Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 Hi We are actually considering this if we decide to opt out of Medicare. We would probably charge $375 per person per year or $500 per couple per year. It would definitely make my life easier. I’d love to do it for all of our patients, but we have a relatively young, healthy population that balks at paying their $20 copay to come in once/year. So for them, it doesn’t make sense. But for our Medicare patients when no one else is accepting Medicare because SGR hasn’t been fixed, it may be worth trying. I have a friend that has no insurance that has switched to Steve and would probably pay that too, as she’s paid almost $200 in the last 2 months for multiple visits and needs regular follow-up. Downsides for the payors are for the young, healthy population. Why should they pay you $375 if the patient never comes in or only comes in once/year? They are then losing money. Of course, they are paying less for the older, sicker population, so I think long term, the insurers would save money. Another downside – more unemployment because there would need to be way fewer people working at the insurance companies because they don’t need to adjudicate individual claims and fewer people working in physician offices because they don’t need billers/coders any more. These are just my random (or not-so-random) speculations about it. Pratt Office Manager Oak Tree Internal Medicine P.C www.prattmd.info From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 7:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 One issue that would have to be addressed in that model is the question of what is that $1 a day actually paying for? Does it include procedures in the office like shave biopsies, endometrial biopsies, IUD insertions, lac repairs? If so, can they assure that one primary care practice provides essentially the same types of services as the others. What if practice A refers out all basic skin biopsies and simple lacs, endometrial biopsies and such while practice B just stops short of providing appendectomies.How to account for different patient panel characteristics. What happens when 60% or more of our patients are 70+ (or in my case 60% or more could carry a diagnosis of anxiety which means every visit is longer than average in both cases). Factoring in the overhead issue- if this were nationwide, the cost of living issue in regard to location and salaries for staff. What about me, the NP with my lower malpractice costs? Do I even get to play?I would want it designed to anticipate the many ways providers or payors could take advantage of the system. One provider could hire 10 RNs and take on 8000 patients managing them via telephone? Will there be some kind of guidelines? I would envision that a system like this would encourage physicians to hire the least expensive care providers possible- so would a doc prefer to hire 2 NPs and expand their patient panel by perhaps twice what hiring a more expensive doc (and I'm not saying either choice is preferable from a care perspective). How is quality evaluated? If the care delivery model changes significantly from what we have now and patients are more likely going to be "pushed" to use phone, email and such (seems inevitable), will the same measures used currently (or those being developed in P4P etc) adequately measure the quality? I would think that the HYH type measurement would be even more germaine to this model. HYH components including Patient satisfaction and involvement in care and knowing who is the captain of their ship would be such a simple approach with perhaps the added parameters of utilization of urgent/ED/hospital services.Jean- you are amazing! We are cheering you on.CarlaTo: < >Sent: Fri, June 4, 2010 8:13:55 AMSubject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can doso say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections)-- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 this is very helpful- I would guess that there would be some guidelines about panel size no one doc can take care of 8000 patietns well, so you might say panel size would have to be at least X and no more than Y per provider AS you say various practitioners do varying jobs-this impacts the panel size( all hiv patietns smaller panel size all young healthy families bigger size) -however this payment system equalizes out the biopsies and the hand holding ,the higher level cognitive and the iud insertion the counselling , and etc right? Under the scope of primary care. you could define quality a number of ways- preventable hospitalizations , er use, drug cost,all measurable by payors, and then the PROM stuff patient reported measures as a standardized thing hyh or equivalent how's that? I would envision this for primary care and so you'd have to say well is that psych , peds and int med and primary care and well how do you include obgyn?do you?I am not the decider of that I am just thinking the basics fp int med peds folks I am just thinking what would be the hard questions to get a pilot started there are lots of specilaist who are non procedural also, rheum and neuro ,who may make less... let s not zoom over my head I am working on a pilot idea of how you could reform primary care payment no fair asking very very very hard questions! I have no idea what to say about midlevels There is both a justifciation that much of the work of primary care can be done by them but then not all .And docs do have more trianing and higher overhead becasue of that. I n some regions there may beonly midlevels available and no doc will work there- I do not know answers about that Proably some similar sort of capitaiton at a lower level. I suspect that if you designed a pilot project partly you would earn from it HOW to expand to the situations you describe becasue those questions would come up and the working folks in the he pilot might know how to address once they trialed such a sys tem This i s helpful thank you very much I fail t o see why I am amazing but thank you Remember this idea came from Egly! If you were paying any attention at all you would be saying what is wrong w ith you why did not you do this or say that and why are you so weird or calling OTHER things that begin with " a. " ....but thank you. One issue that would have to be addressed in that model is the question of what is that $1 a day actually paying for? Does it include procedures in the office like shave biopsies, endometrial biopsies, IUD insertions, lac repairs? If so, can they assure that one primary care practice provides essentially the same types of services as the others. What if practice A refers out all basic skin biopsies and simple lacs, endometrial biopsies and such while practice B just stops short of providing appendectomies. How