Can Home Be Where the Healthcare Quality Is?
When you think of improving quality, you may think it involves something new—new ways of evaluating data, new methods to pay for care, or new applications of information technology. But it also can mean looking at something old—and seeing if it can have an impact as well—such as encouraging the idea of provider home care visits, especially for the senior population.
While great interest has been emerging over the concept of the patient-centered medical home in both the healthcare and political communities, it may be time to look at care in the patient's home as a way to provide quality care.
Back in 1930, house calls accounted for 40% of the encounters between physicians and patients. However, by 1980, that rate dropped to less than 1%. But that has been changing: in 1995, 1.5 million home visits were paid for by Medicare, and by 2007, those visits increased by nearly 2.2 million. Approximately 4,000 of the nation's physicians, plus nurses and physician assistants, are making home visits part of their practice, according to the American Academy of Home Care Physicians.
And greater changes could be ahead if healthcare reform legislation is approved on Capitol Hill. Incorporated into the House bill (HR 3962) and the Senate Finance Committee bill (S 1796) is a provision called the "Independence at Home Medical Practice Demonstration Program" that would test a "payment incentive and service delivery model" staffed by physicians and nurse practitioners on home based primary care teams.
So why this kind of model? As Peter Boling, MD, the head of general medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center in Richmond, tells it, there usually is just enough payment in the current Medicare fee-for-service payment formula to cover short, uncomplicated home-based care visits to patients.
However, "It's not enough to support the really complex case management that actually saves [Medicare] money," said Boling, who speaks from 25 years of experience providing home-based care to Richmond-area residents. "It's hard to grow as a business model."
"We see ourselves saving lots of money for the Medicare program because if the programs are designed the way ours are, we end up keeping people from having to go into the hospital," said Boling, who works with his hospital-supported primary care program that includes several physicians and nurses who make approximately 2,500 to 3,000 home-based calls per year.
Home-based care "ultimately saves the Medicare program money and it makes the patients less sick and more happy—which is also a good thing," he said.
The home-based program described in the bill is a type of "gain-sharing arrangement" in which the main elements of the Medicare program—such as the hospital, physician, and drug coverage—remain the same.
However, for individuals who enroll in a special program called Independence at Home, if the amount of money spent on them was less than what Medicare expected to spend, then the savings would be given to the provider or organization that was providing the healthcare. The Independence at Home amendments, which were actual bills before being incorporated into the reform bills, has attracted strong bipartisan support in both congressional chambers.
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Royal Rife (11/10/2009 at 2:53 PM)
Your article rings very true. We hardly use doctors etc. at all except for kids annual physicals (required) and my wife's periodic ob-gyn. We use zero pharmaceuticals and we're all perfectly healthy. We don't buy the profit driven hype.
And positively no flu shots of any kind. Ha-Ha!
Kristin Baird, RN, BSN, MHA (11/7/2009 at 8:39 AM)
Great points Janice. As a former public health nurse I must add that there is a wealth of information that can be gleaned from assessing patients in their "natural habitat." Every day we draw millions of people onto our turf in health care settings. The environment is foreign to them and often intimidating and overwhelming at a point when they are feeling vulnerable. There is a psychological shift that occurs when we work with patients in their homes rather than on our turf. They are literally and figuratively inviting us in. The partnership in the care plan suddenly becomes a mutual endeavor rather than an edict that we hand out from behind a desk.