Geisinger’s Ask-a-Doc program, which enables direct asynchronous communication between primary and specialty care, was associated with lower healthcare utilization and cost, implying more efficient care.
ABSTRACT
Objectives: To describe and evaluate the impact of primary and specialty care integration via asynchronous communication at a large integrated healthcare system.
Study Design: In January 2014, Geisinger’s primary care providers (PCPs) were given access to an asynchronous communication tool, Ask-a-Doc (AAD), that enabled direct communication with specialists in 14 medical specialties and 5 surgical specialties. Internal data were collected to assess PCPs’ acceptance and use of the tool, as well as satisfaction. Insurance claims data were obtained to assess the impact on healthcare utilization and cost.
Methods: A retrospective analysis of health plan claims data was conducted among those patients who had at least 1 specialist visit with 1 of the participating specialties between January 2014 and December 2016. A set of difference-in-differences multivariate linear regression models with patient fixed effects was estimated, in which those who were not exposed to AAD served as the comparison group.
Results: Acceptance and use of AAD among PCPs gradually increased over time but varied by specialty. AAD was associated with an approximately 14% reduction in total cost of care during the first month of follow-up and a 20% reduction (P <.001) during the second month. These reductions in cost of care appeared to be driven by reductions in emergency department visits and physician office visits.
Conclusions: Geisinger’s AAD experience suggests that the integration of primary and specialty care via the use of a highly reliable and efficient asynchronous communication system can potentially lead to reductions in avoidable care and more efficient use of specialty care.
Am J Manag Care. 2019;25(1):26-31Takeaway Points
Poor communication between primary care and specialty care can lead to care gaps, avoidable care, and adverse patient outcomes. Such problems can be exacerbated by inadequate access to specialists.
Healthcare is evolving, and new care models are being tested to improve quality while reducing costs. In 2007, the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model was proposed, founded on the principles of primary care and patient-centered care combined with payment reform.1-3 Although care coordination implied effective information exchange, it quickly became evident that effective electronic connectivity was extremely challenging.2
In 2008, Fisher et al introduced the concept of a medical home “neighborhood,” where specialists could interact with the PCMH.4,5 Two years later, the American College of Physicians published a comprehensive white paper outlining this concept in greater detail.6 However, their tactical approach focused predominately on traditional face-to-face referral interactions,7 rather than on electronic or other forms of communication. Additionally, even the most rudimentary form of communication (ie, sending basic patient information) was deemed unreliable.8-10 In an attempt to improve communication between primary and specialty providers, other large healthcare systems have developed electronic consultation, or e-consult, programs.11-14 These programs vary in their implementation, but most have demonstrated success in improving the quality of communication and access to care.15-17 However, very little information is published with regard to their process reliability, effectiveness, and cost impact.18-20
This study describes a novel model of asynchronous communication between primary care providers (PCPs) and specialists, referred to as the Ask-a-Doc (AAD) program, developed and implemented by Geisinger. Geisinger is a large integrated healthcare delivery system located in central Pennsylvania serving more than 2 million patients; it has approximately 500 employed PCPs, who include physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants, and 2000 employed specialists. This study also tests the hypothesis that implementation of AAD was associated with lower total cost of care and reductions in healthcare utilization due to improved primary care and specialist communication.
Background
In 2010, Geisinger senior leadership established a work group to improve the integration of primary and specialty care. The first step was to analyze the existing relationships and interactions, which revealed 4 key areas for improvement: (1) trigger (when/why a specialist was consulted), (2) care pathway (what plan of care was selected by the specialist), (3) mode of care (face-to-face, phone call, other), and (4) communication (process and expectations). Table 1 describes these components in relation to AAD in detail.
An integration work group designed and tested the initial AAD program using PCP groups as “askers” and rheumatology and pulmonary medicine specialty groups as “answerers.” To ask a question, the PCP clicked an AAD link within Geisinger’s electronic health record (EHR) system, launching a web-based AAD tool. The PCP selected a specialty department and was then presented with an AAD form. The form was prefilled with information on the patient, PCP, and AAD specialist. The PCP then added their callback number, selected a time frame (1 hour, 1 business day, or 3 business days) and a mode (chart review or phone call), completed a formulated question, and clicked “send” to complete the process.
