Home Health Care Cutting Wait Times for Medi-Cal Specialty Care

Cutting Wait Times for Medi-Cal Specialty Care

by Universalwellnesssystems
At Wellspace Health Oak Park Clinic in Sacramento: Rheumatologist Faye Sajjadi, MD (left), assistant professor of Specialty Connect at the University of California, Davis. Ann Boynton, Deputy Chief Strategy Officer, University of California, Davis Medical Center, is seated. Dr. Janine Vera, Chief Medical Officer of WellSpace Health;Photo: Jose Luis Villegas

Like many communities across the country, the greater Sacramento region has specialized health care issues that are not easily resolved.UC Davis Health 2022 Community Health Needs Assessment (PDF) Regardless of payer, wait times for specialist appointments were found to be “excessively long.” In settings where supplies are limited, it is those with the greatest difficulty accessing care who face the longest wait times.

In Sacramento County, one in five Medi-Cal enrollees Difficulty finding specialized treatment (PDF) In 2020 and 2021, we received input from healthcare providers such as cardiologists, rheumatologists, and urologists. 2023 JAMA network open study Caregivers of children with Medicaid insurance are also more likely to report being frustrated finding specialty care for their children than caregivers of children with private insurance. was found to be more than twice as high.

Lessons learned from Specialty Connect

In November 2023, California Health Policy Strategy Announcing the policy summary, Specialty Connect: A partnership between WellSpace Health and UC Davis Health to improve access to specialty care for Medi-Cal recipients in Sacramento County (PDF). Here are some of the lessons learned from this experience.

• Partners must be in sync. WellSpace and UC Davis knew and trusted each other because of their long history as mission-based organizations focused on patient solutions in the community.

• Don’t underestimate the importance of seemingly small information technology (IT) failures. For example, professionals don’t have the time to learn a completely new software system so that they can do the occasional half-day job. Specialty Connect worked around the issue by using medical scribes, but this increases overhead.

• There is no perfect solution. With Specialty Connect, physicians must accept that a patient’s IPA may refer the patient to other sources of care if they recommend additional treatment, such as a procedure. Professionals who prefer to see patients through to the end may object, and patients may become dissatisfied. “This is an area where we know there is room for improvement,” says Boynton of the University of California, Davis.

• be patient. The need for professionals is very high everywhere. UC Davis wants to help meet the needs of the Medi-Cal community, but its professionals are in high demand at local institutions as well. Specialty Connect plans to expand the program slowly and may need to partner with other provider organizations to grow.

Diana Camacho, MPH, senior program officer at the California Healthcare Foundation, said health care has been looking for solutions to this problem for years. “We know that people on Medi-Cal and the uninsured are suffering because they can’t get medical attention when they desperately need it. The longer treatment is delayed, the worse the patient’s prognosis.” Furthermore, the longer a patient waits to see a specialist, the more specialized care they may need.

Recognizing the need to reduce inequities in specialist care, delegates: Wellspace Healtha Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) with 30 clinics in Sacramento, Placell, and Amador Counties, began brainstorming several years ago. UC Davis Health.

The team determined that inadequate Medi-Cal reimbursement was a barrier to access that could be improved. Fees were so low that even when specialists were available, reimbursements did not cover overhead costs and providers often could not financially justify accepting Medi-Cal patients. “It’s not all about the money,” said Cordia Roche, MBA, Wellspace’s chief strategy officer. “But like any business, sustainability is important in healthcare.”

If the team can find a way to simply break even, rather than letting professionals make a profit from providing Medi-Cal services, they might be on to something.

Reduce wait times for Medi-Cal specialty care

After much discussion, WellSpace and UC Davis came up with a partnership model called Specialty Connect. “Here in the Sacramento area, five or six individual FQHCs have asked for help providing access to specialists,” said Anne, associate chief strategy officer at the University of California, Davis School of Health. Boynton said. “We have found a solution that allows us to provide access to patients on Medi-Cal through the right structure in an economically sustainable way. became the most viable way for us to move forward.”

