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Aligning Hospital and Physician P4P – The Q-HIP SM /QP-3 SM Model Rome H. Walker MD February 28, 2008
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Aligning Hospital and Physician P4P – The Q-HIPSM/QP-3SM Model

Rome H. Walker MD

February 28, 2008

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A Concerted Effort

“…Because the rewards are based on shared performance, the program is intended to create incentives for competing physician groups to work together with hospital administration in a cooperative manner to achieve continuous quality improvement.”

Congressional Testimony of John Brush, MD, American College of Cardiology July 27, 2006

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Anthem’s Quality Evolution

Quality-In-SightsQuality-In-Sights®®: Hospital Incentive Program : Hospital Incentive Program (Q-HIP(Q-HIPSMSM))

Partnership developed in collaboration with the American College of Cardiology and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons

Quality Physician Performance Program Quality Physician Performance Program (Q-P3(Q-P3SMSM))

Sister program to Q-HIPSM designed to align incentives

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Q-HIPSM - Aligning with National Performance Based Incentive Principles

Q-HIPSM : • Is voluntary• Consistently applies nationally vetted and recognized evidence based indicators

• Aligns reimbursement with the practice of high quality and safe health care for all consumers

• Is transparent with external validation and auditing of data

• Based on all-payer data

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The Q-HIPSM Patient Safety Organization (PSO)

• Third-party organization specializing in healthcare quality improvement and patient safety

• Provides an unbiased evaluation of Q-HIPSM submissions and produces final performance scorecards

• Reviews material on a real-time basis and provides ongoing feedback to participating hospitals

• Caretaker of all Q-HIP data

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Q-HIPSM – A Collaborative Effort

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Quality-In-Sights® Hospital Incentive Goal

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ACC-NCDR & STS National Database

• No additional costs on top of regular registry membership – simple consent form allows data release

• ACC-NCDR: $3,195• STS Database: $2,850

• Data comes directly from registries – no additional data entry by hospitals or physicians

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Scorecard Components

Patient Safety Section (25% of total Q-HIPSM Score)

•JCAHO Hospital National Patient Safety Goals

•Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) System

•ICU Physician Staffing (IPS) Standards

•NQF Recommended Safe Practices

•Rapid Response Teams

•Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Measures

Member Satisfaction Section(15% of Total Q-HIPSM Score)

•Patient Satisfaction Survey

•Hospital-Based Physician Contracting

Patient Health Outcomes Section (60% of total Q-HIPSM Score)

ACC-NCDR Section•7 ACC-NCDR Indicators for Cardiac Catheterization and PCI

JCAHO National Hospital Quality Measures•Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) Indicators•Heart Failure (HF) Indicators•Pneumonia (PN) Indicators•Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP)•Pregnancy Related

CABG Indicators•5 STS Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) Measures

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Q-HIPSM Hospitals in Virginia

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Q-HIPSM in Virginia• 65 hospitals participating in Q-HIPSM in Virginia

• >95% of Anthem inpatient admissions in the Commonwealth of Virginia

• Rural, local and tertiary care hospitals

• Measurement period runs July-June; started in 2003

• Outside Virginia:

• Northeast Region (ME, NH, CT): 32 hospitals• Georgia: 21 hospitals• New York: Pilot/Rollout Phase• California: Pilot/Rollout Phase

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Q-HIPSM Model Adoption in WellPoint States

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Encouraging Developments

• Multiple hospitals report Q-HIPSM scores to their boards of directors annually.

• A number of hospitals include Q-HIPSM scores as part of their own internal corporate performance reporting

• A major academic medical center ties Q-HIPSM scores to front-line staff salary bonuses

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“This is a win-win situation in my mind. As health care providers, we always strive to do the right thing for our patients. The reality is this sometimes costs more in terms of putting in place new structures and processes to support a better way of delivering services.”

