In The News

Availability of Kidney Care at Home Moving the Needle on Disease Outcomes, Experts Say

McKnight’s Home Care | By Adam Healy
 
Alternative payment models, technological innovation and a shifting focus to the home are advancing health outcomes and equity for Americans with kidney disease, according to experts.
 
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) this month released its first annual evaluation of the End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Treatment Choices Model (ETC), and the initial results are positive. The report found “modest early gains” in home dialysis training and transplant rates, laying a strong foundation for the future of in-home renal care.
 
The model, which was introduced Jan. 1, 2021, was designed to push for greater utilization of in-home renal care services.
 
“The ETC Model establishes incentives to encourage greater use of home dialysis and kidney transplantation, while reducing Medicare expenditures and preserving or enhancing quality of care provided to beneficiaries with ESRD,” CMS said. “By supporting patient selection of home dialysis and transplant through enhanced patient education, and other strategies, the model is intended to result in lower Medicare payments while preserving or enhancing quality of care for beneficiaries.”
 
Alternative payment model driving change
 
In an interview with McKnight’s Home Care Daily Pulse, Nathan Goldstein, CEO of community-based renal care provider Duo Health, explained that alternative payment models like ETC have steadily moved kidney care to the home. Following this trend, Duo Health recently partnered with National Kidney Partners to deploy a value-based care model in Florida. The model aims to lift barriers to care access and provide holistic support for kidney disease patients, according to a release.
 
Also recently, Strive Health partnered with Prominence Health Plan to provide value-based renal care in Nevada through services like telehealth and enhanced care coordination.
 
In 2016, rates of home dialysis hovered around 12%, said Goldstein. Since then, payment models such as ETC and technology have helped to increase utilization. Services such as blood pressure monitoring, glucose management and kidney tests are becoming more convenient and less expensive, allowing people to integrate them into their daily lives at home, said Joseph Vassalotti, MD, chief medical officer at the National Kidney Foundation, speaking with McKnight’s Home Care Daily Pulse. As an added bonus, these advancements can increase patient education as people learn more about their health “goalposts” and how to reach them. 
 
“Home dialysis, particularly, is a welcome advance. I think many of the alternative payment models speak to that, and ETC is one of them,” Vassalotti said.
 
Many patients prefer in-home dialysis, he said, and it incurs a lower cost to taxpayers than clinical care. There are other benefits to kidney care at home beyond costs. Moving services to the home can improve patient’s comfort, convenience and access to care, he said. 
 
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Help Build Support for the Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act (PCHETA, S. 2243)!

The Palliative Care and Hospice Education and Training Act (PCHETA, S. 2243) was introduced in Senate for the 118th Congress on July 11, 2023. Now we need your help to build bipartisan support for the bill. The Patient Quality of Life Coalition (PQLC) invites you to participate in one or more of the activities outlined below to build cosponsors for PCHETA and thank Senators who are already cosponsors.

#1 Constituent Support Letters

Timing: Now - September 8th

Individuals are invited to sign a PCHETA support letter to your U.S. Senator by completing this Google Form. If you live and work in multiple states, we encourage you to sign letters to multiple U.S. Senators in different states by completing the Google Form multiple times.

We are asking individuals to sign this letter, not organizations. Multiple individuals from within any one organization, family, or practice are welcome to sign on. The purpose of these letters is to demonstrate to senators that individuals in their states support the bill and request they cosponsor PCHETA. More than 60 organizations support this legislation, but many senators need to hear from their constituents that this issue is important back home.

Google Form to sign the constituent support lettershttps://forms.gle/STWiDYQgGwhqne816

Template draft letters are included in the Google Form if you would like to review. Once we have collected constituent signatures, we will individualize the letters to Senators based on whether:

  • they are previous cosponsors who have not yet signed back on to the bill in the current Congress, 
  • we are asking them to cosponsor the bill for the firs time, or
  • they are already a cosponsor of the bill, and we want to thank them for their support.

