Provider Payment Arrangements Flashcards

1
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Types of Risks (List, Define)

A
  • Utilization Risk: Change in utl resulting from payment model and profit impact
  • Technical Risk: Contract’s technical elements not matching population/circumstance
  • Insurance Risk: Normal variation in demand for services over time and difference in utl
  • Performance Risk: Relates to inefficiency, suboptimal quality, and high cost of care
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Types of Payment Models

A
  • FFS
  • Global Cap
  • Shared Savings
  • DRG/Case Payments
  • Bundled Payments
  • Reference Pricing
  • Provider Excess Loss (PEL) Reinsurance
  • Pay-for-Performance (P4P)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

General Pricing Process

A
  1. Select and review target population
  2. Revisit service delivery model to make sure it is appropriate for population
  3. Select payment model
  4. Projecting and model cash flows
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Quality Domains

A
  • Access to Care
  • Structure of Care (Appropriate providers)
  • Process of Care (Screenings)
  • Outcome of Care
  • Experience of Care (Surveys)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Factors Considered by Actuaries when Modeling Program Payments and Cash Flows

A
  • What unintended behaviors may occur due to incentives created by payment model?
  • What other factors would jeopardize achievement of forecasted results?
  • How will results achieved during model test be replicated?
  • Will structure of payment model change over time?
  • Will there be phased-in approach?
  • How will the payment model promote continuous improvement of services?
  • What key factors may affect this progression?
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

FFS Risks

A
  • Utilization = As utl increases, provider profit increases
  • Technical = Low
    • Easy to design and implement
  • Insurance = Low
    • Not at risk for year-to-year variation of population
  • Performance
    • Risk if claim admin don’t monitor nonspecific codes
    • Payer Performance Risk = Providers choose higher cost, clinically equivalent treatment
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Global Cap Risks

A
  • Utilization = As utl increases, provider profit decreases
  • Technical = High
    • Responsible for paying claims
    • Allocate money among various physicians
  • Insurance = High
    • Actual costs of members are higher than average included in cap rate
  • Performance
    • Risk for financial responsibility of patient’s care
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Shared Savings Risks

A
  • Utilization = Depends on contract
  • Technical = High
    • Calculation and distributing shared dollars
  • Insurance = High Medium
    • Cost of mbrs can be > benchmark due to yearly variation
    • New costly procedure
    • Changing demographics
  • Performance
    • High for 2-sided models
    • Low for 1-sided
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

DRG/Case Rates Risks

A
  • Utilization
    • Admits increase, profits increase
    • LOS increases, profits decrease
  • Technical = Low-Medium
  • Insurance = Low
    • Risk of higher than average LOS
  • Performance
    • Discharging patients too early = increases readmits
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Bundled Payments Risks

A
  • Utilization
    • Episodes increase, profits increase
    • Providers must decrease preventable services to make profit
  • Technical = High
    • Gain-sharing between physicians and hospitals
    • Defining episode and treatment is complex
  • Insurance = Medium
    • Risk of higher than average episode cost
  • Performance
    • Consistent communication between care team
    • Gain-Sharing based on quality outcomes
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Reference Pricing Risks

A
  • Utilization
    • Mbrs less likely to utilize as OOP share increases
  • Technical = High
    • Educating PHs on reference price
  • Insurance = Medium
    • Shifts risk away from insurer/provider; Patient is responsible for costs above reference price
  • Performance
    • If patients don’t understand arrangement, they can be unhappy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

PEL Reinsurance Risks

A
  • Utilization
    • Lower for health system
    • Higher for reinsurer
  • Technical = Varies by contract
  • Insurance
    • Provider has risk for higher than average costs that fall below limit
  • Performance = depends on contract
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

P4P Risks

A
  • Technical
    • Measuring quality metrics = complex
  • Performance = increased
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Medicare FFS Allowed Amounts

A

Combo of Geographic Practice Cost Index (GPCI) and Relative Value Units (RVU)

RVU Components

  • work/practice cost (w)
  • Facility/cost of living (f)
  • Malpractice (m)

Medicare Allowed Amount = sumproduct of GPCI and RVUs * Conversion Factor

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Pioneer ACO Model

A
  • For organizations already providing some aspect of care coordination
  • Structure = similar to 2-sided MSSP
  • Program has more risk and more reward
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Considerations While Negotiating Commercial ACO Contract

A
  • Target Costs
  • Risk Adjustment
  • Trend
  • Shared Savings
  • Attribution categories
  • Random variation
  • Stop loss
  • Data and Reports
  • Quality
  • Infrastructure
17
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Basic Steps for Pricing Bundled Payment

A
  1. Obtain claims data
  2. Select DRGs/conditions for which cost of services will be bundled
  3. Define episode (Anchor stay, post-discharge period)
  4. Define exclusion criteria
  5. Estimate the cost of the bundle
  6. Identify savings opportunities
18
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Disadvantages of Bundled Payments

A
  • Difficult to administer and too costly for some providers
  • Claims data doesn’t indicate severity of disease
  • Data includes only costs that are reimbursable
  • Changes in treatment should be factored into price
  • Can be variations in cost of devices
  • If doctor is responsible provider, they choose where procedure happens
19
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Issues with Pay-For-Performance

A
  • Unintended incentive to avoid most severely-ill patients
  • Gaming system by miscoding
  • Selecting patients on basis of likelihood of positive outcome
  • Compliance with treatment protocols rather than need
  • Unmeasured objectives could be ignored
  • Contract may not generate enough revenue at risk to cover costs
20
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Functions of PCMH

A
  • Comprehensive care
  • Patient-centered
  • Coordinated care
  • Accessible services
  • Quality and safety
21
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Best Practices in Provider Payment Arrangements

A
  • Understand exposure, volatility, probability, severity, time horizon, and correlation to risk
  • Actuary = quantify and model risk
  • Payment Reform Team = understand utl/tech/insurance/performance risk
  • CFO: set budget to maintain ROI of payment model
  • Clinicians: Provide high quality care to achieve good outcomes
  • Policymakers = address systematic issues
22
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

Qualities Inherent in Organizations that Succeed Under Payment Reform

A
  • Highly integrate system
  • Effective care management
  • More efficient health system than rest of market
  • Select and restricted networks
  • Collab between providers and payers
  • Reasonable methods to establish cap/episode payments
  • Equitable allocation of capitation payments among providers
23
Q

Provider Payment Arrangements

How Have the Mechanics Improved of Payment Models that Incorporate Provider Risk?

A
  • More clinical integration
  • EMR
  • Widespread use of clinical guidelines
  • Health plan incentives to transfer risk
  • Refined risk adjustment methods
  • Experience from current success and past failures
  • Quality and cost pressure on providers to transform health care system
  • Increased transprency