Jeffrey Hogan
Northeast Regional Manager
Rogers Benefit Group
Few states have done as much as Massachusetts (MA) over the last 30 years to lower healthcare costs, improve quality and outcomes and, in general, to innovate.
Last week the MA Health Policy Commission issued its 2019 Annual Health Care Cost Trends Report documenting wins, losses, and opportunities for change.
Romney Care was passed in 2006 and, in 2012, the state passed a sweeping
initiative to focus on a healthcare growth target and transparent metrics for
evaluating healthcare performance statewide.
Despite significant initiatives,
the state reports slippage in many metrics, including burdensome cost increases
for employers and their employees.
The report points to issues that now vex healthcare policy makers in every state, including medical debt burden, unaffordable premiums and cost shift to employees through plan design and premium share.
The report points to issues that now vex healthcare policy makers in every state, including medical debt burden, unaffordable premiums and cost shift to employees through plan design and premium share.
Further, the report calls for employers to get off
the sidelines and to actively “work collaboratively toward [making the
marketplace] a more high value system.“ Massachusetts provides some of the best
healthcare at close to the highest costs in the nation.
In MA, six hospital systems dominate the market. Quality and
cost of care are MA’s biggest challenges, just as they are nationwide. Some
fascinating statistics:
●
Commercial inpatient volume decreased by 9.3%
between 2014-18 but spending per inpatient stay grew 5.2% annually between 2013
and 2018, from $14,500 to $18,700. Hospitals have become adept at upcoding or
increasing acuity and patient risk scores. These increased by 11.7% during the
same period.
●
"Hospital readmissions rate in MA is
higher than nearly every state in the US."
●
"Payments per major outpatient surgery
episode were nearly twice as high at Mass General Hospital and Brigham as the
lowest-paid high-volume hospital.”
●
Despite decreasing volumes, hospitals are
charging more and using technology to leverage risk scores for bigger compensation
opportunities.
●
The biggest hospital systems are winning while
community hospitals continue to get less volume.
Who pays for all this? Employers and their employees bear much
of the burden for these increased costs. Other key findings from the report:
●
"Health care spending growth in MA between
2016-18 absorbed almost 40 cents of every additional [dollar] earned for
families with coverage through employers, more than they took home in pay after
taxes."
●
"Between 2000 and 2018 in MA, the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) grew by 50%, while the average cost for a family premium
nearly tripled, from $7,341 to $21,801. Employees direct premium contributions
rose even faster - by a factor of nearly four - as employees paid an
increasingly larger share of premiums over this time period out of their
paychecks (increasing from 21 percent of the premium being paid by employees to
26%)."
●
"In 2017, one in four MA residents
reported having gone without needed medical or dental care due to cost, and 17%
reported having family medical debt. In 2019, one in four MA residents reported
forgoing medically necessary prescription drugs...
Employees are bearing the burden for increased costs, and are
increasingly unable to pay for necessary medical services. This isn’t a promising
trajectory.
The report covers many issues that most of us see everyday,
including inadequate primary care and behavioral health attribution, lack of
adequate ambulatory care access and steerage, out-of-control pharmacy spending
and opaque pricing, facility fees, low value care, provider pricing variation
and out-of-network billing.
Perhaps one of the most disconcerting findings in the report
relates to Alternative Payment Methods (APMs) and provider risk arrangements.
The report has an excellent accompanying chartpak that looks at these. In areas
that feature many contracted providers utilizing upside/downside risk
arrangements, employers generally benefit. These arrangements often protect the
employer and employees from costs borne by providers (complications and
infections) as part of the arrangement.
Other takeaways from the report:
- “The percent of members in global full payment arrangements decreased from 35.3% in 2016 to 31.5% in 2018.”
- “The overall rate of APM adoption across all products in MA declined from 45% in 2016 to 42% in 2018.” This is truly remarkable. We see other states making progress, influencing providers to move to Alternative Payment Methods which require provider risk and quality outcomes. The bottom line is that APMs hold providers directly accountable for the care they provide to patients via attribution. APM slippage is a negative trend.
So, in the face of apparent slippage, who does the state want to
become more involved? As part of the 2019 Summary Policy Recommendations in the
report there is a very clear recommendation for employer engagement and
consumer choice. This recommendation appears repeatedly in the report, and is a
call to arms, so to speak, for the Massachusetts business community:
“Employer Engagement and Consumer Choice. The Massachusetts business community should increase its coordinated engagement to drive changes in health care. Employers should collaborate with payers, providers, and other stakeholders to influence changes in spending and affordability, care delivery, and the promotion of a value-based market.”
The recommendation goes on to suggest the promotion of “two
sided contracts.”
Massachusetts policymakers and others have worked hard over a
thirty year period to push for healthcare innovation, access and
accountability.
Massachusetts boasts the lowest rate of uninsured residents in
the US. At the same time, MA also experiences many of the same problems that
plague other states. Employers and employees continue to bear the burden for
ever increasing hospital and drug costs, and progress with APMs has apparently
stalled or reversed.
Will employers seize the day and demand change? Will benefits
brokers and consultants finally be held responsible by employers in favor of
value-based arrangements that are fair to providers but also fair to patients
and purchasers?
The payer marketplace in MA has been slow to offer transparency
and shared savings products to employers and many benefits advisers have continued to favor the status quo. Perhaps
the findings of this new report will inspire active change and an employer
movement toward value.
Jeffrey Hogan is the Northeast Regional Manager for Rogers
Benefit Group, a national benefits marketing and consulting firm. Jeff
has been with RBG for 29 years, starting his career in Massachusetts and
expanding his territory to include all of the Northeast states. Jeff uses
an analytical approach to solving healthcare problems and has acted as a
consultant to payers and integrated health delivery systems for product
development and launch, and as a resource to brokers and employers desirous of
implementing strategies to manage their health spend. Jeff is focused on
healthcare value, payment reform, care quality and patient outcomes. Jeff
regularly appears on national and local forums focused on moving to value based
healthcare and is actively working to promote healthcare transparency in the
New England commercial marketplace. Jeff also serves as a Regional Leader
for the Leapfrog Group.