to account for different patient panel characteristics. What happens when 60% or more of our patients are 70+ (or in my case 60% or more could carry a diagnosis of anxiety which means every visit is longer than average in both cases). Factoring in the overhead issue- if this were nationwide, the cost of living issue in regard to location and salaries for staff. What about me, the NP with my lower malpractice costs? Do I even get to play?I would want it designed to anticipate the many ways providers or payors could take advantage of the system. One provider could hire 10 RNs and take on 8000 patients managing them via telephone? Will there be some kind of guidelines? I would envision that a system like this would encourage physicians to hire the least expensive care providers possible- so would a doc prefer to hire 2 NPs and expand their patient panel by perhaps twice what hiring a more expensive doc (and I'm not saying either choice is preferable from a care perspective). How is quality evaluated? If the care delivery model changes significantly from what we have now and patients are more likely going to be " pushed " to use phone, email and such (seems inevitable), will the same measures used currently (or those being developed in P4P etc) adequately measure the quality? I would think that the HYH type measurement would be even more germaine to this model. HYH components including Patient satisfaction and involvement in care and knowing who is the captain of their ship would be such a simple approach with perhaps the added parameters of utilization of urgent/ED/hospital services. Jean- you are amazing! We are cheering you on.Carla To: < >Sent: Fri, June 4, 2010 8:13:55 AM Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can doso say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections)-- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 This idea is very much like the "direct care" approach. There, the patient pays a certain amount per month and sees the provider whenever they need to be seen. I've looked at several plans on various provider websites, and the one I'm going to use assesses a $75 joining fee, then allows a well visit every year (a few more for infants, per the recommended schedule) and up to six total visits annually. After the sixth visit, the patient is assessed a $10 copay per visit. This offsets some of the additional cost for those patients who either "want" to be seen more often (anxiety?) or "need" to be seen more often. My monthly cost will be $30/patient, maximum of $120 per family, so it looks like I'm right there with what's being proposed. Patients will pay discounted prices for their labs and radiology above those amounts. I think it will appeal to those with high-deductible accounts. Deanna, FNP Beth's right, having a set fee per month would be low risk for larger practices (our small traditional group has around 8000 patients). These larger populations will tend towards the mean in use of services and their costs can be predicted fairly accurately. However, a solo IMP could be bankrupted quickly if his or her several hundred patients tend to be sicker or needier than average.Again, a copay system would reduce this risk for the very small practice by sharing the risk of increased costs with the patient. The alternatives, forcing small IMP practices to take on a large financial risk or forcing them into larger practices are much worse.BP Beth - I do not understand why?I am not that birght.. In a country where you have X millions of patietns and all of them have their primary care paid for why does it matter where they seek care? Y number of docs are needed to take care of X people CAn't those docs be in any setting?then folks will seek care in any style practice They all need care/all pratices are paid equally to see them.NOW ,the smaller practices are undercut by hospitlas' offering slding fees and becasue smaller practices are forced to financially cherry pick payers to stay alive.This idea puts small practices on a solid footing woudn't it So brian and Tim think there would have to be some pooling o f patients or weighting of patietns illnesses Hmm This immediaitely begins to drive us back a system of complex rules; geographical sitribution of people would be invovled--eg IHAVE to see older and sicker as that who lives here...how can you keep this simple? Forcing copays on sicker patietns does not sit well with me.... is saying if I wan t to make more money then I only take the well patietns so I can take more of them and have less work so make more dollars.What measures could you take about that? How likely is that to be a widespread problem?Could looking at quality measures help you in some way??thanks for the disussion you guys help me a lot. keep talking... On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 2:41 PM, Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97windstream (DOT) net> wrote: This system almost assures the death of the small imp micro practice. Not something I would support. Beth Sullivan, DO Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can doso say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model?thanks( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 Basing some of our pay on a per patient per month fee would be an improvement our current fee for service system. However, I would not want to base all of our pay on monthly fees. That would penalize the docs who take sicker patients and encourage dumping of high maintenance patients. A monthly or yearly fee plus a copay per visit or procedure would be ideal. this is very helpful - I would guess that there would be some guidelines about panel size no one doc can take care of 8000 patietns well, so you might say panel size would have to be at least X and no more than Y per provider AS you say various practitioners do varying jobs-this impacts the panel size( all hiv patietns smaller panel size all young healthy families bigger size) -however this payment system equalizes out the biopsies and the hand holding ,the higher level cognitive and the iud insertion the counselling , and etc right? Under the scope of primary care. you could define quality a number of ways- preventable hospitalizations , er use, drug cost,all measurable by payors, and then the PROM stuff patient reported measures as a standardized thing hyh or equivalent how's that? I would envision this for primary care and so you'd have to say well is that psych , peds and int med and primary care and well how do you include obgyn?do you? I am not the decider of that I am just thinking the basics fp int med peds folks I am just thinking what would be the hard questions to get a pilot started there are lots of specilaist who are non procedural also, rheum and neuro ,who may make