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When You Prioritize Accountable Care, You Improve Women’s Health

, , | Nov 15, 2024

Accountable care is well-positioned to make a significant impact on the health care needs of women. When it comes to the state of women’s health in the United States today, there is much to be desired. Evidence shows troubling trends to that end: the United States, among high-income nations, has the worst maternal health outcomes; additionally, women are more likely to report delaying preventive care, be caregivers, and develop chronic conditions like dementia than men. Among women, there are also deep inequities in access, quality, and outcomes by race, ethnicity, geography, and economic status.

These disparities pose unique health challenges for women that must be addressed using targeted approaches such as improving access to preventative care and enhancing maternal health supports. On October 17, Accountable for Health, the National Partnership for Women & Families (NPWF), and United States of Care (USofCare) co-hosted a virtual Congressional briefing, “Advancing Women’s Health & Patient-First Care Through Innovation & Payment Reform,” making the compelling case for how accountable care can improve outcomes, particularly in women’s health (briefing slides are available). Invited speakers included Dr. Kristin Oaks, Lisa Hunter, and Dr. Carol Sakala, each providing a unique perspective on how accountable care has improved health outcomes and patient experiences for women.

Physicians Know that Patient Experiences Matter, Especially for Women

When it comes to delivering care, physicians are juggling many pressures and variables, but one core priority is always in focus: the patient. Accountable care defies the traditional fee-for-service system of paying providers based on volume by incentivizing care that drives improved health outcomes, quality, and better patient experiences. Accountable care is what patients desire, and when payment reform allows for these models of care, providers are set up to deliver on that desire.

“Women physicians generally spend more time with patients, so they weren’t doing well in the fee-for-service system because they see fewer patients and the fee-for-service metric pays more when you see more patients. That contributed to an exodus from primary care by women physicians. I am one of the founders of the Women Physicians Leadership Council. This council was founded to foster leadership among women physicians so that we have a seat at the table when decisions around how practices are paid.”

— Kristin Oaks, D.O., Central Ohio Primary Care (Accountable for Health Member)

Dr. Kristin Oaks, from Central Ohio Primary Care (COPC), highlighted two patient stories on how accountable care has changed women’s lives. The stories involve a 23-year-old woman with chronic abdominal pain of an unknown cause and a 65-year-old woman with a recent ALS diagnosis with symptoms that prevented her from leaving her home. Through accountable care, both women were able to receive palliative care, which significantly improved their symptoms. The 23-year-old patient was able to decrease her dependence on tube feedings and pain medication, keeping out of the hospital. This allowed her to return to work. The palliative care allowed the 65-year-old woman to receive in-home visits that reduced her ALS symptoms and provided emotional support for her and her spouse. These patient stories showcase the powerful impact of accountable care, allowing patients, particularly women, to receive coordinated and necessary care. Dr. Oaks also emphasized that COPC has leveraged its value-based partnership with Aglion Health to invest in technology to help identify and minimize gaps in preventive and chronic care services, making it easier for physicians to see what their patients truly need.

“When we perform better, the patients do better, and have better health.”

— Kristin Oaks, D.O., Central Ohio Primary Care (Accountable for Health Member)

Putting Quality Over Quantity in Women’s Health – A Dementia Care Model

Following Dr. Oaks, Lisa Hunter, from USofCare, discussed the policy side of accountable care. USofCare’s listening research shows that nearly two out of three people believe the fee-for-service system doesn’t work because it is fragmented, lacks coordination, fosters an overreliance on medication rather than prevention, and creates long appointment wait times. Instead, people desire a “patient-first care” system that prioritizes the patient experience alongside other system-wide transformation goals, such as cost-savings and efficiency. Knowing whether a given policy or model of care truly embodies the spirit of patient-first care can be difficult, but USofCare offers a framework for policymakers and stakeholders, Patient First Care Principles, for assessing a given model’s fidelity to centering patients.

