Wednesday, August 15, 2012

You asked about ACOs - Part 2, Team Delivery of Care

... continued from last day. For a brief discussion of ACOs and Communications, see Monday, August 13.

Team Delivery of Care

We clearly see a corollary in the development of team-based care delivery: the purists would like to see a system where all providers could form into teams to deliver care in the most efficient and cost-effective ways and in which all providers could participate in shared savings accounts. Large health systems want to maintain their dominance and even extend their control over the delivery system. What we are seeing arise is a number of programs that represent the gamut between these two extremes.  

On the one extreme are ACOs which revolve around a myriad of regulations to the point that it is difficult even to understand exactly what ACOs can and cannot do. The bottom line is that this complex set of regulations restricts ACOs to relatively large health systems in order to fulfill all the requirements. This, of course, favors health system domination and, in fact, was pushed as a complex system by the large health systems.

On the other end of the spectrum is the new Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative, which was effected largely by the designers of health care reform and pushed by the Office of the National Coordinator. These stakeholders want to see competition in the health care marketplace and access by providers at all levels.  

From an eye care perspective, we believe it is important for every eye care provider to have a general understanding of ACOs and health information exchanges, knowing that both are too complex and too diverse to be fully understood in terms of what they can and cannot do. Every eye care provider, on the other hand, should have an intimate knowledge of how DIRECT works and the significance of the Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative, as these are the two programs that most parallel the original goals of the health care reform movement. They also show how providers may work together, through coordinated care, to provide the highest level of care within a structure that openly communicates patient health information between providers. Seeing the significance of shared savings when controlled by primary care is a key to understanding the importance of team care delivery and reimbursement.  

Once again, we believe the way that independent eye care providers are going to be most successful is to understand ACOs and exchanges generally but DIRECT and the Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative specifically. The latter pair illustrate well how the emerging system is supposed to function. Then, being involved in the local community as the care delivery structures are being formed is the most important step.  To that end, the National Eye Care Communications Project, while sponsored by EMRlogic, is offered as a vendor-neutral gathering where providers can share their learnings, their experiences and assist all participants in understanding the cultural changes necessary for business success in health care reform.

Jim Grue, O.D.
Alistair Jackson, M.Ed.

More on ACOs is available in Archives. See Categories: Accountable Care Organizations.


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