Penn's Community Health Worker Program Yields $2.47 for Every $1 Invested Annually by Medicaid
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- First-of-its-kind analysis provides the latest evidence showing how addressing unmet social needs can improve health and cut costs
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Every dollar spent on patients receiving support from Penn Medicine's community health worker (CHW) program resulted in an annual return on investment (ROI) of
Developed at Penn, IMPaCT (Individualized Management for Patient-Centered Targets) addresses unmet social needs such as housing and food insecurity and transportation needs in underserved populations with the goal of improving health. The evidence-based program hires and trains trusted neighborhood residents to become CHWs who carry out culturally appropriate outreach activities, social support, patient advocacy, and health system navigation.
"Within a Medicaid population, we now know that investing in our communities with this type of robust and personalized social support not only adds meaningful health value but also meaningful financial value," said senior author Shreya Kangovi, MD, MSHP, founding executive director of the
The findings provide the latest round of evidence for state Medicaid programs or health systems looking to invest in proven community health worker programs to improve health and lower health care costs.
The study is the first economic analysis of a health system-based community health worker intervention for adults that used data from a randomized controlled trial. Past economic studies, have either not been rigorous enough or exaggerated savings because the reductions in spending were not attributable to an intervention but rather to random variation, or regression to the mean.
The researchers analyzed inpatient and outpatient costs on 302 patients (150 randomly assigned to the intervention arm and 152 to the control arm) who were treated within the
The intervention arm had both fewer and lower cost admissions, with a total inpatient cost of
When outpatient costs were factored in, the total cost of care was
CHWs from IMPaCT meet with patients regularly to encourage healthier behaviors, and otherwise provide support for the patients' own health goals by addressing social determinants of health. That can include helping them identify and purchase healthy food, connecting them with recreational activities such as urban gardening or simply being a shoulder to lean on.
Importantly, while some community health worker programs focus on patients more likely to incur high costs, IMPaCT casts a wider net to capture patients with not only frequent hospitalizations, for instance, but also other measures, such as patients with chronic diseases who never go to the hospital.
"This proves that even when applied to a broader population, IMPaCT still provided a significant return on investment," Kangovi said. "What's more, the return on investment underestimates the true social return."
The randomized controlled trial not only demonstrated financial ROI, but also improved quality of care, and modest improvements in cigarette smoking, obesity, diabetes severity, and mental health. Two other randomized controlled trials of IMPaCT from Penn Medicine researchers over the past several years have similarly demonstrated its benefit. A 2014 study of hospitalized patients demonstrated improved mental health, quality of care and lower recurrent admissions. A recent multi-center randomized trial found that IMPaCT reduced hospital stays by 65 percent and doubled (https://www.pennmedicine.org/news/news-releases/2018/october/community-health-workers-can-reduce-hospitalizations-by-65-percent-and-double-patient-satisfaction) the rate of patient satisfaction with primary care.
IMPaCT has served more than 12,000 patients in the
Penn co-authors of the study include



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