less... let s not zoom over my head I am working on a pilot idea of how you could reform primary care payment no fair asking very very very hard questions! I have no idea what to say about midlevels There is both a justifciation that much of the work of primary care can be done by them but then not all .And docs do have more trianing and higher overhead becasue of that. I n some regions there may beonly midlevels available and no doc will work there- I do not know answers about that Proably some similar sort of capitaiton at a lower level. I suspect that if you designed a pilot project partly you would earn from it HOW to expand to the situations you describe becasue those questions would come up and the working folks in the he pilot might know how to address once they trialed such a sys tem This i s helpful thank you very much I fail t o see why I am amazing but thank you Remember this idea came from Egly! If you were paying any attention at all you would be saying what is wrong w ith you why did not you do this or say that and why are you so weird or calling OTHER things that begin with "a."....but thank you. On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 11:59 AM, Carla Gibson <carlygold> wrote: One issue that would have to be addressed in that model is the question of what is that $1 a day actually paying for? Does it include procedures in the office like shave biopsies, endometrial biopsies, IUD insertions, lac repairs? If so, can they assure that one primary care practice provides essentially the same types of services as the others. What if practice A refers out all basic skin biopsies and simple lacs, endometrial biopsies and such while practice B just stops short of providing appendectomies. How to account for different patient panel characteristics. What happens when 60% or more of our patients are 70+ (or in my case 60% or more could carry a diagnosis of anxiety which means every visit is longer than average in both cases). Factoring in the overhead issue- if this were nationwide, the cost of living issue in regard to location and salaries for staff. What about me, the NP with my lower malpractice costs? Do I even get to play? I would want it designed to anticipate the many ways providers or payors could take advantage of the system. One provider could hire 10 RNs and take on 8000 patients managing them via telephone? Will there be some kind of guidelines? I would envision that a system like this would encourage physicians to hire the least expensive care providers possible- so would a doc prefer to hire 2 NPs and expand their patient panel by perhaps twice what hiring a more expensive doc (and I'm not saying either choice is preferable from a care perspective). How is quality evaluated? If the care delivery model changes significantly from what we have now and patients are more likely going to be "pushed" to use phone, email and such (seems inevitable), will the same measures used currently (or those being developed in P4P etc) adequately measure the quality? I would think that the HYH type measurement would be even more germaine to this model. HYH components including Patient satisfaction and involvement in care and knowing who is the captain of their ship would be such a simple approach with perhaps the added parameters of utilization of urgent/ED/hospital services. Jean- you are amazing! We are cheering you on. Carla From: <jnantonuccigmail> To: < > Sent: Fri, June 4, 2010 8:13:55 AM Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 The idea of $365/yr/patient only works if all the patients are pooled, like a " community rating. " Then the work is averaged out for some younger and low maintenance patients with the older and high maintenance. The idea works as a general idea so the billing silliness can be removed from the equation. Could imagine a tiered design too. For example, some age groups $200, others $350, and other $500, so it generally averages out as $365/yr/pt. But if one has a panel of 20-somethings then honestly it will generally be easier load, and you can carry more patients, than if working with many 60-somethings. Finally, the insurances could track data of outside referrals and billings very easily, and then check on the main outlier docs if they are taking the monies but costing the system by not offering the care and only sending folks to other docs. But hopefully they could be out of the hairs of most docs who are doing generally the right thing. I'd love the idea! Tim Malia, MD (phone / fax) www.MaliaFamilyMedicine.com www.SkinSenseLaser.com Malia Family Medicine & Skin Sense Laser 6720 Pittsford-Palmyra Rd. Perinton Square Mall Fairport, NY 14450 -- Confidentiality Notice -- This email message, including all the attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and contains confidential information. Unauthorized use or disclosure is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not use, disclose, copy or disseminate this information. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender immediately by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message, including attachments. payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) Jean -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 I posted some thoughts separately. But I'll add that I agree with you on the balance of some, perhaps " most " payment from set fee, then a copay for a visit. The challenge then is balancing the work of visits and non-visit care ... " but doc, can't we just deal with this without a visit so I can skip the copay? I already paid the $250 fee for this care you are offering by phone/email/etc. .... " But, again, I'd prefer that system over current hassles of billing. Tim Malia, MD (phone / fax) www.MaliaFamilyMedicine.com www.SkinSenseLaser.com Malia Family Medicine & Skin Sense Laser 6720 Pittsford-Palmyra Rd. Perinton Square Mall Fairport, NY 14450 -- Confidentiality Notice -- This email message, including all the attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and contains confidential information. Unauthorized use or disclosure is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not use, disclose, copy or disseminate this information. