Healthcare ReformThe “Affordable Care Act”
How Will It AffectSubstance Abuse Care?
Population Prevalence
Addiction ~ 25,000,000
“Harmful – 60,000,000 Use”
Little or No Use
Diabetes ~24,000,000
LITTLE
LOTS
In Treatment ~ 2,300,000
President’s 2012 Budget
Healthcare
23%
Poverty Assist.
17%
Defense
19%
Social Secur.
21%
The Presentation
1 - The Basic Elements2 – Changes Expected3 – The Implications
2010 Healthcare ReformThe “Affordable Care Act”
Transformative for MH/SA •SA care is “Essential Service” •Funds full continuum of care
• Prevent, BI, Meds, Spec Care•Focus on Primary Care
• Part of “Medical Home”• Information management
Insure ~45 million uninsured
Reduce Costs of Healthcare
Correct Insurance Problems
Improve Care Quality
~32 million newly insured
Admin Costs, Prevention, Tech.
Pre-exist cond, dropping, portability
Ev Based Pract., Technology
Expanded Insurance
Health Exchanges
“Medical Home”
Electronic Health Record
Prevention Emphasis
• Training Emphasis
–Significant grants for provider training
–On-line Medicaid billing requirement
• Federal/State funding “match”
–“Essential services” 100% federal
– Most prevention is 100% federal
The Presentation
1 - The Basic Elements2 – Changes Expected3 – The Implications
Addiction
“Substance Use Disorders”
XXXXXXXX
1
A “Bad Habit” not an Illness
Leads to a Special Approach
A Nice Simple Rehab Model
NTOMS Sample of 250 Programs
Treatment
Substance Abusing Patient
Non- Substance Abusing Patient
ASSUMPTIONS• Some fixed amount or duration of
treatment will resolve the problem
• Clinical efforts put toward correctly placing patients and getting them to complete treatment
• Evaluation of effectiveness should occur following completion
– Poor outcome means failure
Addiction Treatment
Very Rare Use
Very Frequent Use
In Specialty Treat.
~ 2,300,000
• Detoxification – 100%
– Ambulatory – 85%
• Opioid Substitution Therapy – 50%
• Urine Drug Screen – 100%– 7 per year
Note – Great variability state to state
• Virtually all these are hospital benefits
• Very few are “visit” benefits – almost all are program benefits
• Very few care options, little variety within options
• Comparatively little acknowledgement of patients’ rights, little help with access
Treatments For Other Illnesses
Why it matters
A Continuing Care Model
PrimaryContinuing Care
Primary Care
Specialty Care
In Chronic Illnesses….1 – There is no Cure - the effects of treatment do not last very long after care stops
2 – Patients who are out of contact are at elevated risk for relapse: Retention is essential
In Chronic Illnesses….3 – Early, intensive stages prepare patients for less intensive care:
– ultimately Self-Management
4 - Evaluation is a clinical duty:Good function = continue care
Poor function = change care
• Physician Visits – 100%
• Clinic Visits – 100%
• Home Health Visits – 100%
• Glucose Tests, Monitors, Supplies – 100%
• Insulin and 4 other Meds – 100%
• HgA1C, eye, foot exams 4x/yr – 100%
• Smoking Cessation – 100%
• Personal Care Visits – 100%
• Language Interpreter - Negotiated
• Virtually all these are in primary care
• Most are “visit benefits” not packaged
• The term “dual disorder” originated here as diabetes and hypertension
• Note patients have rights and benefits designed to help them access care and to benefit from it
• Physician Visits – 100%
• Clinic Visits – 100%
• Home Health Visits – 100%
• Glucose Tests, Monitors, Supplies – 100%
• Insulin and 4 other Meds – 100%
• HgA1C, eye, foot exams 4x/yr – 100%
• Smoking Cessation – 100%
• Personal Care Visits – 100%
• Language Interpreter - Negotiated
• Virtually all these are in primary care
• Most are “visit benefits” not packaged
• The term “dual disorder” originated here as diabetes and hypertension
• Note patients have rights and benefits designed to help them access care and to benefit from it
• Physician Visits – 100%– Screening, Brief Intervention, Assessment
– Evaluation and medication – Tele monitoring
• Clinic Visits – 100%
• Home Health Visits – 100%– Family Counseling
• Alcohol and Drug Testing – 100%
• 4 Maintenance and Anti-Craving Meds – 100%
• Smoking Cessation – 100%
~ 500,000 Primary Care Physicians + CNPs
1. Prevention ServicesScreening and Brief Intervention - UPHS
2. Early InterventionBrief Counseling / Treatment
3. Office-Based TreatmentMedications, Monitoring, Management
4. Referral to Specialty CareReferral Back for Continuing Care
The Presentation
1 - The Basic Elements2 – Changes Expected3 – The Implications
• New market for prevention research
– Very significant funding in ACA
– new initiatives to drive down cost and improve personal responsibility
– Challenge – What is prevention – just vaccines or community focus – wellness
• Need “intervention research” with PCPs
– Adherence assistance
– Tele-health and Tele monitoring
• New market for medications
– 500,000 PCPs – other “prescribers”
• Research on counseling in primary care
– “Behavioral Health” focus? Family focus?
• Adaptation of Health Homes to SUD
– 90% Federal funding for Health Home services
– Emphasis on care integration and transition
– Addition of case management services
• Information exchange and decision support research– New information will be in EMR
– Need standard “performance measures”
• Most “treatment” funding will come from Medicaid and private health insurance
– New populations – medical referrals
– New billing requirements – reporting requirements
– Emphasis upon Outpatient care integrated into “Medical Home”
• Emphasis on “Evidence Based” Practices
• What is a profitable outpatient model?
• Emphasis/expansion home health services – Will “specialty care” fill this role?
• Role of Block Grant could change
– Recovery-Oriented services NOT covered in healthcare
• Budget negotiations may change some of this
• State variability will continue but ultimately reduce