Marking Women’s National Health Week: Pay Attention to Your Mental Health

Source: https://www.womenshealth.gov/nwhw/tools/infographics/mental-health/
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Source: https://www.womenshealth.gov/nwhw/tools/infographics/mental-health/
Being a parent is one of the most challenging and rewarding jobs an individual can hold. When behavioral health challenges are added, it becomes even more difficult. Try, for a moment, to imagine being a foster parent to a child with behavioral health challenges. Where does one even begin to find the help and services they need to best care for their child?
Through our collaboration with the Wyoming Department of Health, Division of Healthcare Financing (Medicaid), Magellan in Wyoming coordinates care, including behavioral health interventions with other youth serving agencies in our system, using the High Fidelity Wraparound (HFWA) model to build a team of support for the successful management of complex conditions and behaviors in home- and community- based settings. The team creates steps to help youth stay in their homes, schools and communities. Through the 10 guiding principles of the program, families and youth have a voice in their care and choice in the kind of care they receive. We help to strengthen community support, understanding, and education of at risk youth ages 4-20 with complex behavioral health needs.
Magellan in Wyoming recently had the opportunity to hear from a former foster parent and HFWA graduate to discuss how the program benefited them through their challenges and supported their growth. “Opening my heart up to love and attachment with these children, parenting them with unconditional love, all the while knowing, they might not stay was difficult,” said the foster parent.
The siblings involved and their foster family cycled through numerous foster care workers in three years, creating more trauma for everyone. There was no stability and no consistency. Dealing with several different mental health diagnoses and many weekly appointments, in addition to the strain of everyday life, took a toll.
When this family discovered HFWA, they were naturally a little skeptical. They had experienced enough “new” things; however, this was the beginning of a completely new outlook on life. From the very start, HFWA taught the foster parent that it was okay to take a breath, to sleep and to ask for support. More importantly, it became evident that people wanted to help and be on the family’s team to help support them.
The family had spent so much time triaging the risk aspects of their children’s lives, that it had drained them of most of their hope. Through the strengths-based principles of the HFWA program, the family was able to gain new insight into ways they could focus on the local supports available to help them.
The program taught them to see the progress. By forming a HFWA team around the foster children and the whole family, they were able to gain some positive, strengths-based perspective along with stability and consistency.
HFWA empowered the family to have a voice and to use it effectively. “I knew all the people on my team before HFWA, but the program taught me how to use my voice. It taught me how to say what was going on and who to say it to,” said the foster parent. It was because of the family’s team, as well as community investment in the program, that today, the family is enjoying a life full of hope and possibility.
On March 22, Magellan Rx Management released its seventh annual Medical Pharmacy Trend Report, which continues to be a leading source for payers and other industry stakeholders to analyze high-cost injectable drugs paid under the medical benefit. It’s clear that specialty spend on the medical benefit accounts for a significant expenditure for both members and payers alike and it is continuing to grow rapidly, particularly for commercial health plans. Ensuring a sound medical benefit drug management structure is in place is necessary to rein in costs in both the short- and long-term, particularly as new drugs come to market.
This year’s report highlights the member and payer impact of high-cost specialty drugs billed on the medical benefit. Often unrecognized, but a critical component of total drug spend, this segment of drug utilization is especially important considering that by 2018, it’s expected that 50 percent of total United States drug spend will be composed of specialty medications. Additionally, half of specialty drug spend is billed through the pharmacy benefit and half through the medical benefit, or “medical pharmacy.” Specifically, the report found:
Key strategies for the effective management of medical benefit drug spend outlined in the report include:
Building an effective medical benefit drug management strategy requires an in-depth knowledge of and expertise in this complex area, but it’s essential to help payers rein in costs and improve the quality of care for members.
Download the full report to learn more.
When I was selected to join the National Quality Forum’s Medicaid Innovation Accelerator Project Coordinating Committee, I thought about the background and experiences I would bring with me – both personally and professionally. As a trained pediatrician, my medical training focused largely on the care and treatment of young children. According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), more than 45.2 million children were “ever-enrolled”1 in Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) during fiscal year 2015. In addition, in the time since I was in practice, I’ve worked for several national healthcare companies, with a focus on population health, clinical delivery systems delivery and improvement.
