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Bonner, Carolyn & Boyd, Barbara (January 6, 1997). Managed care: threat or opportunity for home health? Online Journal of Issues in Nursing Available http://www.nursingworld.org/ojin/tpc2/tpc2_5.htm © 1997 Online Journal of Issues in Nursing
Article published January 6, 1997 MANAGED CAREThreat or Opportunity for Home Health? Carolyn Bonner, RN, BSN
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...it is not uncommon for patients referred to home care to either go without care for two to three weeks or have the home health agency provide care without authorization.
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There is a tendency for the physician groups to micro-manage care, focusing on short-term savings at the expense of potential long-term losses. Many of the physician offices do not have the staff or systems to oversee the authorization, approval and utilization process. Consequently, it is not uncommon for patients referred to home care to either go without care for two to three weeks or have the home health agency provide care without authorization.
There are two types of liability risk for the home health providers that drive decisions: clinical liability and financial liability. Home health providers make decisions while weighing these two types of risk. Further, some physician groups use their own office staff to provide care in the home. These physician groups may be unaware of the licensing and/or certification requirements and the standards needed to provide quality home health care.
The Northwest health care environment is unique in many ways. While the overall HMO penetration is not great, since 1947, the Northwest has had the presence of Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound (GHC). This HMO has done much to influence the health care practices in this area. Hospital LOS's are shorter than the national average (Washington State is 4.9 days, in contrast to 6.7 days nationally). Home health providers also have shorter LOS and reduced visits per case. (Washington State is approximately 30 visits per case in contrast to 68 visits per case nationally.)
An environmental factor may be that the Northwest seems to attract or foster healthy life styles. Consumers tend to be more independent in their care and have higher expectations. There is less utilization of home health aide services and more use of professional staff. The health care staff are frequently unionized in the hospital setting or almost exclusively unionized, as is the case of GHC, where the co-op was started by a union. The Northwest is also dominated by non-profit health care providers. There are virtually no for-profit hospitals or health care systems. Although, there are some proprietary home health agencies, they have a small percentage of the home health market at this time.
In the home health environment, there continues to be ongoing debate around costs and quality. Home health providers struggle with the goal of how to maintain quality in this rapidly changing environment. A major obstacle to this goal is the lack of documented clinical outcomes, not just for home health, but for the patient across the entire health care system. Home health providers are in the process of actively modifying and changing the number of visits per case in the absence of concrete outcome practice data. Tools for measuring and/or tracking these system outcomes are also deficient. Most agencies are still in the process of developing these standardized tools and information systems.
Home health is eagerly awaiting the flexibility and portability of technology. Remote access and lap top computers will make assessment and interventions possible anywhere the patient is located. "Technology will so change the character, availability and usability of information that it will increasingly change the character of our lives and the function of our work." (Porter-O'Grady, 1995, p. 10) . In this virtual office, supervisors will lead a team with less face to face interactions.
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Clinical productivity is expected to improve due to reduced travel time, improved documentation and less duplication or gaps in service, which often lead to additional, unnecessary, or longer visits.
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Further, electronic and communication technology will change the services offered by home health. "A technology such as telemedicine is one vehicle that will permit providers to see more patients spread over a wide service area, at a lower cost per patient." (Remington, 1996, p. 14) . This new technology can change how an organization functions and how it is able to compete in the marketplace.
Locally, PHS is in the process of implementing a computer system that includes lap top computers with remote access for the home health staff. GHC is about one year away from implementing a similar system. These projects are a primary strategy to reduce costs while maintaining quality. Clinical productivity is expected to improve due to reduced travel time, improved documentation and less duplication or gaps in service, which often lead to additional, unnecessary, or longer visits. Administrative productivity is also expected to improve due to an elimination of manual processes and a reduction in duplication or hand-offs. In addition, these endeavors will electronically connect home health staff to physicians in clinics and staff in the institutional settings.
