Understanding the need to align care models, payment, products and networks
[Number 4 in a series of 6]
By Sam Mupalla – Vice President, McKesson Health Solutions, Network Performance Management (NPM)
I wanted to follow up on last month’s ME-P discussion about Performance-based Networks and Medical Cost Savings. I wrote about the need to align care models, payment, products and networks, and then promised to address some of the barriers standing in the way of achieving alignment. Well, that’s what I’m writing about today.
Strategic Difficulties
Health plan operations responsible for supporting the intent of the provider network designs will find it increasingly difficult to maintain strategies that provide affordable care by applying existing methods and systems.
Currently, the systems and processes that enable these operations are frequently based on systems that are neither integrated nor automated, rather relying on various manual interventions to achieve some scale of efficiency. Creating and maintaining innovative value-based offerings in this environment requires process excellence coupled with tight coordination executed across multiple departments. As the complexity and frequency of demand for these offerings increase, this approach becomes more challenging to sustain, thus risking long term success of the affordable care promise.
Figure 1: Today’s operational engine interactions are not optimized for enabling innovation.
The traditional systems and processes that health plans have used to respond to specific client demands appear in Figure 1.
For example, product demands from consumers may come in through the sales team, which manually interacts with the product management, care management, network development, and health economic teams to design a product to meet the market need. This first set of interactions, in effect, becomes the innovation engine for value-based product designs. Additionally, it becomes the starting point for a myriad of manual and highly paper-based interactions that ripple throughout the enterprise.
The interactions within this innovation engine then set forth a series of parallel and independent sequences with three different operational engines: the provider contracting department, the provider management department and the claims operations department. Each of these areas relies heavily upon their own set of manual and paper-based processes and interactions. The inefficiency of this current approach suggests the potential for an annual administrative cost savings opportunity of $5-25 million, depending on the health plan’s size and current system architecture.
In addition to administrative costs, this approach creates inefficiency and waste in IT costs and medical costs that could be between $40-100 million.
Assessment
So, how can you unlock these savings and eliminate this waste? We’ll discuss that next week. I’ll say only three words here: Integrated Building Blocks. I’m not going to say a word more — but if you can’t wait for next week you can read the entire Unlocking Affordable Care by Aligning Products white paper; it’s available on our website now.
Conclusion
Your thoughts and comments on this ME-P are appreciated. Feel free to review our top-left column, and top-right sidebar materials, links, URLs and related websites, too. Then, subscribe to the ME-P. It is fast, free and secure.
Link: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HealthcareFinancialsthePostForcxos
Speaker: If you need a moderator or speaker for an upcoming event, Dr. David E. Marcinko; MBA – Publisher-in-Chief of the Medical Executive-Post – is available for seminar or speaking engagements. Contact: MarcinkoAdvisors@msn.com
OUR OTHER PRINT BOOKS AND RELATED INFORMATION SOURCES:
DICTIONARIES: http://www.springerpub.com/Search/marcinko
PHYSICIANS: www.MedicalBusinessAdvisors.com
PRACTICES: www.BusinessofMedicalPractice.com
HOSPITALS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466558731
CLINICS: http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781439879900
BLOG: www.MedicalExecutivePost.com
FINANCE: Financial Planning for Physicians and Advisors
INSURANCE: Risk Management and Insurance Strategies for Physicians and Advisors
Filed under: Health Economics, iMBA, Inc., Information Technology, Practice Management | Tagged: ACA, ACOs, Affordable Care, affordable care models, McKesson Health Solutions, Performance Based Networks and Medical Cost Savings, Sam Mupalla, Unlocking Affordable Care by Aligning Products |


















High administrative costs are a major reason US healthcare costs are out of control. Most of this excess administrative overhead can be attributed to the highly complex private health insurance system in the United States, which includes the high costs of product design and marketing.
I agree with Sam and the comments here that only by having a more integrated system with all the players involved can we address reasonable cost containment. The well done graphics here point out the current complexities that needs to be addressed and more efficiently dealt with.
David K. Luke, MIM
LikeLike
Should Your Doctor Be Thinking About Society’s Healthcare Costs?
Sam – You probably want your doctor to care about people, but how much do you want him/her to care about all of them; all the time and in the aggregate?
http://thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2012/01/16/should-your-doctor-be-thinking-about-societys-healthcare-costs/
Georgina
LikeLike
What should the law do about out-of-network ER or any type of doc?
Colleague Austin Frakt PhD wanted to join up with Aaron Carroll MD in venting some spleen about Elizabeth Rosenthal’s maddening story from a recent New York Times article.
http://theincidentaleconomist.com/wordpress/what-should-the-law-do-about-out-of-network-er-docs/
How can it possibly be legal for your doctor to charge you out-of-network rates when you show at up an in-network emergency room? And how can we change the law to get at the problem?
Briefly: when you show up at an ER, you’re given an incomprehensible contract to sign. Among the terms you don’t read, you agree to pay the on-call ER physician for her services, whether or not the physician happens to be in-network. Given this “agreement,” the out-of-network physician can name her price.
http://theincidentaleconomist.com/wordpress/best-in-the-world-my-a-emergency-departments-and-networks/
Now, the courts won’t generally enforce contractual terms to the extent they deviate from what a reasonable person would agree to pay. That’s especially so if you were in medical distress when you signed the contract. It should be possible, especially in these ER cases, to persuade courts that the out-of-network doc should only be paid a reasonable fee—maybe the rate that the patient’s insured would have paid, maybe Medicare rates.
http://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2014/09/outrageous-117000-bill-assistant-surgeon.html
via Ann Miller RN MHA
LikeLike