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Horizon Council Health Challenges and Opportunities How Technology Can Help Mike Smith Chief Information Officer Lee Memorial Health System October 22, 2015 Discussion Topics Macro-level Healthcare Challenges Macro-level Opportunities Technology Innovations – How they can help Possible Opportunities for Employers to Help 1 Actuarial Publications www.socialsecurity.gov Social Security Online Status of the Social Security and Medicare Programs A SUMMARY OF THE 2011 ANNUAL REPORTS Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees Medicare Relative to the combined Social Security Trust Funds, the Medicare HI Trust Fund faces a more immediate funding shortfall, though its longer term financial outlook is better under the assumptions employed in this report. Medicare costs (including both HI and SMI expenditures) are projected to grow substantially from approximately 3.6 percent of GDP in 2010 to 5.5 percent of GDP by 2035, and to increase gradually thereafter to about 6.2 percent of GDP by 2085. The projected 75-year actuarial deficit in the HI Trust Fund is 0.79 percent of taxable payroll, up from 0.66 percent projected in last year’s report. The HI fund fails the test of short-range financial adequacy, as projected assets drop below one year’s projected expenditures early in 2011. The fund also continues to fail the long-range test of close actuarial balance. Medicare’s HI Trust Fund is expected to pay out more in hospital benefits and other expenditures than it receives in income in all future years. The projected date of HI Trust Fund exhaustion is 2024, five years earlier than estimated in last year’s report, at which time dedicated revenues would be sufficient to pay 90 percent of HI costs. The share of HI expenditures that can be financed with HI dedicated revenues is projected to decline slowly to 75 percent in 2045, and then to rise slowly, reaching 88 percent in 2085. Over 75 years, HI’s actuarial imbalance is estimated to be equivalent to 21 percent of tax receipts or 17 percent of program outlays. The drawdown of Social Security and HI trust fund reserves and the general revenue transfers into SMI will result in mounting pressure on the Federal budget. In fact, pressure is already evident. For the sixth consecutive year, a "Medicare funding warning" is being triggered, signaling that projected non-dedicated sources of revenues -- primarily general revenues -- will soon account for more than 45 percent of Medicare’s outlays. That threshold was in fact breached for the first time in fiscal 2010. A Presidential proposal is required by law in response to the latest warning.. Conclusion Projected long-run program costs for both Medicare and Social Security are not sustainable under currently scheduled financing, and will require legislative corrections if disruptive consequences for beneficiaries and taxpayers are to be avoided. The financial challenges facing Social Security and Medicare should be addressed soon. If action is taken sooner rather than later, more options and more time will be available to phase in changes so that those affected can adequately prepare. 2 2 International Comparison of Spending on Health, 1980-2008 Source: OECD Health Data 2010 (Oct. 2010) 3 Costs by Age Categories Healthcare Costs by Age U.S. is spending much more for older ages Source: Fischbeck, Paul. “US-Europe Comparisons of Health Risk for Specific Gender-Age Groups.” Carnegie Mellon University; September, 2009. 4 5 5 Healthcare Challenges for All of Us Cost – Not sustainable Quality/Outcomes – Need to continually improve 6 The Challenges A Little More Detail: – Payment Structure – Generally Fee For Service (repair shop healthcare) – Fragmentation of Healthcare (lack of care coordination, fend for self, chronic disease management gaps, lifestyle issues) – – – – – Advanced Clinical/Medical Technology (we can do more) Increased Complexity of Healthcare As consumers we are not engaged (someone else is paying) Aging of Workforce/Society Payor Mix 7 PAYMENT SCHEMES THAT REWARD EXCESS If automakers were paid by the bolt, cars would be brimming with unnecessary bolts. The U.S. fee-for-service system in effect pays for “bolts” – unit of service – rather than for results, rewarding volume over value and encouraging extra visits, procedures, and tests. 8 A FEW PEOPLE COST A LOT A relatively small number of patients – often older or chronically ill people – account for a large portion of all medical costs. These include frequent hospital readmissions and managing the consequences of obesity and uncontrolled diabetes. One in five Medicare patients discharged from the hospital will return within a month; half won’t have seen a doctor before their return. More than 50% of all discharged Medicare patients will be back within a year. SOURCE HENRY J. KAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION 9 “New Healthcare delivery system” Improved coordination of care between Hospitals, Physicians, and other Providers Jointly accountable for quality and resource use (Which means a different payment model) A FUNDAMENTALLY NEW DELIVERY MODEL “What could be worse than healthcare overhaul? No healthcare overhaul” Assoc Press, Feb 14, 2010 10 Lee County Payor Mix 21.7% Commercial 44% Medicare 13% Medicaid 10% Uninsured/Self Pay Cost vs Reimbursement Cost Commercial Medicare Medicaid Uninsured 11 Medicare Value Based Purchasing Slide 12 12 “Information systems are critical. Medicine is inherently an information science. In general, the better information I have, the better diagnosis I can make, the better treatments I can offer, the better treatments I can deliver and the better outcomes I can achieve.” Brent James, MD Vice President of Research and Medical Affairs at Intermountain Healthcare, Executive Director for Healthcare Delivery Research 13 The Healthcare Reform Pyramid Consumerism Focus: CDHPs, transparency, PHRs, incentives, value Coordination of Care Focus: Primary Care 2.0 Model (the new “Medical Home”) Comparative Effectiveness/Evidence-Based Medicine Focus: personalized medicine, comparative effectiveness, episode-based payments to acute organizations Healthcare IT Focus: e-prescribing, care coordination, administrative cost reduction CDHP=Consumer Driven Health Plan Source: Deloitte Center for Health Solutions 14 How technology is poised to help: Electronic Health Records (EHRs) – Epic, other EHRs Intelligent Clinical Decision Support – – based on clinical data about what actually works Patient and Family Engagement Tools – Patient Portal (i.e. Epic MyChart) E-visit/Video Visit Technology Mobile/in-home patient monitoring and diagnostics – Enabling the Right Care at the Right Place at the Right Time 15 16 16 17 17 18 18 Lee County Electronic Health Record Vision Lee Outpatient Centers Lee Convenient Care Lee Home Health Lee Physician Group Regional Network Partners Lee Specialists EMS Electronic Health Record/ Personal Health Record Schools Nursing Support Physician Support Med. Staff Support Health Park Care Center Outcomes Mgmt Medication Management Ancillary Systems Medical Home Diagnostic Imaging Children’s/ HealthPark Accountable Care Organization Revenue Cycle Public/Community Health Services Operational Systems LMHS Technology Infrastructure Gulf Coast Cape Coral In Home Services Employers, Government, Insurance Community Physicians Lee Memorial (Cleveland) Rehab. Mental Health 19 20 MyChart Mobile App IoT - (Internet of Things) 21 22 22 Wireless Digital (Mobile) Diagnostics http://video.msnbc.msn.com/rock-center/50582822#50582822 23 Analytics Applied to Healthcare 24 Realtime Analytics/Clinical Decision Support 25 The Barriers (and Opportunities) A Little More Detail: – Technology Maturity – Payment Structure – Generally Fee For Service – Fragmentation of Healthcare – (lack of care coordination, fend for self, chronic disease management gaps, lifestyle issues) – – – – – – Advanced Clinical Technology Increased Complexity of Healthcare Patients not engaged (someone else is paying) Aging of Workforce/Society Payor Mix 26 Questions / Discussion What else can healthcare providers do to employers/employees? What can you as employers do to help? What can we do together to accelerate the change? 27