All Posts Author: Dr. Robert Ripley

Transformation Potential for Medicaid Policy Using Counterfactual Properties.

It Has to Be About the Patient

Health care transformation obliges stakeholders in the ecosystem to coordinate. Private and public health plans articulate policy, provider networks deliver care, and patient’s experience care. The glue that holds these stakeholders together is reimbursement. Transformation however requires more than manipulating policies of transactions. This project offers a new way to look at the entire ecosystem using a small set of TennCare data that illustrates how counterfactual methods can serve to extend the scope of information available for transformation.

Technology Medicaid Managed Care Conference 2022

It Has to Be About the Patient

The presentations of the 2022 Medicaid Managed Care Conference in New Orleans moderated by Virginia Burchett gave an insightful snapshot of the challenges faced by Medicaid programs and vendors. These challenges are diverse, and all are impacted by program design and IT support systems.

N of 1: Cube as a Protected Space

It Has to Be About the Patient

Health Care in 3 Dimensions’ “Cube” is a solution for redirecting health care to changing behaviors. The interest in Artificial Intelligence as applied to health care is growing and expresses the concern if not amazement that technology has had little impact on major national policy goals of access and cost containment.

CMS AI Health Outcomes Challenge

It Has to Be About the Patient

The Solution for the AI Challenge must be a catalyst for a new theoretical framework. Risk stratification alone will not afford options for actions that will achieve the desired outcomes. Health Care in 3 Dimensions provides the framework to apply theory to practical problems such as reduction in unplanned admissions. This approach will resonate with family physicians and can be tailored to them as the target audience for AI.

How Can Broad Based Population Data be Useful?

It Has to Be About the Patient

The push for new ways to use big data is impacting Medicare and Medicaid plans. Artificial Intelligence is poised to enter the health care arena, and CMS has proposed the AI Health Outcomes Challenge as a contest to incentivize big data specialists to engage the Healthcare Commons. The idea is that tools such as machine learning and Bayesian neural networks can identify actionable structures in data to assist the CMS Innovation Center in testing innovative payment and service delivery models. Part of the contest is to make broad based data available from the Medicare Claims Dataset. The idea of making more CMS data available to the provider community is gaining currency.

A pathway for burnout: From physician engagement to Emancipation or Estrangement

It Has to Be About the Patient

All discussions of payment reform require an alert and attentive provider community. Physician burnout is clearly an impediment to this attention. It is estimated that 50% of physicians either have, or are at risk for burnout. The manifestations are protean and apparent to families of the providers and coworkers in the workplace. Not only do the effects impair patient management, but the willingness and enthusiasm to participate in health care reform to guide the engagement pathway from estrangement to emancipation. The Innovation Initiative and the Tenncare Episode of Care model, illustrate a successful program that is an ideal vehicle to accomplish this and show the way to more comprehensive models that will emancipate physicians.

Critical Realist Interpretation of Holism/Reductionism

It Has to Be About the Patient

At the heart of the critical realist interpretation of cost containment is to understand the difference in two patient centered approaches to data analytics. The reductionist approach is structured, and the holistic approach is agnostic to how the data is accumulated, or in realist terms the latter approach is open and unstructured. Putting the patient back together again requires a free form method where there is no reason not to draw conclusions from patient centered data because of concerns about statistical significance at the population level. Being unstructured the patient level data can create populations that reflect the holistic approach, in a bottom up method. This is an inversion of the top down approach in the reductionist method that characterizes patients as averages of the predetermined population.

Episode of Care Tenncare, Revisited

It Has to Be About the Patient

TennCare has released participant commentary on its Technical Advisory Groups. If you are unfamiliar with TennCare’s Episode of Care Program I’d encourage to view TennCare’s Introduction to TennCare Technical Advisory Groups and read my January blog Episode of Care Tenncare which discusses its success and potential to be a model for other Medicaid programs just as it has been for Tennessee’s CMS Innovative Initiative.

Care Coordination and Technology Congress

It Has to Be About the Patient

This Congress was an assembly of seven summits. These included: Care Coordination and Transitions, Connected Health: RPM and Telehealth, Bundled Payment, ACO Population Health Management, Merit-Bases Incentive Payment System (MIPS), Health Plan Chronic Disease Management, Provider Strategies on Community Health and Social Determinants of Health.

Time of Many Languages

It Has to Be About the Patient

I consider the present phase of health care the time of Babylon, the time of many languages; the next the enlightenment where the healthcare communities look outside of their comfortable boundaries to understand context. The next is the phase of modernity where the high dimensions inherent to HCn3D are presented to all players in simple understandable ways.

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