Since joining Magellan as the company’s chief medical officer, I’ve worked with my colleagues to help continually looks for ways to reinvent how care is delivered. I am passionate about supporting the volume-to-value payment transformation, and Magellan has a key role to play because of the deep expertise we bring in behavioral health. Oftentimes, we don’t realize how specialized and important that expertise is, and how it impacts the overall quality of care for a patient, particularly with comorbid conditions. Magellan is also considered a trusted partner because we are an independent company and not part of a big health plan. In addition, we also bring a breadth of experience in medical specialty, medical pharmacy and long-term services and supports (LTSS) which is not found in most other organizations.
NQF’s Medicaid Innovation Accelerator Project (IAP) Coordinating Committee is tasked with identifying and recommending measures in four priority areas to help support states’ efforts related to payment and delivery system reforms.
The four priority areas are:
The challenges – and opportunities – are many. Medicaid behavioral health does not currently have standard benefit packages from state-to-state, and there are also not standard billing practices. Both of those elements make it much harder to develop metrics which are reliable, and more technical expertise is needed to ensure that the metrics selected can be broadly used. Ultimately, this committee will provide guidance on performance measures for areas which are unique to Medicaid, including patients with complex health needs, LTSS needs and those with behavioral health and substance use/opioid disorders. The states will then have a list of standardized measures for use in Medicaid performance program evaluation.
All of the committee’s meetings are open to the public. The IAP will issue its draft report in July, and its final report at the end of September. I look forward to working with my committee colleagues as we work to draft these important metrics related to state’s efforts regarding payment and delivery system reforms.
1These enrollment data are unduplicated counts of children who were enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP at any point in FFY 2015. A child who was enrolled in more than one program (e.g., Separate CHIP and Medicaid) at different times during the FFY is only counted in the program in which he or she was last enrolled.
April marks Autism Awareness Month, which focuses on increasing awareness and understanding of autism spectrum disorders (ASD). People with ASD may learn, communicate, and behave in ways that are different from others. Learn more about ASD below, and click on our tip sheets to find additional resources, including ways that you can help support others around you who may be impacted by ASD.
There are many resources to turn to if you are looking to learn more about Autism spectrum disorder. Begin your search here:
Understanding Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
How to Support Parents of Children with Autism
Resources for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
Sources
Learn more about ways to keep specialty spend, an important — and quickly growing — area of pharmacy spend, from Matt Ward, Magellan Rx Management’s general manager of the employer segment. Ward’s op-ed on the subject was recently published in WorldatWork’s magazine. WorldatWork is a nonprofit human resources association and compensation authority for professionals and organizations focused on compensation, benefits and total rewards.
Read more here: Six Ways to Keep Specialty Spend Under Control
Between January 30 and February 1, Magellan hosted its Magellan Open Vision Exchange (MOVE) conference in Scottsdale, Ariz. Our annual gathering of healthcare insiders, experts and leaders provides opportunities for key members of the industry to talk openly about the future of healthcare. You can read part one of our review of the 2017 event here.
Day two keynote speaker, Salim Ismail, chair of ExO Works, best-selling author of Exponential Organizations and former executive director of Singularity University, gave a fantastic overview of the exponential business model and how it applies to healthcare. Pointing to a wide variety of other industries, Ismail showed that disruption is powerful, creating both problems and opportunities. If a company fails to respond, it can quickly become overwhelmed — case in point, the photographic industry’s reaction to digital cameras. When the public embraced digital imaging, the market for film and film development disappeared; however, a whole new slew of problems arose allowing opportunity to flourish. In this case, the large number of images created by the average person needed new solutions, namely how to store and organize their digital pictures.
Ismail explained that there was a doubling pattern of exponential growth in a basket of many technologies. He also pointed out that humans are, in fact, not very good at accepting exponential growth. Our brains do not track exponential growth well, preferring scalable efficiency. Ismail gave advice on how companies (in healthcare and beyond) can prepare themselves to not just deal with exponential change but to lead it. Michael Guyette, president and CEO of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota (BCBSMN), gave some key insights into how that spirit of disruption and innovation can look in the healthcare world. Guyette relayed how BCBSMN had created a unique program focused on innovation and diversification that has resulted in ways they can improve the health of communities they serve. “You need to have focus. Otherwise, you’re just going to go all over the place with innovation,” Guyette said. “But we as leaders need to make sure that we embrace our legacy while we start to reach out for the change of the future.”
