Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Subcommittee on Primary Health and Aging Hearing
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Chairman Sanders, Senator Burr and members of the committee, it is a great honor to be with you today to discuss health policy issues that are critical to our future, both in terms of access to quality healthcare and the overall strength of our healthcare system and economy.
My name is
In
Over the last 15 years,
This unique public-private infrastructure, which covers all 100 of the state's counties, has helped to give
Our model has improved care by building capacity at the provider and community level and linking providers together through a statewide infrastructure that links providers together. We provide support for practices seeking recognition as a Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) support and other needed help in collaboration with the
We have thrived on innovation, fostering change, and establishing a culture of collaboration with all our partners around a common goal, improving the care delivered to our most vulnerable citizens.
Upheaval in the healthcare landscape, however, has accelerated rapidly over the last 2-3 years and our doctors are reeling. Our primary care medical homes are under stress and this will have a significant impact on the future primary care workforce and access to quality healthcare for our citizens.
If you are a primary care physician in NC:
* You have probably just bought and implemented an electronic medical record and are now figuring out how to meet meaningful use requirements. You may be with vendors who have promised a Ferrari and delivered a Yugo. Many EHRs still are not capable of providing needed reports or communicating with other systems effectively.
* Despite buying into technology, doctors are inundated with paperwork and clerical tasks often turning physicians into data entry clerks. A recent national survey demonstrated doctors spend 22 percent of their time on paperwork; that is equivalent to 1 day a week of work.
* You may have been promised enhanced reimbursement for becoming an accredited Patient Centered Medical Home and may have invested
* Physicians now have to decide whether to join (or become) an
* There is rapid consolidation of our hospital systems, leaving independent physicians little choice but to take on salaried positions with large health systems. The number of independent hospitals has dropped from 142 to 24. From personal communications I have had with the
* While some notable integrated delivery systems have increased healthcare value for purchasers, consolidation also decreases competition and may actually decrease local collaboration and innovation as the systems becomes more competitive and proprietary.
* There has also been rapid growth in healthcare technology platforms that promise to activate patients, provide remote monitoring, and control costs. Our state legislators and
* Unfortunately, this chaos is also having an impact on recruiting medical students and residents into primary care. While we have increased the number of medical student slots in NC, only 19 percent are choosing primary care specialties (
I believe that policy options that strengthen primary care are the most important element to a successful national healthcare reform effort. Primary care is essential for delivering preventive care, providing a significant portion of a healthcare needs in a low-cost setting and effectively coordinating care of patients with multiple chronic diseases.
Here are three recommendations from our experience in NC that may be helpful:
1. Create an effective primary care pipeline. We need a continuous and coordinated medical education strategy with both undergraduate and graduate medical education policies that increase the supply of primary care doctors in rural areas.
In
However, instate training and community based GME programs will increase the primary care physician supply:
a. Students who both went to school in
b. Residents who trained in community based AHECs were more likely to practice in
c. We now have two teaching health centers based out of FQHCs in
d. CCNC works with all NC primary care residency programs and North Carolina AHEC
e. CCNC involved practice are more likely to be involved in education.
We must support and build capacity in primary care in order to improve access in rural areas and control costs. The evidence base around population health is teaching us that physician-led medical homes, supported with care management and effective population health strategies and infrastructure can help control costs and improve outcomes.
However, medical homes cannot function under a reimbursement model where physicians must see patients every 10-12 minutes. Payment structures that incentivize team based care, population management, quality data reporting, and accountable care are a start; but we are finding that our independent practices are struggling to participate in these new models.
One of our pediatricians said "I met with my office manager and my accountant, and we figured out that it costs me2. Payment reform is needed now and on a larger scale. It should focus on incentives that allow primary care doctors - especially those in independent practices and FQHCs - to form continuous relationships that engage and activate patients to change behaviors and allow physicians to manage at risk populations. The Direct Primary Care model where some or all primary care services are capitated with a flat fee is one example that shows promise.
3. States need structures to support and build capacity in rural areas and for independent practices. In the CCNC program, two-thirds of our
In NC, we have built a statewide informatics infrastructure that supports our practices and has enabled our practices to identify ED super utilizers, patients who are not getting their medications filled, and those with chronic disease who are missing needed tests like hemoglobin A1Cs. Our platform also allows them to compare their clinical quality data with that of their peers and motivates local clinical management entities to improve population health.
We are now working with our partners including FQHCs to knit together a statewide health information exchange that will allow practices to report quality data and identify populations that need more intensive care management and will allow physicians to use healthcare resources more efficiently.
In summary: In North Carolina, we have found that supporting primary care and residency training in local settings has led to local collaboration and care improvement - and ultimately improved quality and cost control. We look to policy makers to help enable community-based infrastructures such as health informatics and care management supporting primary care that will further improve population health outcomes. Highly functional integrated health systems play an important role, but there will be a need for state-based "utilities" to support rural and independent practices to achieve lasting and widespread reform of our healthcare system.
Thank you for the opportunity to testify before this committee.
Read this original document at: http://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Dobson1.pdf
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