Improving Care and Outcomes in Uninsured Populations: The Invisible Disparity
On September 15, 2009, Randall D. Cebul, M.D. made this presentation at the 2009 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (4.3 MB) (Plugin Software Help).
Slide 1
Improving Care and Outcomes in Uninsured Populations: The Invisible Disparity
AHRQ 2009 Annual Conference Research to Reform
Randall D. Cebul, M.D.
rdc@case.edu
Slide 2
Overview: Quality of Care Among the Uninsured
- Without claims or EMRs, the quality of care and outcomes of the uninsured are largely invisible.
- Yet we know they fare more poorly
- Practice records-based measurement and public reporting are important for improving quality.
- EMRs are useful: timely, granular, enable CDS
- HIE (interoperable EMRs) would be even better
- Linked to regional QI/consumer engagement (CE)/payment reform, better still
- RWJF is supporting 15 communities to measure and report performance, undertake regional QI and CE
Slide 3
We know how many uninsured there are.
% Uninsured by Race/Ethnicity
- White: 9
- Black: 19
- Asian: 18
- Hispanic: 31
% Uninsured by Age
- < 18: 10
- 18-24: 29
- 25-34: 27
- 35-44: 19
- 45-64: 14
- 65+: 2
% Uninsured by income
- $25k: 25
- $25-49K: 21
- $50-74K: 14
- $75K+: 8
% Uninsured by Work Status
- Full Time: 17
- Part-Time: 25
- Not Working: 26
15.4% (46M), growing: 26% if publicly insured are excluded
Slide 4
We know some of the financial and health consequences - to patients
- Medical bill problems/paying off medical debt climbed from 34 percent to 41 percent in the U.S. between 2005 and 2007... 72 million (Commonwealth Fund)
- Medical costs are the leading cause of personal bankruptcies (Himmelstein, AmJMed. 2009)
- roughly half of all bankruptcy filers ('07) had OOP medical costs > $5000 before filing; 3/4 had insurance coverage
- Lack of insurance leads to foregoing necessary care
- IOM: 20,000 premature deaths annually
- NONE OF THESE ARE VERY ACTIONABLE STATISTICS
Slide 5
"Poor Glycemic Control" Among Diabetics: The Uninsured do Worst
Supported by grant: R01 HS-015123, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
- 6843 patients
- One EMR-based system, same PCPs
- Uninsured: 64% higher odds (95% CI: 1.32-2.03) of poor control
- Adjusted for ASR, co-morbidities, smoking, show rates, income, site of care
Slide 6
Aligning Forces for Quality - 2008
Image: An image of the United States is shown with Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Maine highlighted.
Slide 7
AF4Q in Northeast Ohio
OUR MISSION
Better Health Greater Cleveland is a multi-stakeholder partnership that improves the health and value of health care provided to people with chronic medical conditions in Northeast Ohio.
We are committed to:
- Improving care and outcomes of all people with chronic conditions
- Eliminating disparities in health observed among disadvantaged populations by insurance, race, education and income; and
- Transparency across collaborating organizations, and, through public reporting of patient care data, with our community.
Slide 8
Measurement Matters
- Public reports every 6 months
- NQF endorsed, locally vetted measures
- Diverse practice organizations and sites
- "Care Alliance to Cleveland Clinic"
- 8 organizations, 54 sites (42 reporting), 500+ PCPs (361 reporting) - virtually all SNPs, all FQHCs
- Paper-based practices manually abstracted ..
- Region-wide Achievement and Change by:
- Insurance(M'care, commercial, M'caid, uninsured), Race (W, B, H, Other), Income and Education (addresses geo-linked to census)
- Practice site achievement and change by insurance
Slide 9
Diabetes - 2008
A chart showing Diabetes in 2008 is shown.
Slide 10
19% Increase in Uninsured, 2007 to 2008
- Medicare: +2.3
- Commercial: -6.0
- Medicaid: -4.6
- Uninsured: +19.1
Slide 11
Vs. HEDIS. Uninsured do ok - compared to Medicaid
REGIONAL ACHIEVEMENT (2008) COMPARED TO NATIONWIDE HEALTH PLAN AVERAGES (2007) ON HEDIS COMPREHENSIVE DIABETES CARE MEASURES
| Measure | Group | Medicare | Commercial | Medicaid | Uninsured | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HbA1c testing | Region National | 95.0 88.1 | 93.1 88.1 | 91.7 77.3 | 90.8 NA | 93.4 -- |
| Poor HbA1c Control (>9)* | Region National | 12.3 29.0 | 18.8 29.4 | 26.3 47.9 | 35.8 NA | 19.3 -- |
| Eye Exams | Region National | 69.6 62.7 | 62.0 55.1 | 44.2 49.9 | 48.5 NA | 61.5 -- |
| LDL-C Screening | Region National | 89.9 85.7 | 89.4 83.9 | 75.0 70.8 | 77.4 NA | 86.8 -- |
| LDL-C Control (<100) | Region National | 61.3 46.8 | 53.8 43.8 | 38.3 31.3 | 36.7 NA | 53.0 -- |
| Monitoring Nephropathy | Region National | 91.8 85.7 | 89.4 80.6 | 86.6 74.4 | 87.0 NA | 89.7 -- |
| Blood Pressure Control (<130/80) | Region National | 38.5 31.7 | 38.6 32.1 | 36.1 29.5 | 31.7 NA | 37.5 -- |
| Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) | Region National | 66.1 58.9 | 71.3 63.9 | 59.7 55.5 | 62.6 NA | 67.3 -- |
*Lower rates are better for this measure.
Slide 12
Overall, we're improving on our composite measures
Outcomes
- 2007: 36
- 2008: 38
Care Processes
- 2007: 39
- 2008: 47
Slide 13
And most practices have better outcomes and better care processes
Image: A graph showing the Worse Outcomes/Better Processes, Better Outcomes/Better Processes, Worse Outcomes/Worse Processes, and Better Outcomes/Worse Processes.
Slide 14
But our Uninsured are not Improving
Overall: Better/Better
- Medicare
- Commercial
- Mdicaid
Worse:
- Uninsured
Slide 15
Thank you
Visit our website:
www.betterhealthcleveland.org


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