Long Term ACO Impact: Medicare vs. Medicaid vs. Commercial
By Clive Riddle, April 12, 2018
Commercial accountable care – value based payment arrangements between
purchasers and providers seem to be spreading virally. States Medicaid
accountable care initiatives are proliferating.
Will Medicare continue to
consumer the greatest share of healthcare stakeholder attributed ACO
patients and financial resources?
The April issue of
Accountable Care News
Thoughtleaders Corner ask a panel this question: “Which type of ACO
activity will have more impact on stakeholders in the long term:
Medicare, Medicaid or
commercial?”
Kirit Pandit, Co-Founder & Chief Technology Officer of VitreosHealth
responds that “I think Medicare ACO activity will have the most impact
in the long term based on where incentives are maximized. Fully
capitated plans such as Medicare Advantage and managed Medicaid plans
will have the highest incentive to reduce costs and maintain high
quality scores. This is where ACO activity will produce the best
outcomes. The per member per month costs are high to make it attractive
for providers to participate in these performance-based contracts.
However, compared to Medicare
ACOs, Medicaid has higher churn rates. This makes it challenging for the
providers to manage these members with a long-term perspective. If the
churn rates are high, chronic care management activities will not have
enough time to impact patient behavior and outcome. So the Medicare ACO
plans that are fully capitated and have minimal member churn will have
the highest impact.”
Michael Millenson, President,
Health Quality Advisors; adjunct associate professor of medicine at
Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine and author of the
book
Demanding Medical Excellence
has this to say: “Right now, it’s synergistic. Medicare is by far the
nation's largest payer, but joining an ACO is voluntary. However,
Medicare’s clout and standardization are critical. On the other hand,
Medicaid and private payers can both push their programs on providers (a
state or large employers can choose only ACOs) and be much more
innovative. Statutorily, CMS could switch all Medicare to ACOs without
additional congressional authorization. If that ever happens – with
implicit Congressional approval and definitely in the long term – this
question will have answered itself.”
William DeMarco, Founder and President, Pendulum HealthCare Development
Corporation, which has advised a wide range of ACO clients shares that
“We think after all the dust settles, Medicare will offer the biggest
impact on stakeholders. This considers total dollars and the fact that
10,000 Baby Boomers turn 65 every day and total cost of care will
continue to rise ahead of inflation – so it will always be a big number.
Medicaid will continue to be in a constant state of change on a
state-by-state basis, but will slowly follow the ACO transition that may
very well lead to more Special Needs and Dual-Eligible strategies being
promoted by states and offered by insurers, as well as provider-led
health plans that see the advantage of receiving a large capitated sum
from Medicare and Medicaid for eligible patients. I say this based upon
the number of Section 1115 waivers being sought to permit states to
offer above and beyond Medicaid benefits through ACOs and CCOs.
Commercial will always be in transition, as self-funded and fully
insured are finding big deductibles do not work and the fiduciary
accountability starts to weigh heavily on many of the purchasers of
care. What employers are interested in are ACOs that can manage the
active workers and retirees at a predictable cost. Health plans and
insurers are seeing their profitability is linked with these ACOs that
can take partial or full risk for the medical portion of the premium,
and this allows the health plan to improve administrative cost savings –
plus predict total cost of care.”
So, some collective wisdom seems to point towards Medicare continuing to
hold the strongest magnetic force attracting ACO activity. |
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