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A ?Transformed" Health System. The objective is optimal population-healthRedesigned to prevent and manage chronic diseasesBetter integration of public health and medical careEvidence-based intervention and practice Prioritization and adequate funding/reimbursement of interventions that optimize
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1. Access to Health2008 Texas Indigent Health Care Association Conference Eduardo Sanchez, M.D., MPH
VP and Chief Medical Office, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas
Former, Texas Commissioner of Health
2. A “Transformed” Health System The objective is optimal population-health
Redesigned to prevent and manage chronic diseases
Better integration of public health and medical care
Evidence-based intervention and practice
Prioritization and adequate funding/reimbursement of interventions that optimize health
Best use of health information and health information technology
3. Our health care system
“an expensive plethora of uncoordinated, unlinked, economically segregated, operationally limited microsystems each performing in ways that too often lead to suboptimal performance”
(Halvorson, 2007)
4. Our health care system 54% of Americans with chronic disease skip pills and appointments because of cost
Diabetes
Heart disease
Cancer
depression
42% spent > $1000 on out of pocket medical costs
4% in the U.K.
8% in the Netherlands
More likely to have suffered from a lack of coordination of care
5. Blue Cross Blue Shield AssociationThinking About Health Care Reform Employer-based Health Insurance System
59% US
50% Texas
Variations in Cost and Quality
30 percent of care rendered today, according to some studies, is unnecessary, redundant and, in some cases, even harmful.
Cost Impact of Chronic Disease
Cut the prevalence of diabetes in half
obesity, weight management, nutrition, fitness and health risk assessment
Overview of the Uninsured
Higher mortality rate for the uninsured
6. Indigent Health Care Needs Screening and early detection services
Health education
Immunizations, management of other communicable diseases
Reproductive care, including prenatal and family planning services
Diagnosis and management of chronic health conditions (diabetes, hypertension, etc.)
Primary care
Additional medical care
7. Who are the Uninsured in Texas? They are of all ages
They are from all income groups
They live all over Texas
Most of them work
Most of them are legal, US citizens
Their population is growing
8. The Uninsured (2001 Demographic Profile of Texas Uninsured Population. Based on March 2002 CPS, US census Bureau)(2001 Demographic Profile of Texas Uninsured Population. Based on March 2002 CPS, US census Bureau)
9. Determinant of Diabetes? Persons living in low income communitiesare 80% more likely to be hospitalizedfor diabetes or related complications compared with those living in affluent areas
10. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
11. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
12. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
13. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
14. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
15. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
16. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
17. Vicious Circle of Health Cost Increaseswith High Numbers of Uninsured
18. Health Care Spending in the United States $2.1 trillion per year
$7,000 per person per year
20. Estimated Health Care Spendingin Texas $100 billion is spent on health care annually (conservative estimate)
$70 billion, physician and hospital care
$15 billion, drugs and other professional health services
$85 billion, direct client care
$13 billion (15%) spent on indigent care
23. The Real Problem:
26. F as in Fat 2008; Trust forAmerica’s Health Texas
Obesity #15
Diabetes #11
Physical inactivity #8
27. Aiming Higher: Results from a State Scorecard on Health System Performance Texas #49
Access #51
Quality #46
Avoidable hospital use & costs #48
Healthy lives #24
28. Determinants of Health
29. What Drives Health Status and Health Care Costs? CDC’s study individual’s role in their health
50% of healthcare expenses in US
ARE result personal lifestyle choices
that are detrimental and unhealthful.
Demonstrates that our health is actually more in our hands than reliance on our physicians
"The leading causes of death are related to lifestyle choices
tobacco, poor diet & physical inactivity."
CDC’s study individual’s role in their health
50% of healthcare expenses in US
ARE result personal lifestyle choices
that are detrimental and unhealthful.
Demonstrates that our health is actually more in our hands than reliance on our physicians
"The leading causes of death are related to lifestyle choices
tobacco, poor diet & physical inactivity."
30. Scrimping on Medical Care “The economic crisis is exposing further weaknesses in this country’s healthcare system. …many Americans are skimping on medications, physician visits and preventive screening in order to pay other household bills…
Some evidence suggests that many people are cutting back on drugs that fight chronic conditions like high cholesterol, high blood pressure, osteoporosis, and diabetes”
31. Health Care: Are We Getting Our Money’s Worth?
32. Changing Health Systems to Improve Health Status The health and disease paradigm has been shifting in the United States from an acute, infectious disease model of morbidity and mortality to a chronic, non-infectious model.
The systems and interventions that helped prevent and treat infectious diseases at the individual and population level must be transformed to prevent and treat chronic diseases.