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender immediately by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message, including attachments. payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) Jean -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 This system almost assures the death of the small imp micro practice. Not something I would support. Beth Sullivan, DO Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 Beth - I do not understand why?I am not that birght.. In a country where you have X millions of patietns and all of them have their primary care paid for why does it matter where they seek care? Y number of docs are needed to take care of X people CAn't those docs be in any setting?then folks will seek care in any style practice They all need care/all pratices are paid equally to see them. NOW ,the smaller practices are undercut by hospitlas' offering slding fees and becasue smaller practices are forced to financially cherry pick payers to stay alive.This idea puts small practices on a solid footing woudn't it So brian and Tim think there would have to be some pooling o f patients or weighting of patietns illnesses Hmm This immediaitely begins to drive us back a system of complex rules; geographical sitribution of people would be invovled--eg IHAVE to see older and sicker as that who lives here...how can you keep this simple? Forcing copays on sicker patietns does not sit well with me.... is saying if I wan t to make more money then I only take the well patietns so I can take more of them and have less work so make more dollars.What measures could you take about that? How likely is that to be a widespread problem? Could looking at quality measures help you in some way?? thanks for the disussion you guys help me a lot. keep talking... This system almost assures the death of the small imp micro practice. Not something I would support. Beth Sullivan, DO Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 along time ago I figured it as 1.00 /day for birth- age 2 then ages 50 up, with a rate of 50- 75 cents/day in between. You could have outlier very i ll 34 yr olds but less likely.Jean The idea of $365/yr/patient only works if all the patients are pooled, like a " community rating. " Then the work is averaged out for some younger and low maintenance patients with the older and high maintenance. The idea works as a general idea so the billing silliness can be removed from the equation. Could imagine a tiered design too. For example, some age groups $200, others $350, and other $500, so it generally averages out as $365/yr/pt. But if one has a panel of 20-somethings then honestly it will generally be easier load, and you can carry more patients, than if working with many 60-somethings. Finally, the insurances could track data of outside referrals and billings very easily, and then check on the main outlier docs if they are taking the monies but costing the system by not offering the care and only sending folks to other docs. But hopefully they could be out of the hairs of most docs who are doing generally the right thing. I'd love the idea! Tim Malia, MD (phone / fax) www.MaliaFamilyMedicine.com www.SkinSenseLaser.com Malia Family Medicine & Skin Sense Laser 6720 Pittsford-Palmyra Rd. Perinton Square Mall Fairport, NY 14450 -- Confidentiality Notice -- This email message, including all the attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and contains confidential information. Unauthorized use or disclosure is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not use, disclose, copy or disseminate this information. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender immediately by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message, including attachments. payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 This is basically like the capitation we tried with the HMO's. So, what went wrong there? 1. The biggest problem, I think: capitation ended up being too low for services provided (I know for some patients, we were getting less than $10/month for primary care services). 2. Incentives to get rid of sick patients (don't take good care of your cancer patients and pretty soon word gets around to not sign up with that group or doctor if you are sick, and boom, that doctor gets a bonus the next year because of lower utilization (no bone marrow transplants at all). Advertise for sports medicine, urgent care stuff and get lots of men in their 20's and 30's and either you become rich or have a lot of free time compared to taking care of Carla's anxiety patients (how DID you end up with 60%?), menopausal women, or other higher need people. 3. Friction between specialists (if they are also capitated): ortho back guy thinks PCP's should take care of back pain; PCP thinks ortho should since both get paid no more to do it. 4. Need to figure out how to incentivize good care: probably need some additional payment for visit, but not so much that things that can be handled well by phone or email or class get turned into individual office visits just for the money (like happens now under fee for service). 5. Definitely have to have some type of quality measures, lots based on patient satisfaction, but probably some others also. For example, a doctor who sees 50 people a day giving them prescriptions for unneeded antibiotics may have a lots of satisfied customers, but is he really doing the right thing? I'm sure there were others I'm not thinking of right now. Things I LOVE about it: 1. I would love to have capitated specialists that I could email or call about how to manage a patient without feeling like I was taking advantage of them or " owed " them some good referrals. 2. Incentivizes keeping people healthy. 3. Returns focus of health care system to primary care, which is where it should be, both for cost control, patient satisfaction, and long term outcomes. 4. Can you imagine how much more fun our list serve would be to read if we had no billing or coding questions?? (Not that it isn't great fun now.) you are a goddess for trying to change the system and not burying your head in the sand. Sharon Sharon McCoy MDRenaissance Family Medicine10 McClintock Court; Irvine, CA 92617PH: (949)387-5504 Fax: (949)281-2197 Toll free phone/fax: www.SharonMD.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 4, 2010 Report Share Posted June 4, 2010 Beth's right, having a set fee per month would be low risk for larger practices (our small traditional group has around 8000 patients). These larger populations will tend towards the mean in use of services and their costs can be predicted fairly accurately. However, a solo IMP could be bankrupted quickly if his or her several hundred patients tend to be sicker or needier than average. Again, a copay system would reduce this risk for the very small practice by sharing the risk of increased costs with the patient. The alternatives, forcing small IMP practices to take on a large financial risk or forcing them into larger practices are much worse. BP Beth - I do not understand why?I am not that birght.. In a country where you have X millions of patietns and all of them have their primary care paid for why does it matter where they seek care? Y number of docs are needed to take care of X people CAn't those docs be in any setting?then folks will seek care in any style practice They all need care/all