Accountable Care Organizations, Managed Care Organizations, and other delegated risk providers know that spending on Medicare Beneficiaries in their last year of life accounts for about 25% of total Medicare expenses for those 65 and older (KFF).
1: Health Affairs: Hospice Enrollment Saves Money For Medicare And Improves Care Quality Across A Number Of Different Lengths-Of-Stay
It’s also probably common knowledge that futile care is most often delivered in an intensive care setting. Patients who:
…have higher healthcare costs with poorer outcomes.
Delegated risk providers are searching for ways to help these patients achieve better outcomes at lower costs. If kept at home instead of cycling through the hospital for futile care, it can be easier to achieve savings goals and facilitate better-quality outcomes.
When an organization refers to hospice, they are referring their patient to a group of professionals who think like they do- how can we manage patients in a risk-based environment while providing appropriate higher-quality care?
In many ways, hospice is the original model for capitated, risk-based care in the United States. Hospices are paid a flat per-diem set of rates to provide person-centered interdisciplinary care that supports the physical, psycho-social, and spiritual needs of patients and their families. Hospices assume the risk and cover all conditions related to the terminal prognosis: pharmacy, durable medical equipment, and bereavement care for 12 months after death are all included the per diem.
The idea of hospice as a savings mechanism is borne out in a landmark Health Affairs study which found that when compared to matched non-hospice cohorts, hospice usage resulted in significant expenditure reductions across multiple lengths of stay. Specifically, hospice stays of:
The study also found significantly lower rates of hospital day usage for hospice versus non-hospice patients:
The study authors summarize that their findings “…suggest that investment in the Medicare hospice benefit translates into savings overall for the Medicare system.”
The Health Affairs study shows that hospice can be a critical component of a care management strategy, but it doesn’t entirely show why. How does hospice care achieve these outcomes for patients as well as a meeting risk-bearing entities’ goal?
While not all patients will be eligible for hospice services, ACO’s, MCO’s, Direct Contracting Entities and other delegated risk providers can significantly reduce the expensive and sometimes-futile care that seriously ill patients receive in acute care settings near the end of life.
Appropriate use of hospice care for clinically eligible patients can be a core part of a strategy to manage global risk for a patient population, at higher quality. Hospice usage can keep patients from cycling through hospital or acute care settings, lower overall hospitalizations, and increase quality scores for pain management, care planning, family education, and psychosocial support.