It can be hard to think about the bigger picture while in the middle of a crisis, but providers and employers should use this opportunity to work together on new and alternative models of care delivery and financing that directly affect cost, outcomes, and experience.
Many hospitals and doctors are waking up to the silent crisis of 2022. After funding and weathering COVID-19–related slowdowns and staff shortages for the past 2 years, they now face ongoing losses due to these issues, as well as inflation, patients who present sicker, and an inability to discharge to other facilities.
However, this time there isn’t any government money to help solve the problem. So, what is the government doing? Raising rates in an attempt to revenue their way out of their financial predicament. Employers, however, aren’t in any better position to accept these large increases, and many insurers have already filed rates for next year. The whole thing seems like the perfect opening act for a meltdown of the health care system, with hospital bankruptcies or consolidations, employer cost-shifting, and employee loss of coverage coming.
There has to be a better way.
Part of the problem fueling the provider predicament is how doctors and hospitals are paid. In health care, we don’t buy cures—we buy visits and procedures.
In the health care realm, if you go to the doctor with an odd rash, you will most likely receive a diagnosis and a prescription, but because this is all based on evidence and probabilities, the treatment may not work and you may need to return to the doctor’s office. You pay for each trip, and there are no guarantees or frequent buyer discounts.
We have been talking for years about alternatives such as pay for value and pay for performance, but most of the country is still operating in some form of pay-per-view arrangement. This is a likely reason behind the sudden renewed interest in health maintenance organization–style plans, in which employers pay a flat amount for employees irrespective of how much health care they use.
Traditional insurers, however, cannot be the ball carrier on this play; most of their profit is still based on avoiding procedures and redlining groups that spend too much. There needs to be a more direct collaboration among employers, doctors, and hospitals, or costs will continue to increase.
When they work together, they win.
A collaborative, direct relationship among employers, doctors, and hospitals has been shown to successfully reduce care costs and attain better health results over time. First, these relationships can simplify access and make it easier for a patient to know where to go and what to do. Second, they can create targeted programs and outreach to deal with a company’s employees’ specific health issues. Third, they can create greater direct accountability in terms of what gets paid for and what actually happens. Last, they each have equal seats at the table where they share data, outcomes, and goals and can pivot quickly should adjustments be necessary.
It can be hard to think about the bigger picture while in the middle of a crisis, but providers and employers should use this opportunity to work together on new and alternative models of care delivery and financing that directly affect cost, outcomes, and experience.
Here are some quick approaches that could help break up the logjam and avert a protracted health care crisis:
If this newly designed system has a chance of success, it does require more energy and a willingness to engage with local businesses directly. However, the benefits are huge for patients, employees, and the health care system as a whole.
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