WASHINGTON—At a time when everyone is
looking for ways to reduce health care costs in America, using commercial
disease management programs to reduce the fee-for-service Medicare costs
associated with chronic conditions among senior citizens seems like a practical
approach.
Rather than managing chronic conditions with
traditional care that includes physicians and clinical visits, commercial
disease-management models rely on teams of health coaches, usually in remote call
centers, to enhance beneficiaries' knowledge and ability to care for themselves
as well as coordinate services across providers.
Unfortunately, commercial disease management
models did not reduce hospital admissions or emergency room visits or result in
cost savings in a study of nearly 250,000 Medicare patients conducted by
researchers at RTI International for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services.
The study is published in the Nov. 3 issue of
the New England Journal of Medicine.
"While this would appear to be an
innovative way to reduce Medicare expenditures, managing the care of older
patients through telephone contact or an occasional visit does not achieve the
cost savings Congress had hoped for when it mandated the Medicare Health
Support Pilot Program," said Nancy McCall, ScD, a senior health economist
at RTI International and the study's lead author. "Our results suggest
that for such programs to be effective, they would need to be supplemented by
intensive, costly, personal clinical attention."
The study, which included almost 250,000
patients randomly assigned to a commercial program for disease management or
usual care, found that commercial disease-management companies had no success
in reducing hospital admissions or emergency room visits among fee-for-service
Medicare beneficiaries and had only limited success in improving the processes
of care.
The results also showed that commercial
disease-management programs achieved only modest improvements in
quality-of-care measures and had no demonstrable reduction in the use of acute
care or the costs of care.
The researchers suggest that the commercially
based disease-management model may not work for Medicare, in part because the
care of older, chronically ill patients is difficult to manage. They are more
likely than younger people to have new acute conditions such as stroke,
pneumonia or a hip fracture.
The authors also found that the health coaches
in the disease-management program were not integrated into the patient's
primary health care team, which hindered their ability to interact directly
with the patient's primary care providers and facilitate changes in medical
care plans made by the primary care provider.
As part of the Medicare Modernization Act of
2003, Congress required the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to test
the commercial disease management model in the fee-for-service program.
Nancy McCall
RTI International
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