The AAD consult was received by a group of schedulers, who processed and retransmitted the message to the EHR AAD in-basket of the on-call specialist. They also text-paged that specialist if the requested time frame was 1 hour or 1 business day. The specialist reviewed the chart, called the PCP (if requested), documented their response in the EHR using the AAD structured response template, and routed the answer back to the requesting PCP. The process was tracked in a database that followed the process from start (form sent) to finish (answer routed). Any messages that failed to meet the requested time frame, failed to use the correct documentation tool, or were incorrectly routed would appear on a task management report that was addressed via a project manager. PCPs could ask a question 24/7, but the messages were processed only Monday through Friday, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm.
Based on positive assessments from the pilot phase of the program, administrative approval was given to expand AAD across Geisinger. To further provider engagement, specialty directors received quarterly reports with physician-level detail about provider performance and time spent. There was no predefined incentive—financial or otherwise—for PCPs to use AAD. PCPs could use AAD at their discretion for any patient they deemed appropriate. For specialists, relative value units (RVUs) were assigned for the time spent on AAD requests but only for those answered completely and correctly (ie, answered within requested time frame, had correct documentation, and routed to the asker).
The program was officially rolled out (post pilot) on January 1, 2014. All PCPs (primary care physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners) were trained to use AAD. Participating specialties included 14 medical specialties (addiction medicine, cardiology, comprehensive care clinic, dermatology, endocrinology, hematology, infectious disease, laboratory medicine, nephrology, neurology, palliative medicine, psychiatry, pulmonary medicine, and rheumatology) and 5 surgical specialties (orthopedics, thoracic surgery, transplant surgery, urology, and vascular surgery).
Chart review, rather than phone call, was the most commonly requested mode of consultation (87% vs 13%). Four percent of time frame requests were for 1 hour, 33% were for 1 business day, and 63% were for 3 business days. Scheduler turnaround time for processing an AAD consult averaged 3 minutes and 3 seconds. In terms of specialist performance, the average AAD consult took 11 minutes to complete, and the average specialty turnaround time to answer the question was 6 hours and 19 minutes. The specialist answered the question within the requested time frame 98% of the time, the documentation tool was used correctly 98% of the time, and the consult was correctly routed 95% of the time. A project manager helped providers correct the remaining process errors for a consultation completion rate of 99.9%. Finally, the PCPs rated their satisfaction with the AAD service at 4.3 on a scale of 0 to 5, with 5 being excellent.
AAD use by PCPs increased steadily over time (Figure 1). In the most recent data available (third quarter of 2018), 84% of Geisinger’s PCPs are either consistent (at least 1 question per quarter for the last 4 quarters) or periodic (at least 1 question per quarter for 3 of the last 4 quarters) users of AAD. Additionally, 10% of all primary care referrals to participating specialties are now AAD consults.
Access to specialty care also appears to have improved with AAD. The average time for a new patient to be seen face-to-face was compared pre-AAD and post AAD, controlling for the total amount of clinical time available to see new patients. With AAD, the time to new patient face-to-face visit (defined as days from referral placed to patient seen) improved more than 16% for the 5 specialties evaluated (Figure 2). There was wide variation noted among specialties, ranging from a 50% improvement in infectious disease to a 3% worsening in nephrology.
Data
To test the hypothesis that AAD was associated with reductions in total cost and care utilization, this study relied on a retrospective analysis of data obtained from Geisinger’s EHR and the Geisinger Health Plan (GHP) claims database, comparing the intervention group (ie, patients who had been referred for AAD specialist consults) with a comparison group identified from the same claims database. This study was conducted as a part of Geisinger’s quality improvement initiative and therefore was not subject to institutional review board oversight and review.
