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The Role of States & Medical Societies in Reforming Health Care The Massachusetts Experience B. Dale Magee, MD, MS President Massachusetts Medical Society
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Quality Requires Access The price of being uninsured Mortality increased by: Cancer of the colon: Cancer of the breast: Cancer of the prostate: Cancer of the lung: Myocardial Infarction: Acute injuries: 10-15% 25-50% 100-200% Sources: Fowler-Brown, J Gen Intern Med. April 2007; McDavid, Arch Intern Med. Oct 2003; Volpp, Health Services Research April 2003; Haas, American Journal of Public Health, Oct 1994
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State of Health by Insurance Status Source: Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Massachusetts
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Massachusetts Before Access Law 2006 data Sources: Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of Massachusetts; CDC; MA Exec. Ofc. of Labor and Workforce Development; US Department of Labor; US Department of Commerce 2005
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Most managed care not for profit, in-state Free Care pool Collaborative Massachusetts Medical Society principles ◦ Non-disruptive and evolutionary ◦ Politically, economically viable and sustainable ◦ Includes quality and public health components ◦ Comprehensive and affordable ◦ Individual and employer mandates Massachusetts Before Access Law
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Who are the MA uninsured? 2006 data Source: MA Dept. of Health Care Finance and Policy
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Access Law Today Individual Mandate Employer Mandate Insurance sources: – Expansion of Medicaid – <300% FPL (~$30,000): subsidized Medicaid Mgd Care – >300% FPL: Connector with several levels of service (must cover preventive care and drugs)
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Status Today Total enrolled and percent of target achieved Source: Commonwealth Connector Total number in income bracket
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Quality & Cost Council Insurers Payers Public Professional Standards Review Organization Institute for Health Care improvement Advisory Council with MMS & other physician groups
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Purpose of the Council Collect data ◦ Define content ◦ Standardize collection Provide reports to the public ◦ Cost & Quality Track change
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Challenges Modern Health Care is: ◦ Complex: multiple co-morbidities ◦ Distributed: numerous providers involved (different locations, different times) ◦ Data driven (when possible)
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Challenges Barriers to communication: ◦ It is not the standard… ◦ Information technology is in its infancy Numerous systems computerizing records eHealth Collaborative NO intersystem connectivity
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Challenges How we learn: ◦ Traditional teaching by example, stories ◦ Evidence base thin ◦ Research conflicting ◦ Guidelines vary in strength ◦ Literature may be translated into practice prematurely
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What is the Medical Society doing? Principles for Universal Access Education Information technology Work with IPAs Data: ◦ Plans ◦ Purchasers ◦ State
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In the End Universal access is necessary to improve the quality of the community’s health care Access cannot be sustained without cost control Complex systems require shared vision, values and tools
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