TY - JOUR
T1 - Reframing Value-Based Care Management
T2 - Beyond Cost Reduction and Toward Patient Centeredness
AU - Wang, Priscilla
AU - Vienneau, Maryann
AU - Vogeli, Christine
AU - Schiavoni, Katherine
AU - Jubelt, Lindsay
AU - Mendu, Mallika L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023/6/16
Y1 - 2023/6/16
N2 - Importance: Care management programs are increasingly being utilized by health systems as a new foundational strategy to advance value-based care. These programs offer the promise of improving patient outcomes while decreasing health care utilization and costs. However, as these programs proliferate in number and specialization, the field of care management is increasingly at risk of fragmentation, inefficiency, and failure to meet the core needs of the patient. Observations: This review of the current state of care management identifies several key challenges for the field, including an unclear value proposition, a focus on system- vs patient-centered outcomes, increased specialization by private and public entrants that produces care fragmentation, and lack of coordination among health and social service entities. A framework is proposed for reorienting care management to truly address the needs of patients through acknowledging the dynamic nature of patient care needs, providing a continuum of need-targeted programming, coordinating care among all involved entities and staff, and performing regular evaluations of outcomes that include patient-centered and health equity measures. Guidance on how this framework can be implemented within a health system and an outline of recommendations is provided for how policymakers may incentivize the development of high value and more equitable care management programs. Conclusions and Relevance: With increased focus on care management as a cornerstone of value-based care, value-based health leaders and policymakers can improve the effectiveness and value of care management programs, reduce patient financial burden for care management services, and promote stakeholder coordination..
AB - Importance: Care management programs are increasingly being utilized by health systems as a new foundational strategy to advance value-based care. These programs offer the promise of improving patient outcomes while decreasing health care utilization and costs. However, as these programs proliferate in number and specialization, the field of care management is increasingly at risk of fragmentation, inefficiency, and failure to meet the core needs of the patient. Observations: This review of the current state of care management identifies several key challenges for the field, including an unclear value proposition, a focus on system- vs patient-centered outcomes, increased specialization by private and public entrants that produces care fragmentation, and lack of coordination among health and social service entities. A framework is proposed for reorienting care management to truly address the needs of patients through acknowledging the dynamic nature of patient care needs, providing a continuum of need-targeted programming, coordinating care among all involved entities and staff, and performing regular evaluations of outcomes that include patient-centered and health equity measures. Guidance on how this framework can be implemented within a health system and an outline of recommendations is provided for how policymakers may incentivize the development of high value and more equitable care management programs. Conclusions and Relevance: With increased focus on care management as a cornerstone of value-based care, value-based health leaders and policymakers can improve the effectiveness and value of care management programs, reduce patient financial burden for care management services, and promote stakeholder coordination..
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85163271932&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.1502
DO - 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2023.1502
M3 - Review article
C2 - 37327007
AN - SCOPUS:85163271932
SN - 2689-0186
VL - 4
SP - E231502
JO - JAMA Health Forum
JF - JAMA Health Forum
IS - 6
ER -