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Formalization of the Pathways Model Facilitates Standards and Certification | AHRQ Innovations Exchange

Formalization of the Pathways Model Facilitates Standards and Certification | AHRQ Innovations Exchange



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Formalization of the Pathways Model Facilitates Standards and Certification


Bernard Zeigler, PhD, Emeritus Professor of Electrical and
Computer Engineering at the University of Arizona and Adjunct Research
Professor in the C4I Center at George Mason University


Sarah Redding, MD, MPH, Chief Executive Officer for Care Coordination Systems




Formalization of the Pathways Model Facilitates Standards and Certification




By the Innovations Exchange TeamIntroduction:



A new study funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) used a
systems engineering approach to formalize a community care coordination
model, providing a better understanding of its operations and processes.
The data generated from this modeling and testing have provided new
insights into the Pathways Community HUB Model that will inform the
design of the model’s certification program currently under development.
These are the first results from this ongoing effort to study the
application of simulation and modeling approaches to health care
systems.



The Innovations Exchange interviewed the NSF study’s co-principal
investigator Bernard Zeigler, PhD, and study team member Sarah Redding,
MD, MPH, who, with Mark Redding, MD, developed the Community Health
Access Project (CHAP) and the Pathways Model.



Innovations Exchange: How do pathways in the model facilitate care coordination?



Sarah Redding, MD, MPH: A pathway is a structured
process that uses community care coordinators to identify, define, and
resolve a health or social service problem. Each pathway represents one
issue that is tracked through to completion and a measurable outcome.
For example, the Pregnancy Pathway ends with a normal birth weight
infant, and the Social Service Referral Pathway ends with a confirmed
appointment with a social service provider.



The Ohio CHAP in Mansfield developed the Pathways Model to improve the
health and preventive care of high-risk women and their children in
underserved areas. The Ohio CHAP developed the first pathway focused on
pregnancy to improve low birth weight outcomes among African-American
women. The program has since developed 16 additional pathways to address
other issues experienced by high-risk women, including homelessness,
access to a medical home, smoking, immunizations, lead exposure, and
childhood behavior problems.



How did the community HUB concept evolve from the pathways?



Redding: After CHAP achieved significant positive
outcomes using the Pregnancy Pathway, we expanded its use to other
agencies serving pregnant women in Richland County. We developed a
centralized data collection site called a HUB at the community level to
track the various agencies using the pathways to facilitate coordination
of services, evaluation, and quality assurance.



What insights did you gain from your analysis about the HUB
model's potential to improve birth outcomes among disparate populations?




Bernard Zeigler, PhD: We realized that the referral
source of clients to the CHAP program made a difference in birth
outcomes. Our analysis showed that African-American women who were
referred from community-based care sources received more coordinator
attention, showed greater adherence to their assigned tasks, were more
likely to remain in the program, and had a higher percentage of normal
births than the predominantly white women referred by the Medicaid
managed care plans. The community-based enrollment process is quick and
personal, leading to high retention and effective intervention.



Redding: The difference in birth outcomes highlights
the importance of keeping programs at the community level. For example,
Richland County has received grants from the Ohio Infant Mortality
Reduction Initiative for the past decade. The county hired local
African-American care coordinators who quickly engaged African-American
women in early prenatal care by canvassing the local Medicaid office,
obstetrician offices, and community-based organizations. In contrast,
the Medicaid managed care plan requires women to see an obstetrician to
get a referral, which has to go through claims processing and risk
scoring at the plan level. This administrative process causes
significant delays in enrolling women into the CHAP program and
receiving prenatal care.



How does the Pathways Model address accountability at the systems level?



Redding: When payers contract with a community HUB, the
payments are based on completed pathways and measurable outcomes. This
pay-for-performance model is based on the outcomes that a care
coordinator achieves with a client. The largest payers tend to be
Medicaid managed care plans, which select both the pathways and their
reimbursement. Typically, HUBs receive an initial payment after they
engage clients and conduct an initial assessment. The remaining payments
are made after a pathway is completed. Payers like this model because
payment is tied to results.



Zeigler: Our data analysis shows that outcomes-based
payments in plan contracts lead to higher rates of pathways completion,
compared with contracts without outcomes-based payments.



Should Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) measures be tied to pathways payments?



Zeigler: HEDIS measures are not the best way to
approach payment for pathways, because payers may select only action
steps that have HEDIS measures to reimburse and may ignore other
critical steps. For this reason, we recommend that payers reimburse
agencies for completing the entire pathway.



Redding: In our contracts with Medicaid managed care
plans, payments are aligned with HEDIS measures because those are what
plans are held accountable for; however, there are no HEDIS measures for
certain social services, although they play an important role in
achieving positive pregnancy outcomes. For example, the HEDIS measure
for postpartum planning requires only that a patient keep an
appointment. To keep that postpartum appointment, other barriers not
directly related to health care may need to be addressed, such as child
care and transportation. We are trying to help payers think beyond
getting clients to their medical appointments, and to understand that
actions related to social determinants will lead to better outcomes.



