1 / 40

Managing Diabetes The Challenge of Multiple Chronic Conditions

This article explores the challenges of managing diabetes alongside other chronic conditions, and discusses gaps in affordability, quality, evidence, and care delivery. It also examines the importance of personal lifestyle choices and provides potential solutions to improve care delivery and outcomes.

bartz
Download Presentation

Managing Diabetes The Challenge of Multiple Chronic Conditions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Managing DiabetesThe Challenge of Multiple Chronic Conditions James M Schibanoff MD Editor-in-Chief Milliman Care Guidelines

  2. Diabetes Today Type I accounts for 5-10% of diabetes Type II accounts for 90-95% and increasing Prevalence in adults 9.6% (20.8 million Americans) Diabetic adults twice as likely to die as non-diabetics of same age Leading cause of blindness ages 20-74 Leading cause of end-stage renal disease

  3. Diabetes Today In comparison with other chronic diseases, diabetes is relatively well understood and there is broad-based agreement about how to manage it, but…. • National Healthcare Quality Report 2005 (AHRQ) • Hb A1c test performed within year = 90% • Hb A1c level <7% = 39.8% • About 50% of patients do not follow their diabetes medication prescriptions

  4. Patients with Multiple Chronic Conditions

  5. The Challenge is Filling the Gaps • Affordability • Quality • Evidence • Care Delivery • Personal Life Style

  6. Affordability Gap • Milliman Medical Cost Index = $13,000 per year per family DISTRIBUTION OF FAMILY INCOME, UNITED STATES, 2002 Average income $66,970 (Median about $50,000) SOURCE: Bureau of the Census website http://ferret.bls.census.gov/macro/032003/faminc.

  7. Insurance Premium vs. Income SOURCE: Carroll, John. Erosion of Employer-Sponsored Health Care. Managed Care. January 2007, Volume 16, Number 1, 18-29. Retrieved at www.managedcaremag.com.

  8. Is Medicare headed for insolvency?

  9. Question: Has current approach to disease management made medical care more affordable?Answer: Probably not • Objective studies in literature equivocal • Medicare Coordinated Care Demonstration: 2 year results • Difficult to measure • Randomized controlled trials uncommon • Selection bias • Regression to mean

  10. Regression to mean illustration SOURCE: Ortne, Nick. Milliman Research Report. Insight into Two Analytical Challenges for Disease Management. April 2004. Retrieved at www.milliman.com.

  11. Are we getting our money’s worth?

  12. Quality Gap

  13. Evidence Gaps Triple challenge: • Knowledge created at faster rate than we can apply to patient care • Clinical questions growing at faster rate than can be answered by traditional research methods • Current research methods have serious limitations

  14. National Library of Medicine MEDLINE • Contains 15 million citations • 5,000 journals in 37 languages • 2,000-4,000 references added daily (623,000 in 2006)

  15. Evidence Gaps Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard of evidence but apply only to select populations with a low comorbid disease burden. For patients with multiple comorbidities, medication intolerances, poor adherence, or limited cognition, the evidence base is largely nonexistent

  16. Steps in the Knowledge Chain 7 Steps each with a 20% drop off leads to 21% adoption rate

  17. Care Delivery Gaps Coordination of care: fragmented care leads to omissions and overlaps

  18. Care Delivery Gaps: Health Plan • Adverse selection and retention • Plan turnover • Financing disincentives • Helping the competition

  19. Health plan vs Carve-out disease management • A single Carve-out DM vendor could: • Eliminate adverse selection and competitive disincentives • Portable across insurers • Separate ordinary care from diabetes care • Duplicate infrastructure of health plan and vendor

  20. Care Delivery Gaps: Physicians • Impending shortage of primary care physicians • General internists vastly outnumbered by medical subspecialists • Fewer general internists are entering practice • Generalists are paid considerably less than specialists

  21. Why are Primary Care Physicians Vital to Chronic Disease Management?

  22. Family Medicine Residency Positions and Number Filled by U.S. Medical School Graduates

  23. Proportions of Third-Year Internal Medical Residents Choosing Careers as Generalists, Subspecialists, and Hospitalists

  24. Personal Lifestyle: Chronic Disease Care Differs from Acute Care Patient behavior is the most important determinant of outcome

  25. Is it all bad news? Help is on the way …… • Care Delivery • Practice redesign • Personal Health Record • Care coordination tools • Peer support models • Evidence • Quality

  26. Care delivery: Medical home proposals • Personal physician to: • Coordinate and facilitate patient’s care • Advocate for and guide patient through complex health system • Assume accountability • Components are: • Multidisciplinary team • Clinical decision support tools to guide decision making at point of care • Ongoing plan of care • Enhanced access to care (email, etc) • Quality outcomes • Health information technology • Self-management support

  27. Medical home versus current disease management approaches • Current disease management relies on care managers provided by health plan or contracted disease management company • Emphasis is on relationship of care manager and patient with periodic input requested from patient’s physician • Current disease management more inclined to have single disease focus • Accountability diffuse

  28. Medical home requires • Change in traditional role of physician • Redesign of practice • Considerable new technology • New reimbursement system for qualifying practices • Care coordination fee (capitation model) • Fee-for-service visit fee • Pay-for-performance incentive

  29. Is the medical home concept effective? Current best evidence is favorable but is either indirect or preliminary

  30. Information Technology support of medical home • Patient registries • Reminder systems • Personal health record (PHR) • Interoperable • Portable • Guidelines and care coordination tools

  31. DiabetesAssessment

  32. Quality Improvement • Quality measure development • Ambulatory Quality Alliance (AQA) • National Quality Forum (NQF) • Joint Commission • Public reporting • Pay-for-performance

  33. The “new” evidence concepts • “The rapid-learning healthcare system” • “Practice-based evidence”

  34. Personal lifestyle improvement:Self Management • Increasing role of peer support: • Information support • Emotional support • Shared problem solving • Leads to increased • Confidence (self-efficacy) • Perceived social support • Understanding of self-care

  35. Affordability?

  36. Prediction In comparison with other chronic diseases, diabetes is relatively well understood and there is broad-based agreement about how to manage it, and… Our healthcare system will deliver superior diabetes care through innovations in care delivery, evidence, technology, and quality improvement

More Related