pratices are paid equally to see them. NOW ,the smaller practices are undercut by hospitlas' offering slding fees and becasue smaller practices are forced to financially cherry pick payers to stay alive.This idea puts small practices on a solid footing woudn't it So brian and Tim think there would have to be some pooling o f patients or weighting of patietns illnesses Hmm This immediaitely begins to drive us back a system of complex rules; geographical sitribution of people would be invovled--eg IHAVE to see older and sicker as that who lives here...how can you keep this simple? Forcing copays on sicker patietns does not sit well with me.... is saying if I wan t to make more money then I only take the well patietns so I can take more of them and have less work so make more dollars. What measures could you take about that? How likely is that to be a widespread problem? Could looking at quality measures help you in some way?? thanks for the disussion you guys help me a lot. keep talking... On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 2:41 PM, Beth Sullivan, DO <bethdo97windstream (DOT) net> wrote: This system almost assures the death of the small imp micro practice. Not something I would support. Beth Sullivan, DO Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 I do not understand what risk are you talking about?There is no responsibility of physicians for keeping costs down as it impacts their payment-- in my hypothetical model here no mention of this How is small practice at risk? In my hypothesis I have not linked payment to expenditures or to quality - -- we have payment now that is without link to any quality ,after all. if all physicans in primary c are were paid the same certainly without some controls docs could game the system by accepting lots of excess patients to get income but would not able to provide care to all of them .. In a pilot to reform payment the hypothesis is that is we reduce the burden of billing and coding and most importnalty get away from fee for service, so then we reduce costs actually as docs can take care of more people for less cost- as -patietns do not need ot come in to the office( for expensive visits) to get care - quality might be improved becasue of guaranteed fair income independent of visit volume In a pilot if you measured quality you would see if this works and decide to extend it. i do not myslef think specialist should be paid the same way- at least procedures But that digresses I am only exploring how else you could pay PCPs. by fair payment you support small practices' sustainability yes? sorry if I am not that bright:) Beth's right, having a set fee per month would be low risk for larger practices (our small traditional group has around 8000 patients). These larger populations will tend towards the mean in use of services and their costs can be predicted fairly accurately. However, a solo IMP could be bankrupted quickly if his or her several hundred patients tend to be sicker or needier than average. Again, a copay system would reduce this risk for the very small practice by sharing the risk of increased costs with the patient. The alternatives, forcing small IMP practices to take on a large financial risk or forcing them into larger practices are much worse. BP Beth - I do not understand why?I am not that birght.. In a country where you have X millions of patietns and all of them have their primary care paid for why does it matter where they seek care? Y number of docs are needed to take care of X people CAn't those docs be in any setting?then folks will seek care in any style practice They all need care/all pratices are paid equally to see them. NOW ,the smaller practices are undercut by hospitlas' offering slding fees and becasue smaller practices are forced to financially cherry pick payers to stay alive.This idea puts small practices on a solid footing woudn't it So brian and Tim think there would have to be some pooling o f patients or weighting of patietns illnesses Hmm This immediaitely begins to drive us back a system of complex rules; geographical sitribution of people would be invovled--eg IHAVE to see older and sicker as that who lives here...how can you keep this simple? Forcing copays on sicker patietns does not sit well with me.... is saying if I wan t to make more money then I only take the well patietns so I can take more of them and have less work so make more dollars. What measures could you take about that? How likely is that to be a widespread problem? Could looking at quality measures help you in some way?? thanks for the disussion you guys help me a lot. keep talking... On Fri, Jun 4, 2010 at 2:41 PM, Beth Sullivan, DO wrote: This system almost assures the death of the small imp micro practice. Not something I would support. Beth Sullivan, DO Ridgeway Family Practice Commerce, GA 30529 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 Sorry, If ya want a well train, licensed up to date ready to go at all hours doc, I do believe that such a well trained, highly burdoned with lots of excess liability and responsibility professional should get paid... My lawyer if he would even answer the phone after 5 pm would start the chess clock going the moment he got passed, "so how are and the kids???" and we all know it. It is time to value yourselves people or nobody else is going to. It is high time to get past the outdated notion of the ever giving doctor while he drowns in a system bloated with money that never seems to get to him personally at the amounts equal to his training, knowledge, skill and output... If the drug companies can be in a totally free market, and so can WA, Sanofa, GE, Next Gen, MidMark and all the rest, then what is so wrong with finally making sure that ever primary in the country can depend on approximately $250 bucks per hour while NOT being on a Hamster Wheel.... And let's step back from the "Fetishazation of Metrics" just for the sake of appearing to actually being doing something to justify such a thing..... it is like someone says, "well prove it and measure it, use stats and research or I won't pay up, JUSTIFY your worth to me the great and powerful Oz", and all the docs, the AMA, the APA and AAFP all go running for their newest CCHIT based EMR and Stat Crunching Programs... "Oh we have to measure and prove ourselves worthy of the lousy $60 bucks per level 3 visit Medicare pays.... HELP!!!" Check out this link and article as this is a term I just stumbled upon today and I love it.... I learned stats in persuit of my Pysch degree and I too believe in allowing science to lead the way for outcomes and what is truly the best choices... that way the next Lobotomy procedure doesn't make it thru unchallenged.... BUT; The most important social benefits and pay offs are the hardest