The patient-first care framework can be seen in the Guiding an Improved Dementia Experience (GUIDE) Model, a model under the CMS Innovation Center (CMMI), which is focused on improving care for dementia patients while supporting caregivers. Unfortunately, approximately twice as many women have Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia, compared to men. As such, success for this model has significant implications for improving women’s health – both at the patient and caregiver levels. The model encompasses care coordination between the patient, caregiver, and physician with the help of a care navigator, and moves away from fee-for-service payment and adopts bundled per-member per-month payments covering comprehensive services and promoting accountability through patient-centric evaluation criteria, including two patient-reported outcome measures. The GUIDE Model exemplifies how patient-first care can transform healthcare delivery by centering the well-being of the patient.

“People desire a system that prioritizes quality over quantity… and that encourages providers to listen and treat patients like humans, instead of a series of symptoms.”

— Lisa Hunter, USofCare

The Promise of Payment Reform in Combatting the Maternal Health Crisis

This briefing ended with Dr. Carol Sakala from the National Partnership for Women & Families (NPWF), discussing implications of alternative payment programs for maternal and newborn health outcomes. NPWF conducted a comprehensive landscape study on maternity care alternative payment models, and aligned its extensive recommendations with priorities of birth justice leaders. These priorities include various elements of “person-first” care, emphasizing using payment to support equity, prioritizing quality over costs and building a more culturally congruent workforce with more midwives and doulas. However, the paucity of alternative payment models with accountability in the maternal health space is a significant missed opportunity to leverage payments to improve maternal health outcomes.

“The failure to leverage payment to combat the maternal health crisis is a huge missed opportunity.”

— Carol Sakala, National Partnership for Women & Families

On a positive note, CMMI’s Transforming Maternal Health (TMaH) Model is expected to launch in 2025. The Innovation Center will select up to fifteen state Medicaid Agencies and award up to $17 million and extensive technical assistance to each awardee over ten years. The initial three-year pre-implementation period offers crucial opportunities to strengthen states’ maternal health infrastructure. This model will increase access to high-performing maternal care models such as midwifery, doula support, and birth centers. Among other required activities are risk assessments, screenings, and support as appropriate for depression, anxiety, SUD, and health-related social needs. Through care coordination and payment reform, this value-based care model is expected to improve maternal and child health outcomes in TMaH states and should have favorable spillover effects elsewhere.

Improving Women’s Health Across the Lifespan Means Embracing Payment Reform

It’s clear that accountable, patient-first care can positively impact women’s health across their lifespan. Accountable care provides a clear opportunity to improve health outcomes and experiences, especially for women.

Patient stories powerfully showcase how two women, at very different points in life, and with very different health profiles, benefitted from compassionate and coordinated care enabled by accountable care and delivered by providers that could spend more time with their patients, address care for the entire person (not just symptom), and work on a team to provide necessary care. New models unveiled by the CMS Innovation Center demonstrate a commitment to weaving beneficiary experiences and needs into model design, with some meaningful opportunities to improve women’s health. The GUIDE Model, which stands to benefit those finding themselves in the model as a patient with dementia, or caregiver supporting such a patient, presents clear upsides for beneficiaries writ large, especially for women finding themselves in either the patient or caregiving role. Similarly, the TMaH model takes the maternal health crisis head-on, seeking to improve maternal health outcomes and, in turn, newborn health outcomes.

Accountable for Health, the National Partnership for Women & Families, and United States of Care are united in calling for advancing payment reforms that stand to improve women’s health across the lifespan. Policymakers, elected officials, regulators, and stakeholders can contribute to improving women’s health by engaging in federal and state payment reform discussions. This could include the following:

  1. Members of Congress (and related stakeholders) encouraging their state officials to use the TMaH model framework for better, more equitable maternal care in their state;
  2. Members of Congress focusing on advancing reforms that will strengthen the nation’s primary care infrastructure and workforce, an entry-point and homebase for care that so many individuals and families rely on; and,
  3. As Members and stakeholders consider payment reform policy and supporting innovative care models, using the Patient-First Care Principles to ensure you are supporting access to patient-centered and high quality health care.

It is clear that accountable, patient-first care has a place in women’s health and across a woman’s lifespan. The opportunity for improved health outcomes for women is immense, and payment reform provides a straightforward, commonsense approach that policymakers at the federal and state levels ought to embrace.

This piece also appeared on United States of Care’s Patient-First Care blog.