Both GHC and PHS have structured themselves based on the type of organization they are and how reimbursement mechanisms have been established. PHS has traditionally been a fee-for-service organization while GHC had capitated reimbursement. As data in the following table show, each organization is expanding the types of visits that they include. For example, PHS in promoting managed care contracts has established a specialized home health team to handle these contracts. In contrast, GHC has adapted its structure to include the fee-for-service Medicare. While GHC now has the option of making more home visits per patient, under Medicare fee-for-service, there have been no changes in policy or practice regarding the number of visits per patient between fee-for-service and managed care. The slight increase noted in 1996 managed care visits is probably a result of increased acuity driven by decreased hospital LOS (see GHC data below). The table below demonstrates the number of visits per patient for the years 1990 and 1996.
GHC PHS 1990 1996 1990 1996 Fee-for-Service * 7.3 26.5 17.4 Managed Care 10.0 10.0 ** 10.0 * = No Fee-for-Service ** = No Managed Care Visits/Case Comparison
A strong belief exists that to achieve positive clinical and financial outcomes, one must track interventions and outcomes across the entire system. This concept supports the model of an integrated health care system where all components of care are interlinked. Capitation and managed care also reinforce the need for an integrated delivery system. Components of prevention, smooth and predictable transitions across the continuum of care, and care that is provided in the right place at the right time must all be present for quality care to occur. GHC and PHS are both attempting to create these integrated systems.
Even within an integrated health care system, home health providers must position themselves within the structure to ensure a strong voice for home health. Home health care is often overlooked as an alternative to other care settings. Home health providers need to advocate by asking the question: "What would it take to allow this patient to be at home?" (Always with the realization that some cases are not appropriate or cost effective in the home). It is here where the historical roots of home health, which started within community health, are valuable. Unfortunately other factors often impact a patient's ability to have home health care and to achieve a positive clinical outcome.
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No longer do we have the luxury of attempting to meet all patient needs or applying resources in a shotgun approach.
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Historically, health care providers have had a very parental approach to care. Goals have been established and care provided with only minimal patient involvement. If we are to achieve positive clinical outcomes with fewer costs, it is clear that patients must be involved in goal setting and providing as much of the care themselves, as possible.
Home health providers, as well as the overall health care system will need to sharpen their skills at implementing the 80/20 rule, both in clinical and administrative areas. Each clinician must ask, "What are the critical items required to achieve the best results?" No longer do we have the luxury of attempting to meet all patient needs or applying resources in a shotgun approach. Instead, health care providers must take additional time to assess and plan where to apply selected resources to achieve maximum results. In this process, one must use the resources of other providers as well as the patient's resources and support systems.
Through pathways and protocols for care, an important question continually begs to be asked, "How can cost and quality exist in creative tension?" Some strategies both GHC and PHS are using to manage these tensions include:
As managed care expands as a reimbursement mechanism, the goal of gaining the best clinical outcomes focuses on the team providing the right amount and type of services instead of the number of visits per discipline. Leaders of these teams need special skills to ensure success Both GHC and PHS are in the process of expanding this concept to include the physician. At one clinic, the home health nurse spends one hour per week meeting with the clinic physicians and discussing the active home health cases. At PHS, one home health team is assigned to two large physician clinics. The key to all of these models, is communication and relationship. The physicians authorize the care and the face to face interaction with the home health nurse creates trust and continuity of services. In this way, home health becomes part of the physician's basic plan of care.
The managed care environment has implications for education and clinical practice. The home health practitioner, especially nurses, must function independently and apply critical decision-making, patient teaching and coaching, and address issues and needs beyond the purely medical model. In addition, home health practitioners must understand the health care system and be able to visualize care for patients across this continuum. They also must be willing and able to work in a variety of interdisciplinary teams to achieve positive clinical and financial outcomes. While this has been a common practice in home health, these clinical teams now must expand beyond the nuclear home health team. It must expand to teams in primary and specialty care clinics, hospitals, subacute and long-term care facilities.
Home health practitioners must have good communication skills, both written and verbal. Teaching and prevention are primary focuses for the home health practitioner.
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Home health practitioners must be computer literate.
