| Literature DB >> 28846618 |
Thomas Doerr1, Lisa Olsen2, Deborah Zimmerman3.
Abstract
Rising health care costs are threatening the fiscal solvency of patients, employers, payers, and governments. The Collaborative Payer Provider Model (CPPM) addresses this challenge by reinventing the role of the payer into a full-service collaborative ally of the physician. From 2010 through 2014, a Medicare Advantage plan prospectively deployed the CPPM, averaging 30,561 members with costs that were 73.6% of fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare (p < 0.001). The health plan was not part of an integrated delivery system. After allocating $80 per member per month (PMPM) for primary care costs, the health plan had medical cost ratios averaging 75.1% before surplus distribution. Member benefits were the best in the market. The health plan was rated 4.5 Stars by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for years 1-4, and 5 Stars in study year 5 for quality, patient experience, access to care, and care process metrics. Primary care and specialist satisfaction were significantly better than national benchmarks. Savings resulted from shifts in spending from inpatient to outpatient settings, and from specialists to primary care physicians when appropriate. The CPPM is a scalable model that enables a win-win-win system for patients, providers, and payers.Entities:
Keywords: health care costs; health care value; innovation; medicare advantage; primary care; triple aim
Year: 2017 PMID: 28846618 PMCID: PMC5618176 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare5030048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
The Collaborative Payer Provider Model (CPPM)’s three main elements and eight critical success factors.
| CPPM Element | Critical Success Factor |
|---|---|
Total cost of care incentive for Primary Care Providers (PCPs). Substantial quality incentive for PCPs. Internal physician compensation formulas produce palpable rewards for delivering high-value care. Primary Care Physician aggregation into groups in order to produce an actuarially credible number of lives (1500–2000). Narrow PCP network producing PCP panel density, which intensifies incentives and enhances PCP engagement. | |
PCP visibility into cost, quality, comparative performance, and care across the continuum. | |
The delivery system must deliver Accountable Primary Care. The payer is accountable to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), members, and providers. Medical group leadership facilitates cultural transformation and implementation of the CPPM. |
Differences between traditional payers and collaborative payers.
| Item | Traditional Payer | Collaborative Payer |
|---|---|---|
| Risk sharing | In the late 1990s, the payers typically gave all the risk to the doctors and had little interest in their success. The payers cared about the payers’ outcomes, such as membership and revenue growth. | Radical alignment of incentives. Providers get up to 80% of the share back, and payers 20% of the share back. The payer is only financially successful if the provider is successful. The collaborative payer cares about PCP outcomes because their economic fates are linked together. |
| Incentives | Providers are rewarded for increasing volume of care. | Providers (and the payer) are rewarded for increasing the value of care. Up to 25% of share back may be based on quality and patient satisfaction metrics. |
| Quality Incentives | Typically too many metrics with inadequate funding. For example, a 2% bonus for 50 measures. | 10 to 15 achievable metrics. Up to 20% of the share back for improvement and for absolute performance. |
| Contracting | Adversarial contracting and unit cost management. Zero sum negotiations. | Collaborative contracting. Win-win negotiations, as the 30% of health care spending that is waste is decreased. |
| Clinical and financial data sharing | Minimal information sharing. When shared, typically too late for interventions. Information asymmetry is exploited for the payer’s advantage. | Complete clinical, financial, and comparative performance data transparency as soon as available. |
| Customer | Members and employers | CMS/employers, members, physicians |
| Provider network strategy | Large networks to increase sales and revenue, contract with everybody, hammer down unit costs. Pass cost increases onto employers. | Narrow or preferred networks, PCPs recommend particular specialists for inclusion in the networks. Limit the number of PCPs to increase their engagement with the payer. |
| Cost management | Traditional burdensome utilization management. Cost increases are passed onto the employers. | Referrals usually only for notification and communication. Utilization management is focused and coordinated. Wasteful care is reduced, creating profitability. |
| Payer relationship with physicians and members | Payers go around the doctors to care for their members. | Mutual dependence; collaborative payer supports the doctor–patient relationship. All three work to reduce waste and increase quality. |
| Payer contracts with vendors who provide care for patients | Has many vendor contracts to meet their members’ needs. They go around the PCPs and directly provide care to members. | Minimizes these. Collaborates with PCPs to mutually approve a few vendors. Honors the PCP–patient (member) relationship. |
Filtered CPPM membership and costs compared to Matched Fee-For-Service Medicare (FFS).
| Year | # CPPM Members | CPPM Costs † | CPPM MCR * | CPPM BD/K | CPPM RAF | #FFS Patients | FFS Costs † | FFS RAF | CPPM/FFS Costs † | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | 24,054 | $485 | 73.4% | 1188 | 1.09 | 8827 | $672 | 1.18 | 72.2% | <0.001 |
| 2011 | 27,898 | $482 | 72.2% | 1181 | 1.11 | 8878 | $675 | 1.16 | 71.4% | <0.001 |
| 2012 | 31,143 | $476 | 72.5% | 1138 | 1.14 | 8804 | $682 | 1.17 | 69.8% | <0.001 |
| 2013 | 33,195 | $498 | 77.9% | 1113 | 1.13 | 8815 | $671 | 1.12 | 74.2% | <0.001 |
| 2014 | 36,516 | $540 ‡ | 79.4% | 1151 | 1.05 | 8350 | $672 | 1.12 | 80.4% | <0.001 |
CPPM is the Collaborative Payer Provider Model. FFS is the 5% Limited Data Set from Fee-For-Service Medicare. MCR is Medical Cost Ratio. RAF is the CMS-HCC Risk Adjustment Factor. BD/K is Bed days per thousand members per year. * The MCR is computed by the authors based on assumed $80 per member per month primary care physician costs in the CPPM. † Costs are per member per month, which were risk-adjusted to a 1.00 risk basis to make them comparable between FFS and CPPM. ‡ In 2014, CPPM costs of $540 are due to a major change in the CMS-HCC risk model. The p values are from Student’s t tests comparing the CPPM and FFS costs each year.
Continuously Enrolled CPPM Members for All Five Years’ Per Member Per Month (PMPM) Costs Compared to Matched FFS Beneficiaries *.
| Year | CPPM Cohort † | FFS Cohort † | CPPM/FFS Cohort † |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | $370 | $561 | 66.0% |
| 2011 | $360 | $559 | 64.4% |
| 2012 | $351 | $562 | 62.5% |
| 2013 | $373 | $576 | 64.8% |
| 2014 | $442 | $620 | 71.3% |
CPPM is The Collaborative Payer Model payer. FFS is the 5% Limited Data Set from Fee-For-Service Medicare. PMPM is Per Member Per Month costs. * PMPM costs were risk-adjusted to a 1.00 risk basis to make them comparable between FFS and CPPM. † These cohorts were comprised of patients who were members of the health plan for all five years to matched FFS Medicare beneficiaries continuously enrolled for all five years.
Figure 12010 through 2014 Costs by Service Category ($PMPM). CPPM is the Collaborative Payer Provider Model. FFS is the 5% Limited Data Set from Fee-For-Service Medicare. PMPM is Per Member Per Month costs. SNF is Skilled Nursing Facility. PMPM costs were risk-adjusted to a 1.00 risk basis to make them comparable between FFS and CPPM.