By completing this sign-on form you will be added to the appropriate letter(s) based on your STATE.

Please complete Google Form

Deadline: Friday, September 8, 6 pm ET.

If you are not able to access Google Forms, please send Auda Martinez ([email protected]) an email before Friday, September 8 at 4 pm MT with the following information:

  • Email address
  • FIRST & LAST NAME and credentials exactly as they want it reflected on the letter (e.g., “Jane R. Anderson, MSN”)
  • Optional: Institution / Practice / Etc. (e.g., Pediatric Palliative Care Team, OU College of Medicine or Attending Physician, Division of Palliative Medicine, Maine Medical Center)
  • CITY
  • STATE
  • ZIP CODE

#2 Action Alerts

Two PQLC members have graciously offered their Legislative Action Centers to help build bi-partisan co-sponsorship for PCHETA. By using one of these links, you can quickly and easily send a pre-populated message to your Senator.

American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine

Hospice Action Network (an affiliate of NHPCO)

You can also find links to the Action Alerts on the PQLC website, here.

#3 Social Media - Twitter

Tweet at your U.S. Senator directly using this memo (includes all U.S. Senators Twitter handles). Be sure to check the status of S. 2243 to confirm whether one or both of your Senators is a cosponsor already!

 

PCHETA RESOURCES

 

Referral Rejection Rates, Patient Complexity In Home Health Care Reaching All-Time Highs

Home Health Care News / By Andrew Donlan

While referrals to home health care are ballooning, providers are rejecting them at an unprecedented rate.
 
As hospitals scramble to place patients in the hands of appropriate post-acute care providers, skilled nursing facilities’ referral volume has rebounded.
 
Home health referral volume also remains above pre-pandemic levels, but providers are struggling with staffing challenges and sicker patients. Data from WellSky’s 2023 Evolution of Care Report shows just how significant those issues have become.
 
“We’re entering a new era of care delivery and there is a dramatic shift happening in the health care landscape,” Lissy Hu, president of connected networks at WellSky, said in a statement. “Providers, whether it’s the hospital or the doctor’s office, and health plans need to be connected to post-acute and home-based providers as care shifts to home and value.”
 
In April, Hu told Home Health Care News that referral rejection rates “very much remained an issue” at a time when home health referrals were at an all-time high.
 
“Our data shows that it’s truly a care continuum – that what happens in the post-acute setting has a direct impact on the hospital setting and vice versa – so improving patient outcomes requires a holistic cross-continuum approach,” she continued.
 
Specifically, 76% of patients being referred to home health care were not being accepted as of December 2022. That number was up from 54% in 2019.
 
WellSky’s data analysis is based on proprietary data that draws from over 2,000 hospitals and 130,000 post-acute care providers.
 
This issue has forced providers to be more up front with their referral partners in recent years, acknowledging which patients they can take and which patients they can’t.
 
“You just need to be transparent,” Geoffrey Abraskin, a senior vice president at Amedisys Inc. (Nasdaq: AMED), told Home Health Care News. “If you’re truly in a partnership, there’s going to be an understanding. Just like hospitals go on diversion – if their ED is full, for example – home health does the same thing. So, we’re in the same boat as them. We just try to be very proactive and upfront with our capacity or limitations.”
 
Home health providers are also caring for more complex patients than ever before.
 
WellSky data shows that patients are now at least 6% more acute, on average, than they were in 2019 at discharge.
 
Patients are more likely to be experiencing neurological, alcohol-use and drug-use disorders. They are also more likely to be suffering from psychosis or pulmonary circulation diseases.
 
“Anecdotally, we’ve been seeing that for years,” Bud Langham, EVP of clinical excellence and strategy at Enhabit Inc. (NYSE: EHAB), told HHCN earlier this year. “It started a long time ago, but certainly accelerated during COVID because there were fewer inpatient beds and staff to take care of those patients. In the home health industry, we were asked to take care of patients who were sicker than what we were used to.”