Here’s how two organizations made Specialty Connect work. WellSpace is Expanding the scope of services for health resource and service management (PDF) To be able to add new specialty dishes and charge for them. Wellspace then entered into an agreement with UC Davis Health to hire experts for half a day for a flat fee using a binding professional services agreement. This fee includes UC Davis Health salaries and provider benefits. The specialist then sees patients at Specialty Connect, an independent clinic run by her WellSpace. WellSpace pays for specialist certification, malpractice insurance premiums, supplies, equipment, nurses and other support staff while practicing with SpecialtyConnect.

Because WellSpace is a FQHC, the organization is eligible for funding based on: Public Health Law Article 330. Importantly, WellSpace will also be eligible for enhanced reimbursement when serving her Medi-Cal patients. In effect, if a provider works under the auspices of Specialty Connect/WellSpace, it will be financially profitable. No one loses, the patient wins.

Of course, what seems so simple rarely actually happens. “Believe me, this took years of discussion and planning,” Boynton said, not to mention overcoming obstacles.

Remove barriers to specialized treatment

Sacramento, like many areas of California, is a state in which Medi-Cal managed care plans provide financial responsibility for health care services for enrollees to independent practice associations (IPAs), physician groups, and, usually, the state, for a down payment amount. We use a model of delegation to other healthcare providers who receive payment. Health plans to provide services. This means that you receive a certain amount of money to cover the expected cost of medical services for a particular patient over a certain period of time. In this delegation model, an FQHC like WellSpace contracts directly with an IPA to become a patient’s primary care provider, and the IPA provides the specialty network.

However, the contracted IPAs were not keeping up with the demand for specialty care. There is an awareness of the problem here. “Right now, he’s the only gastroenterologist between his two largest IPAs, which account for about 400,000 Medi-Cal recipients in the county,” Roche said. “There are approximately 250,000 adults who want access to that one specialist. So, needless to say, if a patient just makes a preventive appointment with that gastroenterologist, she will be treated for six to nine months. You will have to wait.”

Another major obstacle was directly related to the way professionals worked. Doctors at the University of California, Davis use an electronic medical records system called Epic, and WellSpace uses his electronic medical records system called NextGen. “It’s not reasonable to expect doctors to learn a completely new system,” Boynton says. Currently, WellSpace employs a medical scribe (a personal assistant who accompanies the doctor during patient visits and enters documents into her NextGen for record-keeping and billing purposes), but the specialist is Epic I continue to use it. This redundancy will be resolved when WellSpace switches to Epic this year.

Despite all these challenges, Specialty Connect works.

Advancement of Specialty Connect

The number of people treated so far is modest, but patients and UC Davis doctors are satisfied, Roche said. “As a United Church, we are mission-focused,” Boynton said. “Our physicians really want to be part of the solution.”

The plan is to continue slow and steady. “We want to be realistic about growth,” Roche said. Specialty Connect began in January 2023 with Rheumatology. “As soon as we opened, three months worth of appointments filled up quickly.” While this still means long waits for some patients, it is a marked improvement over previous wait times. I am. And we expect appointment waiting lists to continue to improve as providers address patient waits.

A heart failure outpatient clinic will also open at the end of 2023. In addition to rheumatology and cardiology, Specialty Connect plans to add several other specialties in 2024, including gastroenterology and possibly urology.

Roche and Boynton acknowledge that meeting the needs of the Sacramento region may also require expertise from larger health systems outside of UC Davis. All plans must track medical outcomes to fully determine the impact of their approach on Medi-Cal patients.

“But for now, we’re happy that this is off the ground and we’re looking at ways to expand our services, but always in a sustainable way,” Roche said.

Camacho praised Specialty Connect as an innovative solution that can be replicated in other communities, but said it is not a panacea. “To really solve this problem, we’re going to need a number of solutions,” she says. “This model is promising because partners are working to address specialty care access issues in an economically sustainable and reproducible manner that will have a major impact on the health and lives of Medi-Cal patients. Because we are united.”

Jose Luis Villegas

Jose Luis Villegas is a freelance photojournalist based in Sacramento, California, doing editorial and commercial work. He co-authored his three books on Latino/a baseball. His work appears in Ken Burns’ documentary. Bottom of the 10th inning and in that Playbol! The exhibition first opened at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History and has since been shown at museums across the country.read more

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