From the EHR, the complete list of patients for whom AAD specialty consults had been made at any point between January 1, 2014, and December 31, 2016, was obtained (N = 6434 patients). From that list, the subset of those patients who had GHP coverage during the same period was identified (2190 patients). Because AAD was available for all patients treated by Geisinger PCPs regardless of the patients’ payer status, this subset represented approximately 34% of the patients included in the original list (2190 of 6434). These 2190 patients therefore constituted the intervention group.
The comparison group was identified from the GHP claims data based on the following criteria: those who (1) had not been exposed to the AAD program during the same period (January 1, 2014, through December 31, 2016), (2) were attributed to 1 of Geisinger’s PCPs, and (3) made at least 1 specialist visit with 1 or more of the specialties included in the AAD program. The claims data were aggregated to a per-member-per-month level to capture total cost of care (with and without prescription drug costs) and care utilization (rates of acute hospitalization, emergency department [ED] visits, and physician office visits) during the first, second, and third months after the index AAD consult. For the comparison group, the index date was defined as the first month of the observation period during which the patient had at least 1 primary care visit and at least 2 specialist visits, in which at least 1 of the specialist visits was to an AAD-participating specialty. Those instances in which there was only 1 specialist visit in a given month were specifically not considered as index dates for the comparison group because such situations likely reflect routine follow-up specialist visits that would not be subject to the AAD impact.
Total cost of care was defined as total allowed amount (ie, GHP’s payment to providers plus any out-of-pocket expenses paid to the providers by the member). For those patients who had prescription drug coverage through GHP, the total cost of care included allowed amounts for all prescription drugs purchased by the patient during each month of observation. Approximately 90% of the patients included in the study sample had prescription drug coverage through GHP.
METHODS
To estimate the AAD program’s impact on care utilization and total cost, a difference-in-differences (DID) approach was used via a set of multivariate linear regression models with patient fixed effects. The key explanatory variables in each regression model were the binary indicator for whether the patient was in the AAD intervention group or not and a set of indicator variables for the postintervention period (ie, 0, 1, 2, and 3 months after the index date), as well as a set of interaction terms between these 2 sets of indicator variables. The coefficient on the interaction term represents the DID estimate of the AAD impact on the dependent variable. The effect of the AAD intervention was then represented via differences between the regression-adjusted “observed” and “expected” values of the dependent variables. Expected values were obtained by setting the coefficient on the interaction term to zero and recalculating the regression-adjusted values.
Other covariates included patient age (18-45, 46-60, 61-70, and ≥71 years), sex, count of selected comorbid conditions (up to 9: chronic kidney disease, diabetes, asthma, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, coronary artery disease, hypertension, cancer, and depression), insurance type (commercial, Medicaid, or Medicare), length of time the patient’s PCP had been part of a PCMH (because PCMHs have been shown to be associated with lower cost and acute care utilization21,22), and case management status. Also included were indicators for whether the patient had prescription drug coverage through GHP and for each calendar year in the sample; these covariates accounted for any confounding effects due to prescription drug coverage and yearly inflation in healthcare prices. Also, a set of interaction terms between sex and age categories were included as covariates to further capture any nonlinear interaction effects between age and gender.
The inclusion of patient fixed effects in the regression models accounted for any time-invariant patient characteristics that may confound the estimates.23 This implied that the AAD binary indicator variable was perfectly collinear with the patient fixed-effect term and its coefficient was therefore not separately identified in the regression model. Nevertheless, because the main coefficients of interest were the coefficients on the interaction terms, this did not pose any issue for the purposes of this study. Similarly, although the patient fixed-effects terms were perfectly collinear with the sex indicator variable and its coefficient was therefore not separately identified, the age—sex interaction effects were identified in the model.
RESULTS
Table 2 suggests that the AAD intervention group and the comparison group differed from each other on several key characteristics at baseline. First, the AAD intervention group was younger and more likely to be female, more likely to have Medicaid, and less likely to have Medicare. However, the AAD intervention group had greater frequencies of acute inpatient admissions and ED visits, leading to a slightly higher average total cost of care at the baseline. Also, the AAD intervention group had a higher rate of primary care visits, whereas it had a comparable rate of specialist visits. In addition, asthma, congestive heart failure, and depression were significantly more prevalent among the AAD intervention group.
