Literature DB >> 28829924

The 10 Conditions That Increased Vermont's Readiness to Implement Statewide Health System Transformation.

David Grembowski1, Miriam Marcus-Smith2.   

Abstract

Following an arduous, 6-year policy-making process, Vermont is the first state implementing a unified, statewide all-payer integrated delivery system with value-based payment, along with aligned medical and social service reforms, for almost all residents and providers in a state. Commercial, Medicare, and Medicaid value-based payment for most Vermonters will be administered through a new statewide accountable care organization in 2018-2022. The purpose of this article is to describe the 10 conditions that increased Vermont's readiness to implement statewide system transformation. The authors reviewed documents, conducted internet searches of public information, interviewed key informants annually in 2014-2016, cross-validated factual and narrative interpretation, and performed content analyses to derive conditions that increased readiness and their implications for policy and practice. Four social conditions (leadership champions; a common vision; collaborative culture; social capital and collective efficacy) and 6 support conditions (money; statewide data; legal infrastructure; federal policy promoting payment reform; delivery system transformation aligned with payment reform; personnel skilled in system reform) increased Vermont's readiness for system transformation. Vermont's experience indicates that increasing statewide readiness for reform is slow, incremental, and exhausting to overcome the sheer inertia of large fee-based systems. The new payments may work because statewide, uniform population-based payment will affect the health care of almost all Vermonters, creating statewide, uniform provider incentives to reduce volume and making the current fee-based system less viable. The conditions for readiness and statewide system transformation may be more likely in states with regulated markets, like Vermont, than in states with highly competitive markets.

Keywords:  State Innovation Models; Vermont; accountable care organization; readiness; system transformation; value-based payment

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28829924     DOI: 10.1089/pop.2017.0061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Popul Health Manag        ISSN: 1942-7891            Impact factor:   2.459


  1 in total

1.  Primary Care Implementation of Genomic Population Health Screening Using a Large Gene Sequencing Panel.

Authors:  Robert S Wildin; Christine A Giummo; Aaron W Reiter; Thomas C Peterson; Debra G B Leonard
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2022-04-25       Impact factor: 4.772

  1 in total

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