if not nearly impossible to measure... No less when and where to you decide to stop or start measuring... Only in the healthcare sector or for once do we start to properly extrapolate far outside the office visit and the carrier's claim paying and premium collection cycles and for once in our lives start to see what the price is of one bread winner staying an opiode addict and going down the drain verses the far reaching impact such a thing has not just on his healthcare costs, but those of his wife, his children, the social services he does or does not consume, perhaps even the next generation because hopefully his kids turn out better because their dad was mentally healthy and available to them and their mom and a husband and father... Oh and cops, and courts and jails and lawyers and legal aid.... Welfare and section 8 housing, food stamps, SSDI... Just where do we stop or start to measure the real outcomes of such costs benefit analysis???? It always plays against us and right back into the hands of those who care to screw us if we allow the measure to be contained only to the Medical Industrial Complex even though we can sometimes prove ourselves "worthy" even while strangled by their unfair rules and measures.... Saving an entire family from all the mental health and financial and social ruin of addiction or sever illnesses like cancer and DM, heart failure, DEATH, has such honest real world far reaching benefits and yet every day we allow these SOB's to tighten the circle and the measures ever so much more so it is harder for us to prove our real value and viability. And lastly, real IMP's as far as I'm concerned don't fall for these false gods and greed based lies of insurance and gov't based measures because real IMP's know in the hearts, it runs in their veins the knowledge that the final arbitor and judge of the value and quality of our services is none of those kinds... It is one you yourself the doc who self monitors well and most importantly the real other person in the relationship, the patient, the recipient of your end services who should also have as direct a social and monitary relationship with all of you as possible too..... Once we allow ourselves to fall for the false proficies and the premises of constantly having to chase our own tails just to prove ourselves worthy to the powers that be, we have already lost as we are already far on our way down that slippery slope into the abiss that the hamster wheel docs already find themselves on.... it is a lossing battle set up on their home ice, played by their rules, officiated by their officials.... It's turkey shoot plain and simple and we must resist the temptation to over prove ourselves other than in general studies not in any individual office or doc... No two patient panels or docs are the same and that is the human nature of the business and why different docs and patients do or don't have a personal professional relationship.... Not because the HMO measures say that any doc can reach such performance measure with any given panel of patients.... And how do you think they come up with their measures??? Do you really think it is almost every honestly based on what is best for the long term health of the patient or the practice??? Please.... http://www.centerprogressive.org/ http://www.socialedge.org/discussions/success-metrics/the-fetishization-of-metrics "GOING DOWN?????" To: < >Sent: Fri, June 4, 2010 3:31:34 PMSubject: Re: payment reform This is basically like the capitation we tried with the HMO's. So, what went wrong there? 1. The biggest problem, I think: capitation ended up being too low for services provided (I know for some patients, we were getting less than $10/month for primary care services). 2. Incentives to get rid of sick patients (don't take good care of your cancer patients and pretty soon word gets around to not sign up with that group or doctor if you are sick, and boom, that doctor gets a bonus the next year because of lower utilization (no bone marrow transplants at all). Advertise for sports medicine, urgent care stuff and get lots of men in their 20's and 30's and either you become rich or have a lot of free time compared to taking care of Carla's anxiety patients (how DID you end up with 60%?), menopausal women, or other higher need people. 3. Friction between specialists (if they are also capitated): ortho back guy thinks PCP's should take care of back pain; PCP thinks ortho should since both get paid no more to do it. 4. Need to figure out how to incentivize good care: probably need some additional payment for visit, but not so much that things that can be handled well by phone or email or class get turned into individual office visits just for the money (like happens now under fee for service). 5. Definitely have to have some type of quality measures, lots based on patient satisfaction, but probably some others also. For example, a doctor who sees 50 people a day giving them prescriptions for unneeded antibiotics may have a lots of satisfied customers, but is he really doing the right thing? I'm sure there were others I'm not thinking of right now. Things I LOVE about it: 1. I would love to have capitated specialists that I could email or call about how to manage a patient without feeling like I was taking advantage of them or "owed" them some good referrals. 2. Incentivizes keeping people healthy. 3. Returns focus of health care system to primary care, which is where it should be, both for cost control, patient satisfaction, and long term outcomes. 4. Can you imagine how much more fun our list serve would be to read if we had no billing or coding questions?? (Not that it isn't great fun now.) you are a goddess for trying to change the system and not burying your head in the sand. Sharon Sharon McCoy MDRenaissance Family Medicine10 McClintock Court; Irvine, CA 92617PH: (949)387-5504 Fax: (949)281-2197 Toll free phone/fax: www.SharonMD. com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 So here is how I would do it— $1/patient/day capitation to cover all administrative stuff—scheduling appointments, answering phone calls, e-mails, rxn refills, prior auths (although I would rather get rid of these altogether) + between $0-$1/day based on the percentage of patients in the practice who state they “get exactly the care….” off of HYH. + $10 copay/visit Positives: All traditional billing goes away. There is no fear of audits or auditors. Pay will go up. Practices are incentivized to get as many of their patients happy as possible. There is no real database analysis necessary (and therefore a lot of the current technology costs/insanity goes away). Negatives: Still may incentivize practices to ramp up numbers and not care about quality (ex. working hard to get $2/person/day might not be