The webinar discusses utilizing member engagement to improve scores on the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) survey. CAHPS scores are an important factor in reimbursement and ratings for healthcare providers and plans. The webinar outlines how CAHPS scores are calculated and impact reimbursement. It then discusses using the modelH business model canvas to develop strategies for improving member engagement through areas like care management, prevention/wellness programs, and rewards/incentives. Focusing engagement efforts on the most impactful customer segments and issues can help providers maximize their CAHPS scores and reimbursement.
2013 10 utilizing member engagement to improve cahps scores
1. Utilizing Member Engagement to
Improve CAHPS Scores
a presentation by Kevin Riley
for the Opal 2013 ACOs Summit
October 9, 2013 at 3:00 pm ET
2. Synopsis
Webinar: Utilizing Member Engagement to Improve CAHPS Scores
The Accountable Care Act means more access to healthcare for more
people. But to pay for that access it also means margins for healthcare
companies are going to be squeezed. But this does not necessarily
imply doom for healthcare companies. The law actually encourages
healthcare businesses to build better business models – and is willing
to pay for it. By retooling your market approach, and the operations
that run your business, you can actually improve your margins and your
customer’s happiness at the same time you are helping to create a
better and more efficient healthcare ecosystem.
During this session you will learn:
• How much is it worth to engage your customers (members)?
• What are the consequences if you do not?
• How to drive customer engagement into CAHPS information so you
can maximize reimbursement.
4. Kevin Riley
Principal at Kevin Riley & Associates | Health Model Innovation
• former chief innovation officer of Florida Blue
• founder and former president/CEO of GuideWell
• founder of modelH.org
• entrepreneur, health care executive, business model innovator
Kevin started Kevin Riley & Associates | Health Model Innovation
(modelH) in 2006 to help companies with the convergence of health
care and the consumer. He founded and was CEO of a national health
care retail company, played leadership roles for several national retail
health start-ups, and served as the first Chief Innovation Officer of a
major insurance plan. Kevin holds a Masters of Business in
entrepreneurship and marketing from Rice University.
follow me on @kevineriley, linkedin, slideshare
5. Why is this Necessary?
Utilizing Member Engagement to Improve CAHPS Scores
6. What is the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems (CAHPS)?
CAHPS originally stood for the Consumer Assessment of
Health Plans Study - but it has evolved beyond health
plans to capture much more.
Now it develops and supports the use of a comprehensive
family of standardized surveys that ask consumers and
patients to report on and evaluate their experiences with
health care.
These surveys cover topics that are important to
consumers, such as the communication skills of providers
and the accessibility of services.
7. What does it mean to Providers/Systems?
They get ranked by the NCQA, and the score is based on:
• STARs Ratings Measures (90+ measures)
• Consumer satisfaction surveys (Consumer Assessment
of Health Providers and Systems survey, or CAHPS)
• The base measures score is added to a consistency
score - it takes good process and good manners.
So ….
• Compensation is linked to this score.
• Higher ranked plans/providers get more money.
8. It is part of something much larger
Data Source Domains
% Total Stars
Ratings
HEDIS Part C: Domains I&II ~31%
PDE Data Part D: Domain IV ~20%
CAHPS Part C: Domain I&III; Part D: Domain III ~18%
HOS Part C: Domains I&II ~11%
IRE Part C: Domain V; Part D: Domain I ~7%
Phone Monitoring Part C: Domain V; Part D: Domain I ~6%
CTM Part C: Domain IV ~2%
CMS Audit Part C: Domain IV ~2%
MBDS Part C: Domain IV ~2%
MARx Part D: Domain I ~1%
Total: 100.00%
9. Lets focus on CAHPS
Consumer satisfaction measures what patients reported
about the experiences of their care in a survey, including
their experiences with doctors and services they had
access to, and customer service.
NCQA scores are on a scale of 1 to 5, from worst to best:
• 5 means you are are in the top 10 percent compared
with other plans in their category
• 4 means you are above average
• 3 means you are just plain old average
• 2 means you are below average, and
• 1 means you are are in the bottom10 percent compared
with other plans in their category
11. Why is all this important?
Think of it as your business model at risk:
• ACA requires that plans sold through exchanges in 2014
and beyond must be accredited
• Member/patient satisfaction means you probably have a
better Net Promoter Score which makes you stand out
amongst your competition
Think of this as your revenue at risk:
• Buyers rely on health plan comparisons and ratings
systems to inform their purchasing decisions
• You will lose on reimbursement and this means your
competitors can underprice you – starting a death spiral
12. What does it look like for Plans?
Health Plan
Composite Measures
National
2012
Getting Needed Care 3.57
Getting Care Quickly 3.29
Doctors Who Communicate Well 3.72
Health Plan Customer Service 3.66
Care Coordination 3.61
Source: 2012 Medicare Advantage CAHPS Results
13. What does it look like for Providers?
Source: CAHPS Clinician & Group Surveys and Instructions
14. What will this eventually look like?
Source: Why Not the Best? http://www.whynotthebest.org
15. A Framework for Discussion
Utilizing Member Engagement to Improve CAHPS Scores
16. modelH is a business model canvas designed
specifically for healthcare companies and acts as a
strategic management template for developing
new or documenting existing business models
through its visual language.
17. The modelH method aligns business activities
that produce value by illustrating potential trade-
offs, and helps
describe, design, challenge, invent, and pivot a
business model.
18. modelH is about producing value though
profitable and sustainable business models made
by creating and/or realigning the activity systems
that improve patient experience, boost provider
performance, and enable payer cost control.