Table 3 shows the AAD impact on total cost of care, acute care utilization, and physician office visits. AAD was associated with an approximately 14% reduction in total cost, including prescription drugs, during the first month of follow-up and a 20% reduction during the second month, relative to the comparison group. Similar magnitudes of reductions were observed in terms of total medical cost, excluding prescription drugs (15% and 23%, respectively). These reductions in cost appeared to be driven by reductions in ED visits (11% during the first month), primary care visits (10%), and specialist visits (74%) during the same period, relative to the comparison group. However, there was no statistically significant association between acute inpatient admission rates and AAD program exposure. Also, during the second month of follow-up, some statistically significant increases in the physician office visit rates were observed (13% for primary care visits and 8% for specialist visits). In all cases, however, by the third month of follow-up, there was no statistically significant AAD effect relative to the comparison group.
DISCUSSION
Poor communication between primary care and specialty care can lead to care gaps, avoidable care, and, ultimately, adverse patient outcomes.24,25 Also, in markets where there is limited supply of specialty care, a lack of access can further contribute to worse patient outcomes.26,27 Asynchronous communication and interaction between primary care and specialty care, enabled by an efficient and reliable electronic communication tool, can potentially be a solution to such problems. This study provides empirical evidence that such a system—in this case, AAD—was associated with reductions in ED and physician visits, which also appeared to have led to significant total cost reductions. To our knowledge, this is the first study that has shown such evidence using a large cohort of patients across multiple specialties.
Comparing the baseline statistics (Table 2) with the postintervention statistics, particularly those in month 1 (Table 3), reveals that there appear to be large jumps in total cost and care utilization that coincided with the AAD consult. Similar patterns were observed among the comparison group (as indicated by the expected values in Table 3). This suggests that AAD consults might have been used by PCPs in response to some major clinical events requiring quick input from specialists.
PCPs may have used AAD either to address clinical urgencies or simply to obtain specialist input in routine encounters without formal referrals. The reductions in ED and specialist visits during month 1 relative to the expected values (based on the comparison group), coupled with the observation that AAD consults appear to have coincided with large jumps in cost and utilization relative to the baseline period, are consistent with PCPs using AAD for the former purposes rather than the latter. Alternatively, it may be that the reductions in cost and utilization are detectable only when AAD is used for the former purposes rather than the latter. Further research is necessary to explore this mechanism.
One potential criticism of programs such as AAD is that they may simply “delay the inevitable”—that is, rather than causing actual reductions in inefficient care, they merely delay care to later periods. The results of this study confirm that at least some of this might be true: There appear to be small but statistically significant increases in both primary care and specialty care visits during the second month of follow-up. However, these increases are more than offset by the decreases during the first month of follow-up. Moreover, there is no statistically significant difference by the third month, suggesting that there is no long-term impact of the AAD program beyond the first 2 months.
AAD is designed to be scalable in other health systems with mature EHR capabilities. On the asker side (primary care), it allows timely, reliable, and documented assistance from specialists that is easy to invoke and is costless to their patients. On the answerer side (specialty), it is configured to reward providers for their service via RVUs while improving access by effectively increasing the specialist’s capacity. AAD therefore provides benefits for all the key stakeholders, including not only the physicians but also the patients and the payers. Even for other health systems not structured similarly to Geisinger (eg, those that do not have their own health plans), the findings from this study imply financial justifications for AAD from the third-party payer’s perspective.
Limitations
This study is subject to several limitations. First, because this study relied on observational data, a causal link cannot be established. As shown in Table 2, the AAD intervention group appears to be sicker and costlier than the comparison group at the baseline. Therefore, these results are likely to be conservative estimates of the true effect. Second, it is not possible to determine how much of the reductions in care utilization reflect care that was avoidable or unnecessary. Future research may examine the appropriateness of such reductions in care utilization and cost. Third, the AAD impacts may be different depending on the severity and acuity of the patients’ conditions (ie, there may exist interaction effects between AAD and patient characteristics). In addition, there may be differential AAD impacts across the participating specialties, as well as those that have not yet participated. Although the current study did not explicitly examine such interaction effects and specialty-specific impacts, they are topics of future inquiry.
