I’ve always liked the idea of
a geriatric managed care organization. I liked it back when they were called Medicare HMOs (after
they were first introduced in 1972 via an amendment to Social Security); I
liked the idea when Medicare HMOs got a new lease on life from the Tax, Equity, and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA, which launched a number of demonstration projects); I liked it when Medicare
HMOs were reincarnated as Medicare+Choice programs after passage of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997; and I liked the idea when the program was renamed
Medicare Advantage in 2003. It made sense because it encouraged coordination of
care by making a single organization responsible for outpatient, hospital, and
post-acute care; it made sense because it could offer benefits important to
older people such as glasses and, in the pre-Medicare Modernization Act era,
prescription drugs. But it’s never had a wide following. Recently, that trend
may be changing.
A new report from the Henry
J. Kaiser Family Foundation, “Medicare Advantage and Traditional Medicare: Is the Balance Tipping?” isn’t quite ready to conclude
the balance has shifted, but it presents some compelling statistics. Enrollment
in Medicare Advantage plans has been growing steadily for the past ten years.
It went from 16% in 2006 to 24% in 2010 to 31% in 2015. By way of comparison,
the highest rates previously achieved were in the late 1990s, before HMOs
generally got a bad rap and went into decline, when 15% of the Medicare
population were enrolled.
What is particularly
interesting about the new report is that it shows the tremendous geographic
variability in HMO penetration. There are areas of the country where over 50%
of Medicare enrollees have signed up for a Medicare Advantage plan (9% of
people on Medicare live in such areas) and other areas where 40-50% of enrollees
have signed up (another 21% of those on Medicare live in these parts of the
country). In fact, nearly 2/3 of those who live in counties with high rates of
Medicare Advantage use live in just 5 states: California, Florida, New York,
Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
The report is purely
descriptive. It says nothing about why more people are joining Medicare
Advantage plans. It does not even speculate. My guess is that they are
attractive primarily because they are simpler. Fee-for-service Medicare Parts A
(hospital coverage) and B (physician and lab test coverage) have deductibles
and co-pays. If your physician is a “Medicare participating physician,” he must
“accept assignment,” which means agreeing to the payment Medicare provides
without billing you for the difference between the doctor’s charge and
Medicare’s reimbursement—but if the physician is a “non-participating provider”
she can both get the standard reimbursement from Medicare and bill the patient
an additional amount. The drug benefit, Medicare Part D, makes people select
from a dizzying array of plans with varying coverage and cost.
Medicare patients, like every
one else these days, are supposed to have “skin in the game.” Economists and politicians hope that they
will choose the best “value for the money,” keeping costs down. But for many
people, the choices they have to make, both in selecting a plan in the first
place and then in deciding what tests to have and what drugs to take, are
hopelessly complicated. Medicare Advantage plans restrict choice—which can be a
very good thing if you have a wise and trusted physician narrowing the choices.
Whatever the reasons for
Medicare Advantage plans’ appeal to older patients, they offer the possibility
of providing higher quality care than the usual fragmented fee-for-service
approach to care. They offer a model for truly integrated, streamlined care, in
which physicians in the office, the hospital, and the skilled nursing facility
share information, maybe even work together. And the model is more likely to
work than are “Accountable Care Organizations,” the new form of health care
delivery that expects that health care systems will provide coordinated care
even though patients have the freedom to go to doctors and hospitals in
different systems: the organization is responsible for the cost of their patients' care but have no control over something as basic as which doctors they see or what hospitals they go to.
But if Medicare Advantage
plans are going to achieve their promise, and do more than offer patients simplicity, they are going to have to make other changes as well.
As I argued back in 1987, in an essay in the Annals of Internal Medicine on “The Impact of Health Maintenance Organizations on Geriatric Care,” these organizations can only
survive if they cut costs and the most efficient way to cut costs is by
decreasing the rate of hospitalization and, for those who are hospitalized, shortening their length of stay. That’s not so easy to do for older patients, especially if a
significant fraction of them are frail and sick. But outpatient medicine that
incorporates the principles of geriatric assessment can help, as can case
management to coordinate services. In the hospital, the use of geriatric
consultation or, better yet, special inpatient units structured to care for
frail older people (sometimes called ACOVE or Acute Care of the Vulnerable
Elderly units) can minimize the risk of functional decline and iatrogenesis.
Medicare Advantage plans need to recognize that they have an opportunity to do
the right thing for older patients—but if they fail to incorporate geriatric
know-how into their programs, they are doomed to go the way of their
ancestors.
Nice post Dr. Gillick!
ReplyDeleteI am under the impression that to date, most Medicare HMOs have not very effectively coordinated care to improve outcomes and minimize hospitalizations. Any particular ideas as to why?