21. What is patient/member engagement?
Customer engagement, or experience (CX), is the
aggregation of all of the engagements a prospect or
customer has with your business model - whether they are
recognized or not, and whether they are intentional or not.
Experiences happen across the fundamental customer
stages of awareness, discovery, attraction, interaction,
purchase, use, cultivation and advocacy.
Experiences are a key to retaining your Customers
(Buyers and Users) and realizing a larger customer
lifetime value.
23. How to approach member engagement
• Segments
• Regions
• Ability to influence
• Ability to excel
Identify the “best”
customer
segments
• Measures impacted
• Ability to improve
• Ability to excel
Identify the “best”
areas of focus • Value to the person
• Value to you
Rank the value
• Set a target for
improvement
• Create a plan of
attack
Publish the list
25. Prevention & WellnessRewards & Incentives
Resolved?
Health care engagement loop
Patient Need Diagnosis Communicate SolutionProvider Engaged
Care Management
27. Not all customers are the same
Adapted from Winning at Retail: Developing a Sustained Model for Retail Success
28. It takes a consumer culture
Adapted from Why Not the Best? http://www.whynotthebest.org
29. Questions
Kevin Riley & Associates
Business Model Innovation for Healthcare
kevin@healthmodelinnovation.com
www.healthmodelinnovation.com
Editor's Notes
Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS)
Brokers, employer groups, unions, states, and other purchasing groups now “compare the ratings” before making multi-year commitments to health care providers and health plans. Consequently, one performance misstep for a health plan (for example, a mediocre asthma care score), even if it doesn’t jeopardize accreditation, can produce a lower ranking for a health plan than its competitor. This can quickly mean the loss of significant business from a keen-eyed purchaser.
The Business Model Canvas (designed by Alexander Osterwalder) is a strategic management template for developing new or documenting existing business models through a visual language. The design is to align business activities that produce value by illustrating potential trade-offs. This method helps describe, design, challenge, invent, and pivot your business model. You can find out more about it here.
modelH is a business model canvas designed specifically for healthcare. Expanding on Osterwalder’s Business Model Canvas, modelH integrates aspects of Michael Porter’s definition of shared value, measured as the patient health outcome achieved per healthcare dollar spent. It is designed to incorporate the 3 domains of the healthcare “ecosystem”: care consumption, care delivery, and care financing. These domains are actually interdependent points of interaction along a value chain of healthcare. To impact one point, you really impact them all. modelH also accounts for the four key stakeholders across the healthcare value chain: patients, providers, payers, and purveyors.
Each healthcare organization’s journey to improve the member/patient experience (and resultant CAHPS scores is unique). It is a mistaken hope that you can just apply a discreet, tactical approach to revenue optimization. This is merely applying write processes and checklist and it will come across as insincere to you member/patient - and you will suffer for out in the customer satisfaction surveys. You also need to focus on the culture of your organization.
Improving processes that impact multiple member segments are likely to generate a larger return on investment (ROI) than initiatives targeted at specific population segments.Targeting specific populations with mailings, telephone and other forms of outreach can be effective ways to improve scores in specific, low-scoring cohortsapproach and model accounts for the size of cohorts and their relative distance to the next star level to prioritize improvement opportunities and maximize the plan’s star rating.Examples include: focusing patient education on large membership cohorts or steering patients in particular geographies toward specific medical facilitiesAssesses ongoing performance and highlights correlations across cohorts that should help develop process improvements with the broadest impact.This includes reviewing complaint patterns across medical groups and identifying a process shortcoming or systemic customer service failures particular to a providerYou may want to see how your performance has changed over time by comparing the 2012 survey results to those of previous years
Incenting providers through contract clauses and shared-risk payment model is a powerful tool to improve your own quality ratings. identifies under and over-performing cohorts (e.g., medical groups) that can be used as a fact-base to inform provider engagement and contracting decisions across the network.This could entail creating financial incentives for specific, poorly performing providers or creating profit sharing goals with a medical group based on quality ratings created from published provider report cards
Each healthcare organization’s journey to improve the member/patient experience (and resultant CAHPS scores is unique). It is a mistaken hope that you can just apply a discreet, tactical approach to revenue optimization. This is merely applying write processes and checklist and it will come across as insincere to you member/patient - and you will suffer for out in the customer satisfaction surveys. You also need to focus on the culture of your organization.
Analyses of CAHPS data have shown that beneficiaries with certain characteristics tend to report systematically higher or lower scores, even when they are members of the same contract and therefore exposed to the same level of contract quality. Notably, older patients, healthier patients, less educated members and those with lower socio-economic status (SES) tend to give higher scores than younger, sicker and more educated members and those with higher SES.This gets adjusted but it is important to know and take advantage of.Source: 2012 Medicare Advantage CAHPS Results
http://healthcareblog.pyapc.com/articles/quality-1/For AMI patients, fibronolytic therapy received within 30 minutes of arrival? “Check.”For pneumonia patients, blood cultures performed in the ED prior to initial antibiotic? “Check.”For surgical patients, prophylactic antibiotic received within one hour of incision? “Check.”Process measures are well defined and straightforward. But when you try to apply that same checklist methodology to H-CAHPS questions, compliance plays out in a very different way that doesn’t lend itself to a simple “check, complete, move-on” mentality.Did we (specifically, nurses and doctors) always explain things in a way that patients could understand? “I gave them the required information. I think they understood.”Did we always listen carefully to patients? “I tried to listen … most of the time … I think.”Did we always do everything we could to help with pain? “I told her to push her call light when she needed more pain medication.”