as lucrative as seeing 1.5+ times as many but delivering little to no care). Patients have to come up with $10. Insurances would have to do a leap of faith that the increase in payments to primary care would actually result in lower overall costs. The billing industry would mostly go away leading to rampant unemployment. Docs who are doing very well milking the current system will fight to keep it the same. Policy wonks are already rolling hard down the track of database analysis and integration of systems and policies and procedures. They speak an entirely different language (and have little understanding of what really goes on in the front lines between the doc and the patient). From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Jean Antonucci Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 You're right -- I was assuming that the "capitated rate" included all those things. If this is really just a payment for each patient to give them primary care office visits, then I think $1 a day sounds very reasonable. I like it. Thanks for the clarification, Jean. Deanna Deanna- you missed the idea I am talking about how to pay DOCS( providers) You and I think are making assumptions and getting into this RISK business that you as a doc will make less if your order more MRIs as the paymetn for them comes out of your salary?NOPE I am talking about how to pay for offciepracticeLabs and d rugs and Xrays are paid by th e payor separtely I can imagine that vaccines and "things" durable goods shall we say ? would be billed separately alsoThe dollar a day idea pays for a doc (provider) to take care of people any way they want - to do the folow up calls that keep CHF'ers out of the hospital etc to follow up on sick kids to avoid the er etc To answer questions that avoid med erros to coorinate care with a call after being seen by Ms. Neurologist etc. This idea i s in lieu of e and M's and modifiers and office cpts. On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 3:02 PM, <tolpeopleaol> wrote: How about labs and radiology? Can't imagine fitting an MRI in that amount. I think all such "things" should be carved out. Deanna, FNP payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can doso say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatevergrealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure)It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course)and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patientsSo my question--what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model?thanks( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 The one area that would need carve out, IMHO is vaccine costs. Just did a well check this week on a 15 yo gal and total bill was near $500. Most of that was to cover vaccine costs (Gardisil, varicella, adacel). Just a few of those a month would eat up that $365/year pretty quickly. Of course, I also think vaccines should be covered 100% by feds since CDC makes the recommendations and expanding the VFC program to all kids would simplify vaccine handling in the office. (We keep two separate sets of inventory and it is time consuming…) R Ramona G. Seidel, MD www.baycrossingfamilymedicine.com Your Bridge to Health 269 Peninsula Farm Road Suite F Arnold, MD 21012 410 518-9808 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 hmm- goo d point. must payment of dollar a day cover costs of " things " like iud's, vaccines, etc. thanks The one area that would need carve out, IMHO is vaccine costs. Just did a well check this week on a 15 yo gal and total bill was near $500. Most of that was to cover vaccine costs (Gardisil, varicella, adacel). Just a few of those a month would eat up that $365/year pretty quickly. Of course, I also think vaccines should be covered 100% by feds since CDC makes the recommendations and expanding the VFC program to all kids would simplify vaccine handling in the office. (We keep two separate sets of inventory and it is time consuming…) R Ramona G. Seidel, MD www.baycrossingfamilymedicine.com Your Bridge to Health 269 Peninsula Farm Road Suite F Arnold, MD 21012 410 518-9808 From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Sent: Friday, June 04, 2010 10:14 AM To: Subject: payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 How about labs and radiology? Can't imagine fitting an MRI in that amount. I think all such "things" should be carved out. Deanna, FNP payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 Are there studies to show that patients who “get exactly the care….” etc -- are healthier? I can imagine the viral URI patient who didn't get the antibiotics they wanted or the narc seaker who didn't get the narcs they wated will check " No " they didn't get the care they wanted -- but got the care they needed. Or DID get the Abx and Narcs -- and are quite happy with my care - ca-ching, extra money for me -- but I am not giving best care to the patient. Just curious. Locke, MD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 Deanna- you missed the idea I am talking about how to pay DOCS( providers) You and I think are making assumptions and getting into this RISK business that you as a doc will make less if your order more MRIs as the paymetn for them comes out of your salary?NOPE I am talking about how to pay for offciepracticeLabs and d rugs and Xrays are paid by th e payor separtely I can imagine that vaccines and " things " durable goods shall we say ? would be billed separately also The dollar a day idea pays for a doc (provider) to take care of people any way they want - to do the folow up calls that keep CHF'ers out of the hospital etc to follow up on sick kids to avoid the er etc To answer questions that avoid med erros to coorinate care with a call after being seen by Ms. Neurologist etc. This idea i s in lieu of e and M's and modifiers and office cpts. How about labs and radiology? Can't imagine fitting an MRI in that amount. I think all such " things " should be carved out. Deanna, FNP payment reform Serious question There has been a proposal to pay primary care at a bundled rate of a dollar a day for all the office care we can do so say you had a panel of 1000 patietns-->$ 365,000 gross then you can subtract out overhead, hiring a care coordaintior etc whatever grealty improves income and allows freedom to provide car e in many ways without the fee for service structure) It has been calcuated that this would allow docs freedom to take care of people in varying ways - email phone etc and reduce or eliminate the hassle of billing/coding( some records would need to be kept of course) and could improve primary care's bottom line, working conditions, abiltiy to function, and thereby increase access and hopefully quality in many way for patients So my question-- what are