Early versions of managed care meant well. They were created to centralize care and achieve better health outcomes while controlling costs, but things didn’t go as planned. Instead of controlling costs, managed care controlled access to care and, in some cases, also fueled cycles of wasteful spending. This article released by Stanford Business does a great job exploring the details of what exactly went wrong. Lack of choice, spiralizing levels of complexity, and poor collaboration between doctors and insurance companies all played a role in the deficiencies of managed care.
Advanced primary care (APC) delivers on the promise of managed care and much more, with a model focused on members’ health outcomes rather than the volume of care transitions and related claims. This effectively flattens costs and improves the member experience. Here are four ways ACP improves on health outcomes and avoids the drawbacks of managed care:
To be truly effective for an employer’s bottom line, as well as for health and wellness, managed care must be about more than a centralized member experience. The care provided through primary care must be positioned at its core. This should include:
There’s nothing incidental about primary care, its providers, and its services. In fact, the industry is starting to understand just how essential primary care and its providers are for members, even in cases where specialists are needed.
Effective care coordination includes the following benefits:
Care coordination means primary care teams work proactively to identify when a member or employee needs specialty care. It also ensures specialists provide the primary care team with data regarding visits, allowing the care team to follow up with patients regarding their care plans. This improves the member experience and reduces gaps in care that were all too common in earlier versions of managed care.
“This situation requires strong care coordination,” says Dr. Kevin Wang, Vera’s Chief Medical Officer. “You have to have a model in which primary care is the hub that drives the right referrals when needed but also quarterbacks the patient's care.”
APC establishes primary care centers as the hub (rather than a brief pitstop) where 80-90 percent of all care-related needs can be achieved. The entire APC model is driven by data to determine, plan, and staff a care center team that can best meet the actual needs of the population they’re serving.
Behavioral health clinicians provide support for mental health, addictive disorders, and more — contributing to mental and emotional well-being
Health coaches encourage members to improve lifestyle choices that otherwise account for 70% of all healthcare costs
APC and care coordination correct for the costly inefficiencies, care gaps, and underutilized PCPs of managed care. It’s no wonder reputable predictions about the future of healthcare look a lot like APC’s proactive, patient-centered model.
It’s not enough to cut costs and increase control. At the end of the day, APC overcomes what managed care could not, because it prioritizes health outcomes, flattens costs, and improves the member experience.