 

Study Highlights Physical Therapy’s Clinical, Financial Benefits Among Medicare Beneficiaries

Home Health Care News / By Patrick Filbin
 
Increased physical therapy (PT) utilization is associated with significant reductions in hospitalizations and emergency room visits, more evidence shows.
 
Meanwhile, home health providers are still grappling with how to manage physical therapy under the Patient-Driven Groupings Model (PDGM).
 
A new study from the Alliance for Physical Therapy Quality and Innovation (APTQI) showed that an increase in PT among Medicare patients could reduce health care spending by $10 billion.
 
PT users were 50% less likely to visit the emergency room or be hospitalized for a follow-up injury in the six months following their initial fall, according to the study.
 
An important distinction, however, is that the data tracked users who had already experienced a fall.
 
“A lot of people are going to end up in home health because after you fall, you may be homebound for a bit,” Nikesh Patel, executive director of APTQI, told Home Health Care News. “I think what this shows is that whatever setting those PT sessions are happening post-fall, you’re going to have a significant decrease in the likelihood of falls in the next six, 12 and 18 months.”
 
The results confirm what physical therapists have known for a long time, Patel said: that PT is a safe and effective method for helping seniors build the strength and other necessary skills to avoid future falls and reduce costly expenditures.
 
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented PDGM on Jan. 1, 2020. Prior to PDGM, home health agencies were paid per therapy visit under the home health benefit in Medicare Part A. Now, payment is tied to patient characteristics.
 
At the beginning of 2020, many believed there would be an inevitable disruption to home health therapy utilization.
 
Today, it’s still unclear exactly how PDGM has impacted therapy utilization. Following the implementation of the new payment model, providers were naturally less likely to offer therapy services because they were not as incentivized to do so.
 
The study’s findings are another example of how PT can offer savings to the entire health care sector.
 
“For me, the most telling statistic was that for every 100 Medicare beneficiaries, we average in the U.S. about 21 hospital stays,” Patel said. “Of those hospital stays, 40% of those are fall-related. If you have a decrease of four to six hospitalizations and inpatient stays for a year, the costs are staggering.”
 
According to the study’s authors, increased PT use by 100 beneficiaries prone to falls could result in an offsetting reduction in total health care spending of as much as $61,400 to $91,900 per member.
 
When considering the 13.5 million Medicare beneficiaries who are not enrolled in physical therapy, that could create $10 billion in savings.

 

Home Health Value-Based Purchasing Model Sixth Annual Report - Key Takeaways:

The original Home Health Value‐Based Purchasing (HHVBP) Model provided financial incentives to home health agencies for quality improvement based on their performance relative to other agencies in their state. The goal of HHVBP is to improve the quality and efficiency of delivery of home health care services to Medicare beneficiaries. Nine states were randomly selected to participate in the original HHVBP Model CY 2016-CY 2021. Home health agencies in these states received performance scores for individual measures of quality of care that were combined into a Total Performance Score (TPS) to determine their payment adjustment relative to other agencies within their state. CMS first adjusted Medicare payments by up to ±3% in 2018, using agencies’ 2016 TPS. Payment adjustments increased each year, peaking at up to ±7% in 2021, the last year of the original HHVBP Model prior to the nationwide expansion of the model in January 2023. This document summarizes the impact observed in 2016 through 2021, the complete six years of the original model, including all four payment adjustment years.

The six years of the original HHVBP Model resulted in cumulative Medicare savings of $1.38 billion, a 1.9% decline relative to the 41 non-HHVBP states, as well as improvements in quality. These impacts were observed during 2021, the fourth and final year for quality-based payment adjustments, as well as in the preceding five years of the original model.

The Two Page Overview:

The Report (includes an Executive Summary):

Additional Supporting Materials:

 
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