the possible downsides or what objections might be raised by payors or policy wonks etc , / or what have any of you encountered in pursing or thinking about such a model? thanks ( am asked to propose something here in MAIne and am preparing for possible objections) -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 " excatlyt " the care I want and need as on teh HYH tool is notexactly " what I wanted. " Are there studies to show that patients who “get exactly the care….” etc -- are healthier? I can imagine the viral URI patient who didn't get the antibiotics they wanted or the narc seaker who didn't get the narcs they wated will check " No " they didn't get the care they wanted -- but got the care they needed. Or DID get the Abx and Narcs -- and are quite happy with my care - ca-ching, extra money for me -- but I am not giving best care to the patient. Just curious. Locke, MD -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 5, 2010 Report Share Posted June 5, 2010 www.sammamishdiabetesandlipid.org/.../Improving%20Quality%20Improvement%20with%20an%20EHR%20by%.. This is one of Don 's PowerPoints- start with slide 12 or soThe " exactly " question from HYH comes out of Wasson;s work on patietn centered collaborative care and the question which does look goofy on its surface reflects that when people agree with it they are saying they have certain aspects of care see also The journal of ambulatory Care management vol 29 no 3 2006 An Introduction to Patient centered collaborative Care p 195Jean But if the PATIENT is anwering the question and they thought they needed an antibiotic and you thought is was viral and they didn't need the antibiotic. Who is right in regards to anwering the HYH tool? The patient or the doc? That was my point -- patients often know what they want and need -- but not always. Just my humble opinion. Locke, MD " excatlyt " the care I want and need as on teh HYH tool is notexactly " what I wanted. " Are there studies to show that patients who “get exactly the care….” etc -- are healthier? I can imagine the viral URI patient who didn't get the antibiotics they wanted or the narc seaker who didn't get the narcs they wated will check " No " they didn't get the care they wanted -- but got the care they needed. Or DID get the Abx and Narcs -- and are quite happy with my care - ca-ching, extra money for me -- but I am not giving best care to the patient. Just curious. Locke, MD -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!)Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questionsEmail replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2010 Report Share Posted June 6, 2010 , that was a great summary. I had been wondering some of the same things and I think I knew the answer, but couldn't delineate it that clearly. Would you mind if I passed that answer on to a couple of my professors at Columbia with whom I had discussed tracking outcomes in my new practice? Thanks, Deanna, FNP Re: payment reform But if the PATIENT is anwering the question and they thought they needed an antibiotic and you thought is was viral and they didn't need the antibiotic. Who is right in regards to anwering the HYH tool? The patient or the doc? That was my point -- patients often know what they want and need -- but not always. Just my humble opinion. Locke, MD On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 1:20 PM, <jnantonuccigmail> wrote: "excatlyt" the care I want and need as on teh HYH tool is not exactly "what I wanted." On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 3:06 PM, Locke <lockecoloradogmail> wrote: Are there studies to show that patients who “get exactly the care….†etc -- are healthier? I can imagine the viral URI patient who didn't get the antibiotics they wanted or the narc seaker who didn't get the narcs they wated will check "No" they didn't get the care they wanted -- but got the care they needed. Or DID get the Abx and Narcs -- and are quite happy with my care - ca-ching, extra money for me -- but I am not giving best care to the patient. Just curious. Locke, MD -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2010 Report Share Posted June 6, 2010 Sure, no problem. Here are the actual references. Those academics just won’t take my word for it. In no particular order… , L. Gordon & Wasson, H (2006). An Introduction to Technology for Patient-Centered Collaborative Care. JACM, Vol 29, No 3, pp 195-198 (there is the article on The Emergence of Ideal Medical Practices right after this one in the same journal. Very good summary of our initial findings). , G (2002). Going Solo: Making the Leap Family Practice Management, Feb, pp29-32 www.howsyourhealth.org Wasson and . Article on Ideal Medical Practices Family Practice Management, September 2007 http://www.aafp.org/fpm/2007/0900/p20.html Pretty cool we actually have data to prove what we say, isn’t it?? J From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of tolpeople@... Sent: Saturday, June 05, 2010 7:19 PM To: Subject: Re: payment reform , that was a great summary. I had been wondering some of the same things and I think I knew the answer, but couldn't delineate it that clearly. Would you mind if I passed that answer on to a couple of my professors at Columbia with whom I had discussed tracking outcomes in my new practice? Thanks, Deanna, FNP Re: payment reform But if the PATIENT is anwering the question and they thought they needed an antibiotic and you thought is was viral and they didn't need the antibiotic. Who is right in regards to anwering the HYH tool? The patient or the doc? That was my point -- patients often know what they want and need -- but not always. Just my humble opinion. Locke, MD " excatlyt " the care I want and need as on teh HYH tool is not exactly " what I wanted. " On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 3:06 PM, Locke wrote: Are there studies to show that patients who “get exactly the care….†etc -- are healthier? I can imagine the viral URI patient who didn't get the antibiotics they wanted or the narc seaker who didn't get the narcs they wated will check " No " they didn't get the care they wanted -- but got the care they needed. Or DID get the Abx and Narcs -- and are quite happy with my care - ca-ching, extra money for me -- but I am not giving best care to the patient. Just curious. Locke, MD -- PATIENTS-please remember that email may not be entirely secure, and that Email is part of the medical record and is placed into your chart ( be careful what you say!) Email is best used for appointment making and brief questions Email replies can be expected within 24 hours-Please CALL if the matter is more urgent . MD ph fax impcenter.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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