One particularly interesting discussion centered on the rise of big data. While the concept of data-driven healthcare may seem impersonal at first glance, several voices argued that it can actually lead to more personalized care. For example, Michael Neidorff, chairman, president & CEO, Centene Corporation, brought up software that track genetic and genomic patterns. This data can be used to map cancer at the individual level, allowing for personalized care. Similarly, the ability to collect and process personal health data was brought up by Seth Dobrin, vice president and chief data officer at IBM Analytics, as a powerful and personal disruption of the health care industry.
Brian Flanigan, principal at Deloitte Consulting, brought up the fact that healthcare is in an affordability crisis. 76 percent of consumers rate the healthcare system as poor or average and costs are rising to unaffordable levels. Flanigan pointed to the use of innovation and data to provide the high-level, personalized services that consumers demand at more affordable prices. Using data and new technology, Flanigan pointed out, will literally allow us to do more for less.
When we first developed the Magellan Open Vision Exchange, we wanted to avoid the typical corporate conference format and create a genuine exchange of ideas and experiences between healthcare peers and insiders. Once again, we were thrilled with the level of dialogue, questions and answers that we heard from our speakers and panelists.
Magellan’s collection of HEDIS (Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set) quality measures for 2017 has entered the final phase of data collection. You’ve probably heard of the acronym HEDIS – but what does it stand for and what does it mean to you? The Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set – HEDIS — was created by the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) to measure the clinical quality performance of health plans. This is accomplished through the collection and analysis of data documenting the clinical care received by individual plan members from providers, influenced through activities and programs delivered by the health plans. The data is aggregated and reported collectively to reflect the ‘collective’ or population-based care received by the plan’s membership. These reports have become a major component of quality rating systems that measure the clinical quality performance of health plans by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, states offering Medicaid and other entities. Right now, Magellan has entered the final phase of data collection for HEDIS quality measures for 2017.
There are 91 HEDIS 2017 measures, but it’s important to note that the number may vary from year to year as new measures are added to the set and some are retired. The measures cover many aspects of healthcare including preventive care such as screening tests (e.g., mammograms) and immunizations, management of physical and mental health conditions, access and availability of care, patient experience, utilization and relative resource use. Data is reported individually for each product and line of business
Measure data is collected is a variety of ways. Claims are the major source of data, but specific measures may also allow plans to survey members or to access member medical records for additional data not captured in claims. This type of data collection (combined claims and chart data) is called hybrid. The final phase of data collection for health plans choosing to do hybrid runs from January through May and is often called MRR for medical record retrieval, or simply ‘chart chase.’ Final HEDIS data covering services rendered in 2016 and prior will be submitted to NCQA by June 15, 2017. Final health plan ratings for all lines of business are published on the NCQA website by October 2017.
For health plans, HEDIS ratings can be very important. The scores on measures can help them understand quality of care being delivered to their members in some of the most common chronic and acute illnesses. Higher scores can help compete more effectively in various markets. HEDIS score reporting are often required in public markets as well, where the results are often reported to the states, or occasionally counties, in which the plans reside.
Behavioral health and pharmacy are well represented in the HEDIS measure set. Behavioral health has multiple measures that include ensuring continuity of care, appropriate psychotropic medication management/adherence, and initiation and engagement of drug and alcohol abuse treatment. Pharmacy measures focus on medication management of acute and chronic physical and mental illness, appropriate medications in the elderly, and management of polypharmacy. Specialty measures are directed toward inappropriate imaging.
So, what is the value of HEDIS to Magellan? Aside from being a collection and reporting contract requirement for many of our customers and our own health plan, HEDIS gives Magellan valuable information about the populations we serve.
By following the behavioral health data, we collect, for example, we can identify gaps in network performance in patient follow-up patterns, management of drug and alcohol abuse, and prescribing and adherence to medications. This allows us to design and implement interventions that can improve outcomes and reduce cost of care.
The same type of analysis/intervention applies to physical health conditions. Analysis of HEDIS data helps identify gaps in care, particularly preventive care, in such important and chronic populations as patients with diabetes mellitus, patients with cardiovascular disease, and patients with lung disease. We can also identify and address at-risk pediatric populations who fail to complete preventive care such as immunizations, dental and well-child care.
As the healthcare industry moves more and more toward value-based purchasing, all providers, insurers and their vendors are necessarily increasingly focused on the quality of care that is delivered. The impact of this should be better outcomes for our members.
Find more articles about NCQA here