Did you develop new measures for pathways, and what impact did those measures have?



Zeigler: Our analysis identified several steps common
to many pathways that were critical to the overall achievement of
outcomes and that provided important opportunities for process
measurement and improvement. For example, we developed new measures for
care coordinator competency because we found that many pathway reports
were incomplete or inconsistent. We also developed measures for client
adherence; these document the client's role in completing pathway steps,
such as keeping appointments. With the creation of these measures, we
found that care coordinator competency in turn improved client adherence
to the pathways, client retention, and pregnancy outcomes.



Redding: If you have an experienced, well-respected,
and organized care coordinator, he or she is more likely to achieve
successful outcomes with clients.



Did the formalization of pathways in the NSF study lead to improvements in care coordination?



Zeigler: The formal representation of pathway action
steps provided a lens to examine the data, obtain insights, and make
recommendations for improvements in coordination. For example, we
discovered that the community care coordinator’s competency and
community-based experience affects client retention and adherence, and
that having standard and reimbursable metrics for some pathways or steps
may improve client adherence. As a result, we recommend a consistent
payment scheme that covers the entire pathway, including nonmedical
pathway elements such as social services.



Redding: The data enabled us to better understand
successful and unsuccessful elements of the Pathways Model; for example,
the competency measures led us to understand the relationship between
frequency of community care coordinators’ reporting and pregnancy
outcomes.



How will formalization enhance the Community HUB certification process?



Zeigler: Formalization provides a well-defined means
for developing a uniform description of standard pathways that can also
be used for new pathways as they are introduced in practice.
Formalization is designed to support the implementation of recently
developed standards for organizations that aim to achieve community HUB
certification.

 


Redding:
The formalization is critical for the certification
process being developed for any Pathways Community HUB entity. This is a
service delivery system model, so we need more information to improve
the system and its outcomes, especially as we expand our target
population beyond mothers and children to patients with chronic
diseases.



When will the certification process be rolled out?



Redding: It is a 3-year process, and we have just
finished the first year of implementing the draft certification
requirements at three pilot sites in Michigan, Ohio, and New Mexico. We
will also review information from functioning HUBs to incorporate into
the project.





About Bernard Zeigler, PhD: Dr.
Zeigler is Emeritus Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at
the University of Arizona and an adjunct research professor in the C4I
Center at George Mason University. He is internationally known for his
seminal contributions in modeling and simulation theory and has
published several related books. He was named Fellow of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronic Engineers for the discrete event system
specification (DEVS) formalism that he invented in 1976. Among numerous
positions held with the Society for Modeling and Simulation
International, he served as president and was inducted into its Hall of
Fame. He is currently chief scientist with RTSync Corp., a developer of
the MS4 modeling and simulation software based on DEVS.



About Sarah Redding, MD, MPH:
Dr. Redding is Chief Executive Officer for Care Coordination Systems.
Previously, she was the executive director of the CHAP in Mansfield, OH,
a nonprofit organization employing community care coordinators that she
helped start in 1999. Dr. Redding has been involved with community care
coordinators for more than 20 years and was instrumental in obtaining
State certification through the Ohio Board of Nursing. She has worked to
develop and implement pathways and the Pathways Community HUB Model.
Her recent work has focused on community care coordination to address
health disparities, and she is the co-director of the National Center
for Community Care Coordination, a partnership between CHAP and the
Rockville Institute for the Advancement of Social Science Research.



Disclosure Statements:



Dr. Zeigler reported that RTSync Corp. received an NSF grant to study
the formalization of the Pathways Model and that he received payment
from the NSF grant as the study’s co-principal investigator.



Dr. Redding reported that she received reimbursement from AHRQ to attend
meetings of the AHRQ Community Care Coordination Learning Network from
2008 to 2011 when she was CHAP’s Executive Director; CHAP also received
an honorarium on her behalf. Dr. Redding received payment from the NSF
study grant for her participation as a team member. She holds a
leadership role in Care Coordination Systems, a company which is
developing tools for communities that seek to implement a Pathways
Community HUB model.



Suggested Reading



Innovation Profile: Program Uses "Pathways" To Confirm Those At-Risk
Connect to Community Based Health and Social Services, Leading to
Improved Outcomes http://www.innovations.ahrq.gov/content.aspx?id=2040



QualityTool: Connecting Those at Risk to Care: A Guide to Building a
Community "HUB" To Promote a System of Collaboration, Accountability,
and Improved Outcomes

http://www.innovations.ahrq.gov/content.aspx?id=2956






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