CONCLUSIONS
Geisinger’s AAD program was associated with reduced ED visits and physician visits, leading to significantly lower total cost of care. This suggests that a reliable and efficient asynchronous communication system between primary care and specialty care providers can potentially lead to reductions in acute care and more efficient use of specialty care.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank the Medlink Scheduling Team for their excellence in message processing, Wayne Swink for AAD software development, and Jesse Chubb for database and dashboard development.Author Affiliations: The Medicine Institute (EDN, PFS, SMV) and Department of Information Technology (CMC), Geisinger, Danville, PA; Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center (DDM), Rochester, NY.
Source of Funding: None; all work related to this study was done as a part of the authors’ employment with Geisinger.
Author Disclosures: Dr Maeng was an employee of Geisinger at the time this study was conducted. The remaining authors report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.
Authorship Information: Concept and design (EDN, PFS, CMC, DDM); acquisition of data (EDN, PFS, SMV, CMC, DDM); analysis and interpretation of data (EDN, PFS, SMV, CMC, DDM); drafting of the manuscript (EDN, DDM); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (EDN, PFS, CMC); statistical analysis (SMV, CMC, DDM); provision of patients or study materials (EDN, PFS, CMC); administrative, technical, or logistic support (EDN, CMC); and supervision (EDN).
Address Correspondence to: Eric D. Newman, MD, Geisinger, 100 N Academy Ave, Danville, PA 17822. Email: enewman@geisinger.edu.REFERENCES
1. Rittenhouse DR, Shortell SM. The patient-centered medical home: will it stand the test of health reform? JAMA. 2009;301(19):2038-2040. doi: 10.1001/jama.2009.691.
2. Nutting PA, Miller WL, Crabtree BF, Jaen CR, Stewart EE, Stange KC. Initial lessons from the first national demonstration project on practice transformation to a patient-centered medical home. Ann Fam Med. 2009;7(3):254-260. doi: 10.1370/afm.1002.
3. American Academy of Family Physicians. Joint principles of the patient-centered medical home. Del Med J. 2008;80(1):21-22.
4. Fisher ES. Building a medical neighborhood for the medical home. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(12):1202-1205. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp0806233.
5. Greenberg JO, Barnett ML, Spinks MA, Dudley JC, Frolkis JP. The “medical neighborhood”: integrating primary and specialty care for ambulatory patients. JAMA Intern Med. 2014;174(3):454-457. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.14093.
6. Kirschner N, Greenlee MC. The patient-centered medical home neighbor: the interface of the patient-centered medical home with specialty/subspecialty practices. American College of Physicians website. acponline.org/system/files/documents/advocacy/current_policy_papers/assets/pcmh_neighbors.pdf. Published 2010. Accessed December 4, 2018.
7. Yee HF Jr. The patient-centered medical home neighbor: a subspecialty physician’s view. Ann Intern Med. 2011;154(1):63-64. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-154-1-201101040-00011.
8. O’Malley AS, Reschovsky JD. Referral and consultation communication between primary care and specialist physicians: finding common ground. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(1):56-65. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.480.
9. Chen AH, Yee HF Jr. Improving primary care—specialty care communication: lessons from San Francisco’s safety net: comment on “referral and consultation communication between primary care and specialist physicians”. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(1):65-67. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.484.
10. Taylor EF, Lake T, Nysenbaum J, Peterson G, Meyers D. Coordinating care in the medical neighborhood: critical components and available mechanisms. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality website. pcmh.ahrq.gov/page/coordinating-care-medical-neighborhood-critical-components-and-available-mechanisms. Published June 2011. Accessed December 4, 2018.
11. Association of American Medical Colleges. Innovations at the Interface of Primary and Specialty Care. Washington, DC: Association of American Medical Colleges; 2016. members.aamc.org/eweb/upload/Innovations%20Report.pdf. Accessed December 4, 2018.