Ron Clark, MD, Chief Medical Officer, VCU Health System

Provider Perspectives

“We perceive Q-HIP to be a successful program that positively contributes to successful outcomes for our most important people—our patients. Ultimately, that is why we exist.”

Larry Fitzgerald, Chief Financial Officer, University of Virginia Health System

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Q-HIPSM – Why it Works• No “Black Box” – measurement methodology, metric

specifications all transparent to participants

• Third party administrator – unbiased evaluation by the PSO

• Collaboration is critical (success is directly proportional to involvement of key personnel)

• Financial incentives can lead to a higher organizational prioritization

• Alignment of physician and hospital goals focuses efforts

• Adoption of national quality metrics

Communicate, Collaborate, and Build Consensus!

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Q-P3SM Program

• Q-P3SM is Anthem’s performance based incentive program (Pay-for-Performance) for physicians

• Opportunity to reward high quality performance

• Collaborated with the American College of Cardiology and the Society of Thoracic Surgeons

• Researched published guidelines, medical society recommendations and evidence-based clinical indicators

• Programs implemented in 2006

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The Q-P3SM Market Share Approach

• Results determined based on all group facilities – scores are weighted by indicator based on market share at each facility

• In the example above, the score for each indicator at each hospital is multiplied by the group’s % market share at that facility. • The total weighted scores for each facility are then combined to produce the final score of 25.00.

Indicator

Hospital A (60% market share) Hospital B (40% market share)

Result ScoreWeighted Score

Result ScoreWeighted Score

Indicator A 2.2% 10.00 6.00 3.0% 0.00 0.00

Indicator B 95% 15.00 9.00 84% 7.50 3.00

Indicator C 54% 5.00 3.00 66% 10.00 4.00

Total N/A 30.00 18.00 N/A 17.50 7.00

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The Benefit of a Shared Approach

• Physician groups can’t rely on one hospital’s exceptional performance and hospitals don’t benefit from any one group practice

• Best Practice sharing is facilitated by physician involvement at various hospitals

• “Competing” physician practices are given incentive to work together to achieve common goals

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“Hospitals, physicians and health plans must work together to provide high-quality care to patients. Anthem has taken a leadership role in promoting and supporting true hospital/physician quality alliances in Virginia and its Q-HIP and Q-P3 programs are using pay-for-performance programs to provide incentives for participation and for achieving consensus-based performance thresholds designed to improve the quality of care for patients.”

Jeff Rich, M.D., Chairman STS Taskforce on Pay for Performance

Provider Perspectives

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Q-P3SMSM - Cardiology

• Voluntary Program – participating physicians account for 83% of market share

• Based on an all-payer data base except for the pharmacy measure

• Mirrors QHIP indicators to align incentives

• Final Scorecard results are based on hospital market share

• Rewards are based on excellence

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Q-P3SM Cardiology Scorecard Components

JC AMI Section

• Aspirin at arrival

• Aspiring prescribed at discharge

• ACEI/ARB for LVSD

• Beta blocker at arrival

• Beta blocker at discharge

• Smoking cessation advice

JC HF Section

• LVF assessment

• ACEI/ARB for LVSD

• Discharge Instructions

• Smoking cessation advice

ACC-NCDR Section

• Rate of serious complications – diagnostic caths

• Door to balloon time for primary PCI <=90 min

• Door to balloon time for primary PCI <=120 min

• % of patients receiving Thienopyridine

• % of patients receiving statin or substitute at discharge

• Rate of serious complications - PCI

• Risk-adjusted mortality rate - PCI

Bonus Section

• Generic Dispensing - Statins

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Q-P3SM - Cardiac Surgery

• Voluntary Program – participating physicians account for 100%* of market share

• Based on an all-payer data base from the Society of Thoracic Surgery

• Mirrors QHIP indicators to align incentives

• Developed in collaboration with Virginia cardiac surgeons - Virginia Cardiac Surgery Quality Initiative