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Home health practitioners must be computer literate. The need for technological connectivity to physicians and the entire health care system are upon us. The virtual home health office will create an independent practice whose only linkage to others is through technology.
Home health care in this managed environment creates opportunities for nursing research which are endless and exciting. As a result of both education and experiences in home health practice, nurses have begun to realize the importance of research to their practice and professional satisfaction in their work. As health care continues to move from the institutional setting to the community, the role of home health will continue to grow. "Although there will always be an acute care component to managing most chronic illnesses, we believe the "organizer" of the continuum of care for patients suffering from multiple chronic illnesses will be the home health agency working jointly with the patient's personal physician." (Shortell, 1996, p. 222) . Further, the health care environment is becoming more and more data driven. The combination of these two facts afford nurses the opportunity to ask, "Were the right patients identified? Were the right interventions provided? Did the interventions make a difference? Were the patients satisfied with the interventions?" and "Did the organization maximize their health care dollars?" Patient outcome studies need to be linked to nursing interventions. Home health nurses need to be committed to generate the body of knowledge that will guide this growing area of nursing practice.
Finally, a home health organization also has a role in providing a positive environment, culture and leadership to achieve and maintain quality services. All staff in the organization must be empowered to make decisions regarding the use of resources, as well as to achieve and maintain the quality of all services - administrative and clinical. Leadership must encourage risk-taking behaviors, reinforce creative models and solutions, and promote system thinking. Compensation and reward systems must acknowledge and reward those staff who strive, achieve, and maintain the quality of the services. The organization must reward those who work across the historical territorial boundaries within organizations (nursing vs. physical therapy or clinical vs. administrative). The entire staff need to work toward the best possible outcomes and strive to achieve them in the most efficient way for the entire organization and especially, the patient.
GHC and PHS have chosen to view managed care as an opportunity rather than a threat. No easy answers have been found. Their strategies for success have included new relationships and structures, new information systems, and new roles in clinical practice. Like pioneers, GHC and PHS are exploring uncharted territory. They continue to hold themselves accountable for quality outcomes as they survive and thrive in this managed care environment.
Home Care Director
Providence Home Care Services of Seattle
425 Pontius Avenue N, Suite 300
Seattle, WA 98109-5452
Carolyn Bonner is a graduate of Eastern Washington University,
Cheney, Washington, through the Intercollegiate Center for Nursing
Education, in Spokane, Washington. She has 23 years of nursing experience with 21 years in
Home Health within Washington State. She is currently Director of Homecare at Providence
Homecare/Hospice of Seattle, a large, hospital-based home health agency providing 115,000
visits
annually in the Puget Sound area. In this role, she is active in negotiating managed care
contracts,
establishing and overseeing the Quality Improvement programs and participates in several
professional associations in these areas of expertise.
Barbara Boyd, RN, BSN
Administrator Home and Community Services
Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound
83 South King, Suite 815
Seattle, WA 98104
Barbara Boyd is a graduate of Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, Washington and has 26 years experience in Public Health and home health, both in California and Washington states. She has worked in a variety of program areas, including Adult, Maternal/Child Health and Hospice. She has been a Clinical Field Instructor in Public Health Nursing for California State University, Hayward. She has been working at Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound for eight years and currently is the administrator for Home Health, Hospice, Community Parent Child Services, AIDS Care Coordination, Home and Community Volunteer Services, providing 112,000 visits annually in the Puget Sound area. This role includes the oversight of fee-for-service and managed care contracts outside of GHC, budgets, and all quality improvement initiatives for all GHC home services.
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Porter-O'Grady, T. (1995). Managing along the continuum: A new paradigm for the clinical manager. Nursing Administration Quarterly 19(3) 1-11.
Remington, L. (1996, January/February). Top predictions for 1996 in home care. The Remington Report 4 (1), 12-15.
Shortell, S. M. Et al. (1996). Remaking Health Care in America - Building Organized Delivery Systems . p. 222. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
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"80/20 rule": A rule of thumb in business that says that 80% of your results are produced by 20% of your efforts.
Return to place in article where the restrictions were discussed.