paying for care coordination

22
Paying for Care Coordination Deborah Allen, ScD Boston University School of Public Health Josie Thomas Parent’s Place of Maryland

Upload: kermit

Post on 17-Jan-2016

37 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Paying for Care Coordination. Deborah Allen, ScD Boston University School of Public Health Josie Thomas Parent’s Place of Maryland. State-at-a-Glance Chartbook The Catalyst Center. Educational and inspirational tool for state policymakers and other stakeholders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Paying for Care Coordination

Paying for Care Coordination

Deborah Allen, ScDBoston University School of Public Health

Josie ThomasParent’s Place of Maryland

Page 2: Paying for Care Coordination
Page 3: Paying for Care Coordination

State-at-a-Glance Chartbook The Catalyst Center

• Educational and inspirational tool for state policymakers and other stakeholders

– Key indicators of health care coverage for children and youth with special health care needs by state

– Descriptions of promising practices in improving coverage and financing

Page 4: Paying for Care Coordination
Page 5: Paying for Care Coordination

Meg Comeau, MHADirector

The Catalyst CenterHealth and Disability Working Group

Boston University School of Public Health

617-426-4447, ext. [email protected]

www.hdwg.org/catalyst

For more information, contact

Page 6: Paying for Care Coordination

Paying for Care Coordination

Why it matters

Strategic approach

Page 7: Paying for Care Coordination

Why it matters• To Families

– Consistent findings that families place a high priority on care coordination– Consistent findings that there is unmet need in this area

• To State Title V Program Staff– Reflects Title V expertise– Reflects Title V philosophy/systems approach– Links public health to direct care and families

• To Providers– Central to medical home model – Most expensive component of medical home and thus, hardest to assure

• In relation to national 2010/New Freedom agenda– May be most direct, concrete manifestation of family-centered, comprehensive, coordinated

care– Key test of system success

Page 8: Paying for Care Coordination

Starting assumptions --before you get to what it costs

• Children with special health care needs are those who have or are at increased risk for a chronic physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional condition and who also require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required by children generally

• Any child or youth with special health care needs may need access to care coordination at some time

• An organized, statewide system of care coordination is the only way to assure universal access

• The medical home is the best option for a statewide system of care coordination

• Care coordinators in the medical home• Can serve children and adolescents with a range of disabilities or

chronic conditions effectively• Can serve children and adolescents with a range of disabilities or

chronic conditions efficiently

*See Chapel Hill Pediatrics presentation at http://www.medicalhomeinfo.org/model/MHLC.html

Page 9: Paying for Care Coordination

What have we learned from states

• No state has achieved universal access to medical home care coordination yet– There may not be a single, universal formula for

success

• But there has been enough progress to offer lessons related to two strategic objectives

1. Bring down the cost

2. Get partners to share the cost

Page 10: Paying for Care Coordination

Estimating the cost of care coordination

Page 11: Paying for Care Coordination

Why conduct the exercise

• Highlights key components of a system

• Drives debate within the field about optimal approach to system

• Makes statewide implementation a real possibility for policy makers

Page 12: Paying for Care Coordination

Relevant variables

• The number of children with special health care needs in the state– Depends on population and percent CSHCN

• The caseload per FTE medical home care coordinator per year– Depends on model

• The salary per FTE care coordinator per year– Depends on model and local labor market

Page 13: Paying for Care Coordination

Case example: Washington

• 2000 Census: 1,513,843 under age 18• National CSHCN Survey: 13.7% reported to

have special health care needs• That means 207,396 children with special

health care needs• For purposes of estimation: 200,000 CSHCN

Page 14: Paying for Care Coordination

The caseload per FTE care coordinator

• Depends on model and case mix• For purposes of estimation:

– Washington has 500 pediatricians; about 250 family practitioners see children

->Average primary care caseload is 1.5mil/750=2,000

– If assume 1 FTE care coordinator serves typical panel of 2,000

->Each care coordinator serves about 275 CSHCN

->System requires 750 care coordinators

– If assume 1 FTE care coordinator can actually serve 600 children and that a care coordinator can work with more than one provider

-> System requires 375 care coordinators

Page 15: Paying for Care Coordination

So let’s roughly estimate

• 375 FTE care coordinators

• Distributed among 750 FTE physicians

• Each caring for about 530 children

• To serve the state’s population of 200,000 CYSHCN

Page 16: Paying for Care Coordination

Washington labor market salaries

For nurse manager $37.75*

For staff nurse $30.54

For health educator $24.22

For medical/public health social

worker $23.45

For child and family social worker $17.62

For trained paraprofessional $14.67

Page 17: Paying for Care Coordination

Annual salary

• At hourly rate of $35 $72,800

• At hourly rate of $25 $52,000

• At hourly rate of $15 $31,200

Page 18: Paying for Care Coordination

System costs for 375 care coordinators with benefits

@ .25• Advanced practice RN $34,125,000• Social worker $24,375,000• Certified paraprofessional $14,625,000

• Plus Estimate $2,000,000 in system oversight cost\

• -> Cost is between $16 and $36 million

Page 19: Paying for Care Coordination

How are costs spread across system

• Cost of care coordination for CYSHCN per CYSHCN

• Range is $80 to $180/year

• Cost of care coordination for CYSHCN per child• Range is $11 to $24/year

• 24% of Washington CYSHCN are enrolled in Medicaid

• Assume FFP covers ½ of 24% of total cost • State cost would be reduced by $2-$4 million

Page 20: Paying for Care Coordination

Does care coordination produce savings?

Compare costs of care coordination to family costs– 12% of Washington families of CYSHCN exceed $1,000/year out

of pocket– Assume each of those families spends exactly $1,000/year– Then those families ALONE spend $24 million/year

Possible sources of savings due to care coordination– Inpatient care

• Number of hospitalizations or LO• Cost of hospitalization/CSHCN almost four times cost/child

nationally– Specialty visits

• Cost for physician services for CSHCN more than two times cost/child nationally

Page 21: Paying for Care Coordination

Sources for estimating cost of statewide care coordination

• Census http://www.census.gov/prod/2006pubs/07statab/pop.pdf

• Percent CSHCN http://cshcndata.org/Content/States.aspx

• Salary per care coordinator http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oessrcst.htm

Page 22: Paying for Care Coordination

The Catalyst Center on Financing and Coverage for CYSHCN

• Our priorities– Medical debt among families of CYSHCN– Cover more kids through Medicaid buy-in– Reduce gaps through Catastrophic Relief– Enhance quality through financing of care

coordination

• Our team– Carol Tobias, Susan Epstein, Sally Bachman, Meg

Comeau, Deborah Allen– Find us at http://www.bu.edu/hdwg/– Contact me at [email protected]