2015-2016: An Outcomes-Based System
While modernizing Medicaid and streamlining health and human services helped Ohio to progress, OHT’s overarching goal was to move towards an outcomes-based system. In the past, the state’s health and human services providers had employed a mix of a fee-for-service model (i.e., an approach in which consumers paid for the services that providers rendered) as well as a managed care setup (i.e., a system in which a company oversees the cost). However, in 2015 and 2016, OHT sought to take the state to the next level of the Health and Human Services Value Curve and began implementing ways for Ohioans to pay for the value they received, rather than just the services that health and human services providers delivered.
A key part of OHT’s strategy for moving to an outcomes-based system has been introducing episode-based payments—an approach in which “payment [is] based on performance in outcomes or cost for all services needed by a patient, across multiple providers for a specific condition.” OHT began this effort in early 2015 with an initial wave of reform focused on a limited set of conditions (e.g., asthma exacerbation and total joint replacement). Since then, it has gradually expanded the conditions to which episode-based payments apply. In fact, by the end of 2016, the setup was used for over a dozen treatments.
At the same time, OHT officials have worked extensively to ensure that payers and providers are enthusiastically participating in the system and that they have the tools they need to achieve the desired results. To establish buy-in, Plouck and his colleagues have engaged in an expansive dialogue with both payers and providers. The approach has paid dividends: more than 90 percent of payers are participating in the system, and, as Plouck explained, OHT has developed a “robust partnership plan where they engage providers in meetings and strategy sessions.” “Without this engagement,” Plouck emphasized, “it [the use of episode-based payments] would all be a waste of time.”
OHT has also developed reporting and data analysis tools to help providers gauge their progress and discern ways to improve. Every provider receives a quarterly performance report that highlights the number of treatments they provided, the risk-adjusted spending for each episode, key performance indicators, and quality and utilization efforts compared to other providers. What’s more, OHT has given providers the tools to drill down into any metric and examine the raw data upon which it is based. Consequently, providers—who, as Plouck emphasized, want to maximize the time and attention that they devote to their patients—are able to analyze quickly on a case-by-case basis what is affecting their ability to achieve the outcomes they need.