California Health News

Covered California mandates consumers be assigned primary care clinicians

Covered California

Covered California’s Board Adopts Prescriptions for A Better Health Care System

Posted: 07 Apr 2016 02:48 PM PDT

New Contract Changes for 2017 Require Health Plans to Focus on Quality and Delivering the Right Care at the Right Time for All Who Have Coverage

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Covered California announced Thursday that its board adopted significant new changes to its contracts with health insurers as part of its prescription to take health care reform to the next level. The new contract provisions, which will cover the years 2017-2019, will advance ongoing efforts by health insurance companies, hospitals and care providers to ensure that patients receive quality health care.

“Covered California’s mission is not just getting patients health insurance; it’s about improving the quality of the health care delivery system,” Covered California Executive Director Peter V. Lee said.

“We are creating a market that rewards quality over quantity and moves health reform forward in an impactful way.”

“Covered California is making it clear that we are about more than just getting consumers coverage, by ensuring they get the right care when they need it,” said California Health and Human Services Secretary and Covered California Board Chairwoman Diana Dooley. “We are proud of the hard work and extensive collaboration — which has been a hallmark of Covered California’s work — engaging with doctors, hospitals, health plans, consumer advocates, patients themselves and other stakeholders who are working together with us to improve quality and strengthen the health care delivery system for all Californians.”

The new contract provisions seek to address the challenges in our current health care system and provide concrete prescriptions for the future that will address both quality and costs, such as strengthening value-based, patient-centered benefit designs to improve access to primary care. In addition, Covered California uses core levers to promote better quality and lower costs, such as:

Diagnosis:

Many consumers do not have a primary care provider and do not know how to use the current fragmented and costly health care system.

Prescription:

Diagnosis:

The current health care system rewards providers based on the volume of care delivered, regardless of its quality or value.

Prescription:

Diagnosis:

There are significant health disparities and problems with health equity, meaning that the care received by millions of Californians — and the health status of those Californians — varies because of their race, ethnicity or income.

Prescription:

Diagnosis:

Consumers do not have the tools they need to make an educated decision on picking a provider based on cost and quality, and there is a huge variation in costs for consumers.

Prescription:

“We are insisting on the best care and value for our consumers,” Lee said. “In the near term, keeping costs low is about making sure Covered California has a good mix of enrollees, but over the long term there must be system-wide efforts to lower costs and improve quality for all Californians.”

The improvements were hailed by a wide variety of stakeholders, including CMS and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP).

“We applaud California’s focus on delivery system reform in the California health insurance exchange,” said Dr. Patrick Conway, CMS’s deputy administrator for innovation and quality and its chief medical officer. “Through payment incentives, innovative care delivery and improvement science, and transparent information, the public and private sector can collaborate to transform the health system to achieve better care, smarter spending and healthier people.”

“We applaud Covered California for their leadership in working to ensure that all Californians have an ongoing relationship with a primary care physician and that the care patients receive is truly coordinated across the continuum of services,” said Dr. Douglas E. Henley, executive vice president and CEO of AAFP. “Research has consistently shown that people who have access to a usual source of health care are in better health and have lower medical costs. This initiative will help make that vision a reality for Covered California beneficiaries because it values primary care and shifts payment toward paying for the quality of care and away from the number of services or procedures.”

The contract provisions were developed over the past year in conjunction with consumer advocates, health plans, clinicians, and other stakeholders and subject matter experts. See the full summary of the 2017 contract provisions and the slides presented at the board meeting. In many cases, these improvements will benefit both Covered California members and consumers enrolled outside the exchange.

Covered California is required under both state and federal law to strengthen the health care delivery system; require that health plans improve health outcomes through effective case management, care coordination, chronic disease management and care compliance initiatives; and require health plans to reduce health and health care disparities.

In addition, Covered California will also make improvements to its patient-centered benefit design for 2017 plans. Benefits will be structured to remove financial barriers to consumers getting needed care and will include:

For 2017, Covered California is proposing to build on this structure by lowering the out-of-pocket costs for primary care and urgent care. For more details, see the proposed 2017 Standard Benefit Plan Designs and 2017 Standard Benefit Plan Design End notes.

http://news.coveredca.com/2016/04/covered-californias-board-adopts.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CoveredCaliforniaDailyNews+%28Covered+California+Daily+News%29