UnitedHealthcare will significantly expand its already substantial base of accountable care contracts over the next five years across our employer-sponsored, Medicare and Medicaid health benefit businesses, helping transform how health care is delivered, paid for and rewarded.
Placing much greater emphasis on rewarding care providers for better care and lower costs allows us to dramatically reduce the use of exclusively fee-for-service contracts.
Already more than $20 billion of the company’s reimbursements to hospitals, physicians and ancillary care providers are paid through contracts that link a portion of the reimbursement to quality and cost-efficiency measures. UnitedHealthcare expects that number to increase to $50 billion by 2017 as more care providers join the transition to accountable care contracts that reward quality and value-based health care.
UnitedHealthcare offers the largest care provider network in the United States and has accountable care relationships with more than 575 hospitals, 1,100 medical groups and 75,000 physicians across the country.
“We are improving health outcomes for patients at lower costs by moving even more broadly to value-based payment models and integrating those with our care provider network, product and clinical strategies,” said Austin Pittman, president, UnitedHealthcare Networks. “Our unparalleled experience with accountable care models – and there are many – demonstrates that they can work better for everyone in health care, from patients to payers to care providers.”
Accountable Care Strategy Our accountable care strategy includes three categories of programs that offer varying levels of integration with care providers depending on their ability to assume financial risk and affect health outcomes. By creating a flexible approach, we are able to align programs with all types of care providers across employer-sponsored, Medicare and Medicaid benefit plans.
The level of shared accountability and financial risk between us and care providers increases with each of the three programs:
- Performance-based programs – may include bonus-based incentives for primary care practices, or performance-based contracts with hospitals, physicians and ancillary care providers that reward them for successfully improving patient health outcomes and lowering costs.
- Centers of Excellence programs – reimbursements are bundled for specific treatments and/or procedures (e.g., organ transplants) rather than charging for each visit or drug administered.
- Accountable care programs – ACOs and Patient-Centered Medical Homes are among the most common. In these programs, both the health plan and care provider share in the risk and savings associated with managing patients’ health.
Programs Show Promising Results Our accountable care strategy is showing promising trends in improving evidence-based care and quality outcomes while reducing costs. For example:
- Performance-based programs have demonstrated improved quality and cost-efficiency outcomes, such as a 14% reduction in the use of non-Tier 1 prescriptions and a 25% reduction in the use of out-of-network lab services.
- The transplant Centers of Excellence program has demonstrated a 25% reduction in average length of hospital stays for transplant patients, a 16% reduction in transplants due to applying evidence-based care approaches and improved transplant survival rates at Centers of Excellence.
- Accountable care programs have proven results that demonstrate improved health outcomes, such as a 4 to 4.5 percentage point reduction in medical cost trend, a 16% reduction in emergency room visits and a 17% reduction in inpatient days, in addition to clinical quality results trending above program targets on 95% of all measures.
- Accountable care programs focused on Medicare Advantage plan members achieved at least a 4-Star HEDIS level on screenings for diabetes, cardiovascular care, colorectal cancer and rheumatoid arthritis.
For more information about UnitedHealthcare’s accountable care initiatives, visit http://www.accountablecareanswers.com/ or contact your UnitedHealthcare representative.