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Q-P3SM Cardiac Scorecard Components

STS Clinical Indicators

• CABG Operative Mortality Rate – Risk-adjusted

• Surgical Re-exploration – Risk-adjusted

• Prolonged Intubation – Risk-adjusted

• Pre-Operative Beta Blockade

• IMA Use

STS Discharge Medications

• Anti-platelet

• Beta Blocker

• Anti-Lipid

Point of Care Usage

• Increased Transactions

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Outcomes

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Original 8: DTB 90 min or less (Quarterly)

71.9%

77.6%

74.1%

80.4%

55.1%

67.9%

64.2%

59.7%

69.8%

58.9%

58.8%

63.3%

49.7%

50.3%54.2%

46.0%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4

DTB 90 min Linear (DTB 90 min)

*data is from original 8 cardiac care hospitals that supplied four full years of comparative data (07/2003-06/2007)

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Original 8: DTB 90 min or less (Annual)

65.5%

75.9%

49.8%

58.8%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

2003 2004 2005 2006

*Original 8 is the original 8 cardiac care hospitals that supplied four full years of comparative data.

Physician Program Implemented in

2006

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Cohorts: DTB 90 min or less (Annual)

58.79%

37.20%

65.50%

56.40%

75.00%75.90%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

Cohort 1 Cohort 2

2004 2005 2006

*Cohort 1: cardiac care hospitals that joined during Q-HIP 2003 (8 hospitals) Cohort 2: cardiac care hospitals that joined during Q-HIP 2004 (6 hospitals)

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Original 8: Serious Comp - PCI (Quarterly)

2.8%

2.3%

3.0%

2.6%

3.1%

2.3%

2.4%

2.3%

1.8%

2.2%

2.1%

4.0%

5.0%

6.1%

4.7%

5.8%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4

Serious Complications-PCI Linear (Serious Complications-PCI)

*data is from original 8 cardiac care hospitals that supplied four full years of comparative data (07/2003-06/2007)

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Cohorts: Serious Comp - PCI (Annual)

5.40%

2.90%

4.40%

2.90%

2.20%

2.70%

2.50%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

Cohort 1 Cohort 2

2003 2004 2005 2006

*Cohort 1: cardiac care hospitals that joined during Q-HIP 2003 (8 hospitals) Cohort 2: cardiac care hospitals that joined during Q-HIP 2004 (6 hospitals)

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ACE/ARB for LVSD: Q-HIPSM vs National

80%

75%

82%

84%

89%

83%

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

90%

95%

100%

National Q-HIP

2004 2005 2006

• Q-HIP: average for the 39 facilities that submitted data for Q-HIP 2004-2006• National: national average (source – Hospital Compare). Note 2006 data one quarter behind (2Q06-1Q07)

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Discharge Instructions: Q-HIPSM vs National

50%

59%60%

71%

78%

65%

40%

45%

50%

55%

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

90%

National Q-HIP

2004 2005 2006

• Q-HIP: average for the 39 facilities that submitted data for Q-HIP 2004-2006• National: national average (source – Hospital Compare). Note 2006 data one quarter behind (2Q06-1Q07)

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Pre-Op Beta Blockade: Q-HIP vs National

79.40%

73.90%

50%

55%

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

90%

95%

100%

National Q-HIP

*Q-HIP: average for the 13 facilities that submitted data for 2006 National: national average during 2006 (source – STS National Registry).

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ROI Challenges

• Varying base reimbursement methods

• Wide ranging starting reimbursement levels

• Physician programs still new – outcomes analysis just beginning

• Care must be taken to recognize external forces and identify unique “change”

• Not all indicators are “created equal”

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Summary

• Marketplace is looking for a solution

• A demonstrated impact on quality of care for cardiology

• Feeds into hospital transparency efforts

• Drives alignment between hospitals and cardiac specialists

• Win-Win solution for providers, members and employers

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Questions?