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Primary care case management

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Primary Care Case Management (PCCM) is a system of managed care in the US used by state Medicaid agencies, in which a primary care provider is responsible for approving and monitoring the care of enrolled Medicaid beneficiaries, typically for a small monthly case management fee in addition to fee-for-service reimbursement for treatment.[1] In the mid-1980s, states began enrolling beneficiaries in their PCCM programs in an attempt to increase access and reduce inappropriate emergency department and other high cost care. Use increased steadily through the 1990s.

History

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In 1981, the 97th session of Congress enacted the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA) which allowed state Medicaid programs to implement risk-based managed care programs as well as PCCM, pending HCFA (now known as CMS) waiver approval. The state had to meet two requirements in order to be granted HCFA approval.

  • The case management restrictions must not "substantially impair access" to primary care services of "adequate quality where medically necessary"; and
  • The case management restrictions must be "cost effective".[2]

In their earliest forms, PCCM programs closely resembled traditional fee-for-service Medicaid than managed care. Some states developed PCCM as a first step towards risk-based managed care and considered their MCO contracts as the main managed care system. As PCCM programs matured, state goals have expanded to improving quality of care provided. States have used strategies similar to network management principles used by MCOs.[1]

PCCM programs have evolved over the past two decades[when?] through the addition of a variety of care management and care co-ordination features. These include payment innovations, increased care management resources, improved performance monitoring and reporting, increased resources for management of serious and complex medical conditions and a variety of "medical home" innovations including performance-based reimbursement, better use of information technology, increased contact with patients and efforts to provide additional resources for physician offices.

Intent

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By 1986, seven states had implemented PCCM programs.[3] By 1990, that number had grown to 19.[4] States were motivated to implement PCCM programs for several reasons.

  • States wanted to increase access to health care. State officials tried giving participating physicians a small payment to encourage physicians to accept more Medicaid beneficiaries. Each beneficiary would choose or be assigned a participating physician who would serve as his/her medical home.
  • States felt physicians would like PCCM more than risk-based managed care.
  • States hoped to save money by eliminating unnecessary or inappropriate emergency department and specialist visits, lab tests, and other high-cost care.
  • States thought PCCM would be well-suited for rural areas where MCOs have difficulty maintaining an adequate population base for financial viability.

Prevalence of PCCM

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On July 1, 2010, approximately 21% of the almost 39 million Medicaid enrollees who were enrolled in a comprehensive managed care plan were enrolled in a PCCM program.[5]

  • These 8 million consumers participate in PCCM programs in 31 states.
  • There are 11 states which offer PCCM as the only managed care option.
  • Illinois, North Carolina, Texas and Louisiana have the largest PCCM programs, each with over 700,000 enrollees.
  • Approximately 30 percent of SCHIP enrollees are served by PCCM systems.[6]

Organization of PCCM programs

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In most PCCM programs, PCPs are paid a per member per month fee for each Medicaid beneficiary or an increase in preventive service fees to pay for case management services. In addition, PCPs are paid on a fee-for-service reimbursement for all primary care services that he/she provides. HMOs are not involved. In return, the PCP is responsible for providing primary care and for prior authorizations to hospitals and specialty care providers.[7]

Physicians bear no financial risk for the services they provide or approve. State Medicaid agencies may include additional activities, such as medical management, network management or performance incentives, to improve outcomes and generate cost savings.[8]

States vary in how they manage provider networks, provider recruitment, data collection and analysis, monitoring, quality improvement, patient education, disease management programs and enrollment. Some states perform all these programs in-house using state employees; other states contract out all or some of these functions.[9]

Scientific evidence

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States that have tried implementing PCCM programs have encountered mostly positive results.

  • PCCM has been shown to improve patient outcomes. A study of Medicaid-enrolled children in Virginia found that immunization rates were higher among PCCM enrollees than among enrollees in either mandatory or voluntary HMO programs.[10]
  • Disease management programs, a prominent part of many PCCM programs, have shown to improve health outcomes by increasing communication between the patient and his/her PCP.[11]
  • The cost effectiveness of PCCM is thought to derive from increased preventive services and less use of costly services such as emergency department visits. A 2006 cost analysis of the Iowa PCCM program found that PCCM was associated with substantial aggregate cost savings over an 8-year period, and that this effect became stronger over time.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Joanne Rawlings Sekunda, Deborah Curtis and Neva Kaye. "Emerging Practices in Medicaid Primary Care Case Management Programs". Prepared by the National Academy for State Health Policy for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, June 2001
  2. ^ Deborah A. Freund, Medicaid Reform: Four Studies of Case Management (Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute, 1984).
  3. ^ Maren D. Anderson, Peter D. Fox, "Lessons Learned from Medicaid Managed Care Approaches", Health Affairs 6, no. 1 (spring 1987): 71–88.
  4. ^ Horvath, J. and N. Kaye (eds), Medicaid Managed Care: A Guide for States, 2nd edition. Portland, Maine: National Academy for State Health Policy, 1995.
  5. ^ Medicaid Enrollment in Comprehensive Managed Care Plans by Type. Accessed January 29, 2012
  6. ^ VanLandeghem K and Brach C, "Impact of primary care case management (PCCM) implementation on Medicaid and SCHIP", CHIRI Issue Brief No. 8. Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. March 2009. AHRQ Pub. No. 090020.
  7. ^ Complete information about the BBA and Medicaid managed care, including the actual text and a series of letter to states from HCFA (now known as CMS) regarding the BBA, is available at "HCFA is now Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services". Archived from the original on 2005-03-10. Retrieved 2012-02-02.
  8. ^ Neva Kaye, "PCCM Contracting and Quality Monitoring", Medicaid Managed Care: A Guide for States (second edition) (Portland, ME: National Academy for State Health Policy, 1995), 115-135
  9. ^ Silberman P, Poley S, Slifkin R. "Innovative Primary Care Case Management Programs Operating in Rural Communities: Case Studies of Three States". Accessed August 18, 2006
  10. ^ Cotter JJ, McDonald KA, Parker DA, et al. "Effect of different types of Medicaid managed care on childhood immunization rates", Eval Health Prof. Dec 2000;23(4):397-408
  11. ^ Rossiter LF, Whitehurst-Cook MY, Small RE, et al. "The impact of disease management on outcomes and cost of care: a study of low-income asthma patients", Inquiry, summer 2000;37(2):188-202.
    - Silberman P, Poley S, Slifkin R, "Innovative Primary Care Case Management Programs Operating in Rural Communities: Case Studies of Three States". Accessed August 18, 2006
  12. ^ Momany ET, Flach SD, Nelson FD, Damiano PC, "A cost analysis of the Iowa Medicaid primary care case management program", Health Serv Res., August 2006, 41(4 Pt 1):1357-1371