The United States needs a population-based, prevention-centered health system that interrelates public health and medical care.
33. The Health Care Equation is Out of Balance Demand
Older
Heavier
More Sedentary
Un & Underinsured
Health Illiterate Supply
Increasing Access
Increasing Workforce
System Redesign
Improving Quality of Care
Improving Technology
Improving Meds
34. How to achieve balance Health promotion
and
Disease prevention
35. "Healthy choices need to bethe easy choices”
– World Health Organization's Ottawa charter
36. Framework on Population Health . . .(adapted from CDC, Public Health Action Plan to Prevent Heart Disease and Stroke)
37. The Consequences of Misplaced Priorities To maximize health, we should pursue interventions in proportion to their ability to improve outcomes
38. The Consequences of Misplaced Priorities Choosing effective services (appropriate use of things that work vs. overuse of things that don’t )
39. The Consequences of Misplaced Priorities Choosing effective services (appropriate use of things that work vs. overuse of things that don’t )
Delivering care (services delivery system improvements vs. biomedical advances)
40. The Consequences of Misplaced Priorities Choosing effective services (appropriate use of things that work vs. overuse of things that don’t )
Delivering care (services delivery system improvements vs. biomedical advances)
Preventing disease (tobacco cessation versus b-blockers)
41. The Consequences of Misplaced Priorities Choosing effective services (appropriate use of things that work vs. overuse of things that don’t )
Delivering care (services delivery system improvements vs. biomedical advances)
Preventing disease (tobacco cessation versus b-blockers)
Fostering social change (educational attainment versus medical advances)
42. Education: The Greatest Predictorof Longevity Lower education = unhealthy behaviors
Lower education = higher death rate
< 12 years of education: 615.6 deaths per 100,000 foradults 18-65
>13 years of education: 207.9 deaths per 100,000 foradults 18-65
43. The Primary Solution Mending Texas’ Fractured Health Care System Grow Texas’ primary care physician base
Create a consolidated loan repayment program for Texas’ primary care physicians and other qualified health care professionals who agree to serve in medically underserved areas
Increase funding for family medicine residency programs and primary care residency programs
Fully fund primary care pre-ceptorship programs
Invest in health information technology
Create a matching investment fund to provide HIT infrastructure for residency programs and primary care physician practices
44. The Primary Solution Mending Texas’ Fractured Health Care System Ensure Texans have access to affordable healthinsurance options
Pursue innovative, market-based approaches to reduce the ranks of the uninsured
Build upon the reforms initiated by Senate Bill 10 to use Medicaid dollars to extend private coverage for low-income parents and adults
Support funding for local public-private collaborations such as the three-share model designed to extend affordable health care and coverage for the uninsured
45. The Primary Solution Mending Texas’Fractured Health Care System Reinvest in Medicaid and CHIP
Support competitive physician reimbursement rates that keep pace with the amount it costs to provide the services, and include rewards for physicians who implement after-hours care, open-access scheduling and other features of the patient-centered medical home
Enact 12 months continuous coverage for children enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP; strengthen outreach initiatives to enroll children who are eligible but not enrolled in CHIP or Medicaid
Reduce the Medicaid “hassle factor” to entice more physiciansto participate, modernize outdated information technology, andsupport extended use of HIT such as electronic medical recordsand e-prescribing
46. The Primary Solution Mending Texas’Fractured Health Care System Support a patient-centered primary care medical home forall Texans
Assure that patients receive the right care at the right time, every time by supporting and nurturing the establishment of a medical home for every Texan
Provide incentives to physicians who adopt components of the medical home model into their practices such as after-hours care, open-access scheduling and health information technology
To provide the best care at the lowest price for their patients
47. Another consideration toImprove the Health of Texans An investment of $10 per person per year in proven community-based programs to increase physical activity, improve nutrition, and prevent smoking and other tobaccouse could save the country more than $16 billion annually(and Texas more than $1.3 billion annually) within five years.This is a return of $5.60 for every $1
48. America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) A Vision for Reform
A Vision to Assure Health Coverage for All Americans
SCHIP reauthorization
Medicaid eligibility for adults < 100% FPL
49. Community-oriented Primary-care Health System
50. “One of the first duties of thephysician is to educate the masses not to take medicine”
Sir William Osler (1849-1919)
51. “Healthy choices need to
be the easy choices”.
World Health Organization’s Ottawa charter
52. Healthy Living Tips Eat smart
Be active
Avoid tobacco
Stay connected
Sleep plenty
Learn to learn
53. Access to Health2008 Texas Indigent Health Care Association Conference Eduardo Sanchez, M.D., MPH
VP and Chief Medical Office, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas
Former, Texas Commissioner of Health