Engaging Primary Care Providers to Reduce Unwanted Clinical Variation and Support ACO Cost and Quality Goals: A Unique Provider-Payer Collaboration.


Journal

Population health management
ISSN: 1942-7905
Titre abrégé: Popul Health Manag
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101481266

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
08 2019
Historique:
pubmed: 18 10 2018
medline: 28 3 2020
entrez: 18 10 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

This project was undertaken to reduce unneeded variation among practicing primary care clinicians participating in an accountable care organization (ACO) and to raise quality and reduce costs. This real-world, quasi-controlled experiment compared ACO target improvements between 3 participating geographic regions and members within the ProHealth ACO against nonparticipating regions and members. The authors used a novel care standardization initiative to engage participating providers. This was a 2-year longitudinal study with 6 rounds of serially measured provider care decisions and customized individual and group improvement feedback. Participating providers cared for online patient simulations as they would actual patients, and their care decisions were scored against evidence-based guidelines. This approach generated significant increases in evidence-based quality scores (+27%) and reductions in unneeded testing (-55%) in the patient simulations. Improvements in the online simulated patients correlated with improvements in patient-level ACO quality measures, which showed gains above and beyond the quasi-control group. Reductions calculated for spending on unneeded tests and specialist referrals exceeded $4.8 million. This study found that supporting practicing physicians in ACOs with evidence-based feedback significantly improved care and cost-efficiency.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30328782
doi: 10.1089/pop.2018.0111
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

321-329

Auteurs

Trever B Burgon (TB)

1QURE Healthcare, San Francisco, California.

James Cox-Chapman (J)

2ProHealth Physicians, Inc., Farmington, Connecticut.

Catherine Czarnecki (C)

3Aetna Accountable Care Solutions, Hartford, Connecticut.

Robert Kropp (R)

3Aetna Accountable Care Solutions, Hartford, Connecticut.

Richard Guerriere (R)

2ProHealth Physicians, Inc., Farmington, Connecticut.

David Paculdo (D)

1QURE Healthcare, San Francisco, California.

John W Peabody (JW)

1QURE Healthcare, San Francisco, California.
4University of California, San Francisco, California.
5University of California, Los Angeles, California.

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Classifications MeSH