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Predictive Modeling And Team Care For High-Need Patients At HealthCare Partners
HealthCare Partners Medical Group, which cares for one million patients in California, Nevada, and Florida. Roughly half of these patients are treated by the 1,000 physicians who are employed in a staff-model health maintenance organization; the rest are cared for by affiliated physicians in indepen...
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Published in: | Health Affairs 2011-03, Vol.30 (3), p.416-418 |
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description | HealthCare Partners Medical Group, which cares for one million patients in California, Nevada, and Florida. Roughly half of these patients are treated by the 1,000 physicians who are employed in a staff-model health maintenance organization; the rest are cared for by affiliated physicians in independent practice associations. HealthCare Partners instituted two interventions targeting high-need patients at risk of hospitalization. At five Comprehensive Care Centers, multidisciplinary teams care for patients who have just been discharged from a hospital or who have conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or congestive heart failure. Homecare Teams of physicians, social workers, and case managers visit homebound patients. The goals are to control conditions and return patients to care with their primary care physicians and free up resources for other high-need patients. Reduced hospital use has saved the system $2 million annually for every 1,000 members. For patients in the high-risk program, hospital use has declined 20 percent over the two years of the program. Identifying where resources can best be used to improve care quality and reduce high-cost interventions. A new payment model is also needed to replace fee-for-service, to encourage the provision of this "high-value" care. HealthCare Partners aspires to be a Medicare accountable care organization that takes partial or full risk for patient care. Adapted from the source document. |
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Identifying where resources can best be used to improve care quality and reduce high-cost interventions. A new payment model is also needed to replace fee-for-service, to encourage the provision of this "high-value" care. HealthCare Partners aspires to be a Medicare accountable care organization that takes partial or full risk for patient care. 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Roughly half of these patients are treated by the 1,000 physicians who are employed in a staff-model health maintenance organization; the rest are cared for by affiliated physicians in independent practice associations. HealthCare Partners instituted two interventions targeting high-need patients at risk of hospitalization. At five Comprehensive Care Centers, multidisciplinary teams care for patients who have just been discharged from a hospital or who have conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or congestive heart failure. Homecare Teams of physicians, social workers, and case managers visit homebound patients. The goals are to control conditions and return patients to care with their primary care physicians and free up resources for other high-need patients. Reduced hospital use has saved the system $2 million annually for every 1,000 members. For patients in the high-risk program, hospital use has declined 20 percent over the two years of the program. Identifying where resources can best be used to improve care quality and reduce high-cost interventions. A new payment model is also needed to replace fee-for-service, to encourage the provision of this "high-value" care. HealthCare Partners aspires to be a Medicare accountable care organization that takes partial or full risk for patient care. 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service</subject><subject>Medicare</subject><subject>Multidisciplinary teams</subject><subject>Nevada</subject><subject>Patient care</subject><subject>Patient satisfaction</subject><subject>Patients</subject><subject>Physicians</subject><subject>Population</subject><subject>Primary care</subject><subject>Risk</subject><subject>Social 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Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Feder, J Lester</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Predictive Modeling And Team Care For High-Need Patients At HealthCare Partners</atitle><jtitle>Health Affairs</jtitle><date>2011-03-01</date><risdate>2011</risdate><volume>30</volume><issue>3</issue><spage>416</spage><epage>418</epage><pages>416-418</pages><issn>0278-2715</issn><eissn>1544-5208</eissn><abstract>HealthCare Partners Medical Group, which cares for one million patients in California, Nevada, and Florida. Roughly half of these patients are treated by the 1,000 physicians who are employed in a staff-model health maintenance organization; the rest are cared for by affiliated physicians in independent practice associations. HealthCare Partners instituted two interventions targeting high-need patients at risk of hospitalization. At five Comprehensive Care Centers, multidisciplinary teams care for patients who have just been discharged from a hospital or who have conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or congestive heart failure. Homecare Teams of physicians, social workers, and case managers visit homebound patients. The goals are to control conditions and return patients to care with their primary care physicians and free up resources for other high-need patients. Reduced hospital use has saved the system $2 million annually for every 1,000 members. For patients in the high-risk program, hospital use has declined 20 percent over the two years of the program. Identifying where resources can best be used to improve care quality and reduce high-cost interventions. A new payment model is also needed to replace fee-for-service, to encourage the provision of this "high-value" care. HealthCare Partners aspires to be a Medicare accountable care organization that takes partial or full risk for patient care. Adapted from the source document.</abstract><cop>Chevy Chase</cop><pub>The People to People Health Foundation, Inc., Project HOPE</pub><doi>10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0080</doi><tpages>3</tpages></addata></record> |
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subjects | Accountable care organizations California Capitation Chief executive officers Chronic illnesses Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease Community support Continuity of care Corporate profiles Cost control Doctors Electronic health records Health care Health care expenditures Health care policy Health maintenance organizations Health policy Heart failure HMOs Hospitalization Hospitals Independent practice associations Innovations Interventions Medical service Medicare Multidisciplinary teams Nevada Patient care Patient satisfaction Patients Physicians Population Primary care Risk Social workers Success Teams |
title | Predictive Modeling And Team Care For High-Need Patients At HealthCare Partners |
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