12. Kim-Hwang JE, Chen AH, Bell DS, Guzman D, Yee HF Jr, Kushel MB. Evaluating electronic referrals for specialty care at a public hospital. J Gen Intern Med. 2010;25(10):1123-1128. doi: 10.1007/s11606-010-1402-1.
13. Chen AH, Murphy EJ, Yee HF Jr. eReferral—a new model for integrated care. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(26):2450-2453. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1215594.
14. Kirsh S, Carey E, Aron DC, et al. Impact of a national specialty e-consultation implementation project on access. Am J Manag Care. 2015;21(12):e648-e654.
15. Keely E, Liddy C, Afkham A. Utilization, benefits, and impact of an e-consultation service across diverse specialties and primary care providers. Telemed J E Health. 2013;19(10):733-738. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2013.0007.
16. Barnett ML, Yee HF Jr, Mehrotra A, Giboney P. Los Angeles safety-net program eConsult system was rapidly adopted and decreased wait times to see specialists. Health Aff (Millwood). 2017;36(3):492-499. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2016.1283.
17. Cruz ML, Gleason N, Wang M, Wrenn K, Gonzales R. Transforming the endocrine consult: asynchronous provider consultations. Endocr Pract. 2015;21(5):514-521. doi: 10.4158/EP14297.OR.
18. Anderson D, Villagra V, Coman EN, et al. A cost-effectiveness analysis of cardiology eConsults for Medicaid patients. Am J Manag Care. 2018;24(1):e9-e16.
19. Liddy C, Deri Armstrong C, Drosinis P, Mito-Yobo F, Afkham A, Keely E. What are the costs of improving access to specialists through eConsultation? the Champlain BASE experience. Stud Health Technol Inform. 2015;209:67-74. doi: 10.3233/978-1-61499-505-0-67.
20. Walsh C, Siegler EL, Cheston E, et al; Informatics Intervention Research Collaboration (I2RC). Provider-to-provider electronic communication in the era of meaningful use: a review of the evidence. J Hosp Med. 2013;8(10):589-597. doi: 10.1002/jhm.2082.
21. Maeng DD, Sciandra JP, Tomcavage JF. The impact of a regional patient-centered medical home initiative on cost of care among commercially insured population in the US. Risk Manag Healthc Policy. 2016;9:67-74. doi: 10.2147/RMHP.S102826.
22. Maeng DD, Khan N, Tomcavage J, Graf TR, Davis DE, Steele GD. Reduced acute inpatient care was largest savings component of Geisinger Health System’s patient-centered medical home. Health Aff (Millwood). 2015;34(4):636-644. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2014.0855.
23. Wooldridge JM. Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press; 2010.
24. Horner K, Wagner E, Tufano J. Electronic consultations between primary and specialty care clinicians: early insights. Issue Brief (Commonw Fund). 2011;23:1-14.
25. Mehrotra A, Forrest CB, Lin CY. Dropping the baton: specialty referrals in the United States. Milbank Q. 2011;89(1):39-68. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2011.00619.x.
26. Cook NL, Hicks LS, O’Malley AJ, Keegan T, Guadagnoli E, Landon BE. Access to specialty care and medical services in community health centers. Health Aff (Millwood). 2007;26(5):1459-1468. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.26.5.1459.
27. Cook NL, Ayanian JZ, Orav EJ, Hicks LS. Differences in specialist consultations for cardiovascular disease by race, ethnicity, gender, insurance status, and site of primary care. Circulation. 2009;119(18):2463-2470. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.825133.
Overhauling Quality Measurement in the US: Measure What Matters
October 30th 2024As the US charts its course through the next political era, it is crucial that we boldly allocate resources and prioritize what truly impacts patients. When faced with complexity, feasibility concerns, or entrenched norms, we must proclaim: “It’s the outcomes, stupid.”
Read More
No Free Lunch: The Misaligned Incentives of the American Health Care System
October 30th 2024The author highlights reasons why we have not seen substantial cost savings in the health care industry and why future efforts are likely to continue to see forceful pushback, as well as offers potential solutions.
Read More