Introduced by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement a decade ago,
the “Triple Aim” is an approach that focuses on three critical areas of
care: improving the patient experience (via increased quality and
satisfaction), strengthening population health, and reducing costs to
the health care system. The approach is still viewed across the health
care sector as the ultimate option for optimizing health system
performance, but successful examples remain as elusive as the proverbial
“unicorn.”
But unicorns do exist. And Medicare’s hospice benefit is a rare unicorn in our health care system.
Hospice began as a demonstration program over 35 years ago and
continues to be an exemplar of the kind of care we want for everyone.
Hospice is a value-based, person-centered model of care that works to
meet the unique needs of patients and their families by addressing all
aspects of a patient’s well-being, including physical and emotional
health, spiritual needs, family support and patient preferences. It is
quite literally the nation’s first proven integrated — or coordinated
care — model of care.
Policymakers have taken notice and proposed models for expanding
access to hospice care. While we are encouraged hospice is being
recognized as a valuable asset in the care continuum, it is critical
that any new models are designed to optimize care for patients and
families while not diluting the integrated care approach that makes
hospice work.
Hospice is currently only accessible during a patient’s final six
months, but this model of care — or one like it — should be offered much
earlier than at the end of one’s life. Further, there are ways to
strengthen the current Medicare hospice benefit to enable it to improve
the lives of more people facing serious illness.
First, any new payment models must protect the integrity of the
benefit. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently
announced plans to expand its Value-Based Insurance Design Model to all
50 states and allow Medicare Advantage plans to provide hospice care.
We are committed to ensuring that MA plans maintain the integrity of
the hospice philosophy and care for patients and families entirely. We
strongly believe that testing the model first is far more responsible
than a premature, broad legislative change.
However, any demonstration must be better for patients, families and
those that serve them. The hospice community is ready to work
collaboratively to ensure real and legitimate improvement.
Second, we hope to work with Congress to expand access to palliative
care that offers patients relief from pain and stress when living with a
serious illness. To ensure hospice programs can provide the right care
at the right time, Congress should establish a statutory standard
definition of community-based palliative care that would allow payment
for and access to at least a minimal standard set of palliative care
services and supports.
Last, the hospice community welcomes the opportunity to work with the
administration as it explores avenues for regulatory relief. While
providing high-quality care to the seriously ill demands close oversight
including quality outcome measures, regulatory policies must promote
and support program integrity rather than create excessive
administrative work that leads to unintentional clerical errors and
distracts from patient care. The goal of regulation should be to
guarantee patient quality of care and the weeding out of willful bad
actors, rather than burdening honest providers.
Expanding access to the compassionate and personalized care that
patients and families want is not an impossible fantasy, but rather it
is attainable. Hospice and palliative care providers are eager to join
with policymakers to lead the way. Expanding hospice access, supporting
community-based palliative care and reducing regulatory burdens that
restrict access to care are a good place to start.
While we are awash in models that promise to meet the Triple Aim by
moving away from volume-based care and toward value-based approaches, we
often treat the promise as an idea, like a unicorn, as one that exists
in our imagination but not yet in reality. As the 116th Congress begins
the tough process of governing and advancing policies to further
strengthen our nation’s health care delivery system to achieve the
Triple Aim, I urge it to look no further than the hospice model — health
care’s unicorn — already achieving the desired outcomes of value-based
care.
By Edo Banach, JD
President and CEO
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
This op-ed was originally published by Morning Consult.
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