these best practice activities via a MiPCT work group to identify models and improvement processes.

  40. MiPCT Care Management Best Practice Work Group – SOW Deliverables High Level Deliverable: Create a Generic Framework which can be individualized to meet the needs of the practice /PO • Identify best practice for Care Manager time management, caseload, patient encounters, positive patient outcomes • Care Management delivery best practice model for complex and moderate risk patients • Preliminary findings, best practice infrastructure to support care management

  41. A Unique Opportunity • To recognize and highlight collective workgroup expertise • To create an evidence based toolkit for MiPCT Care Management delivery based on best practice • To share this work with • MiPCT Leadership • MiPCT POs/practices/care managers • Participating MiPCT payers • Potentially other health care leaders

  42. MiPCT Care Management (CM) Best Practice Work Group Participants • MiPCT Statewide Representation • Invitation based on performance criteria of CM encounter data, MiPCT quality and utilization metrics for Adult population • PO Leaders • Care Managers • Clinical Leads • Physician(s)

  43. CM Best Practice Participants MiPCT PO Leaders and MiPCT Clinical Leads • Anne Levandoski- UPHP • Susan Viviano- Advantage Health • Margaret Jacobs- UMHS • Maureen Braun- IHA • Karen Bennett- Sparrow Health Medical Group • Chris Rusin- United Physicians • Ruth Clark- Integrated Health Partners • Lynn King- Lakeshore Health Network, MiPCT Clinical Lead

  44. CM Best Practice Participants cont. MiPCT PO Leaders, Care Managers, and MiPCT Clinical Leads • Belinda Fish- UMHS • Mary Kramer- UPHP • Victoria Lee- Advantage Health Physicians • Diane McLeod- Sparrow Medical Group • Lindsay Schohl- Lakeshore Health Network • Robin Schreur- Spectrum Health Medical Group, MiPCT Clinical Lead • Della Slavsky- UPHP, MiPCT Clinical Lead • Tammy Starks- IHP • Heidi Steinhebel- IHA • Juliann Testy- Henry Ford Medical Group, MiPCT Clinical Lead • Loretta Warda- CIPA/MAG, MiPCT Clinical Lead MiPCT Clinical Leadership: Dr. Kevin Taylor, Dr. Jean Malouin, Marie Beisel, Paula Amormino

  45. MiPCT Care Management Delivery in the Practice: Individual Care Manager (CM): How does the care manager complete daily work? System Factors: Leadership, Infrastructure & Practice embedment

More Related