Monday, January 30, 2012

THE ADMINISTRATION’S VISION

     Earlier this year HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius highlighted the ability of President Obama's Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) to significantly curtail the ever escalating costs of health care.  "The rising cost of health insurance coverage has imposed a heavy burden on our nation….  If health-care costs continue to rise unchecked, they will threaten America's ability to compete and will become unaffordable for most families.  One of the major reasons we passed [ACA] was to bring down costs… tackling the underlying cost of medical care….  [ACA] gives us tools to reduce costs by promoting better health and providing better care, especially in Medicare and Medicaid, which can be tremendous forces for positive change across the entire health-care system.  The law emphasizes prevention because we know it is far less expensive to prevent disease than to treat it….    The health-care law gives us dozens of tools to improve chronic-disease management, coordinate care among multiple providers and foster innovation.  Experts who have studied the law, from the Medicare trustees to the independent Congressional Budget Office, agree that it will put the brakes on skyrocketing Medicare costs.  And last January, 272 of America's top economists wrote to the House Budget Committee that the ACA 'contains essentially every cost-containment provision policy analysts have considered effective in reducing the rate of medical spending.'  It won't be easy and it won't happen overnight.  But at a time when some claim that our only options are to allow health-care costs to continue to skyrocket or to make some of the most dramatic cuts to our health-care programs ever proposed, the Affordable Care Act provides a better way forward."

            It is important for all of the health care professions to appreciate the magnitude of change that our nation's health care environment will soon be experiencing.  Watching the President's State of the Union Address every practitioner should understand that unprecedented change is coming.  "I will not go back to the days when health insurance companies had unchecked power to cancel your policy, deny you coverage, or charge women differently from men.  And I will not go back to the days when Wall Street was allowed to play by its own set of rules…."  From our perspective, significant policy decisions will evolve at both the local and national level.  Are we sufficiently engaged?

ACA is fundamentally patient-centered, heralding a major commitment, over time, to data-based decision making.  "What objectively works and under what conditions?" might be seen as its underlying orientation.  And yet, given the intensity of efforts being made by various health interest groups (including professional associations), one must expect that active engagement in the public policy/political process will become a major element of decision making.  Will, for example, the conceptualized "medical home" require physician direction under an historical "captain of the ship" philosophy or will it embrace true interdisciplinary care, facilitating each discipline practicing to the fullest extent of its training?  One factor will undoubtedly be the extent to which the various non-physician professions are successful in modifying federal statutes (e.g., Medicare and Medicaid) to ensure that their training institutions and practitioners have ready access to the same resources that medicine has historically possessed (e.g., financial support for implementing electronic medical record systems and telehealth/telepsychology reimbursement).  In the abstract, moving from historically isolated silos of practice and training to interdisciplinary care makes sense, especially under ACA.  How to accomplish this monumental change in orientation will be the evolving question.

            A Renewed Focus:  I recently accepted the exciting opportunity to join the faculty of the Uniform Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) of the Department of Defense.  I will be located within the School ofNursing and the Department of Psychology, the latter having been on the forefront of the Health Psychology movement thanks to the vision of former APA President Joe Matarazzo, as a member of the Board of Regents.  The chair of the Department is David Krantz, another of the original visionaries.  I will have the opportunity to become increasingly familiar with the culture and literature of our health profession colleagues.  For example, how do they (and perhaps psychology) address the needs of the growing number of individuals with chronic diseases?  The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that 7 of 10 deaths among Americans each year are from chronic diseases with obesity becoming a major public health concern (almost 1 in every 3 adults being obese; as is almost 1 in every 5 youth, between the ages of 6 and 19).  Seventy-six percent of Medicare spending is currently on patients with 5 or more chronic diseases.  By 2020, our nation is projected to spend $685 billion a year in direct medical costs for individuals with chronic diseases.

            David and I visited the USUHS Centerfor Deployment Psychology (CDP) which was established 5 years ago, after considerable involvement by the APA Education Directorate (Cynthia Belar and Nina Levitt).  Since 2007, the Center has trained more than 20,000 mental health providers working throughout the deployment cycle.  The Deputy Director, Bill Brim, is a health psychologist with over a decade of service within the USAF.  Former APA Congressional Fellow Paula Domenici is the Director of Training Programs, overseeing several initiatives educating mental health providers about the unique needs of service members, veterans, and their families; and the best strategies to assist them.  Since many veterans seek help from community-based clinicians, both immediately and years after their deployment, CDP trains military and non-military providers who care for the warriors and their loved ones.  One of CDP's hallmark offerings isAddressing the Psychological Health of Warriors and Their Families, a 1-week course that has been presented in 27 cities, includingHonoluluSan DiegoAlbuquerque,MinneapolisAustinNashville, andPittsburgh, to reach civilian audiences across the country.  Through this program, over 2,300 psychologists, social workers and other professionals have learned about military culture, the deployment experience, and evidence-based psychotherapies to treat PTSD.  Congressman Tim Murphy, a clinical psychologist, emphasized the value of CDP's mission after completing this course: "Although PTSD is treatable, we simply do not have enough trained military and civilian clinicians to meet the needs….  These (CDP) courses provide solid foundations in that critically important training."  [www.DeploymentPsych.org].

            Clinical Pharmacy:  The USPHS Report to the Surgeon General from the Office of the Chief Pharmacist is entitled: ImprovingPatient and Health System Outcomes through Advanced Pharmacy Practice.  "The 2011 Report provides rationale and compelling discussion to support health reform through pharmacists delivering expanded patient care services.  In collaboration with other providers, this is an existing, accepted, and additional model of improved health care delivery that meets growing health care demands in theUnited States.  Health care delivery (including preventive or supportive care) in the United States is challenged by demands of access, safety, quality, and cost.  These challenges are amplified by provider workforce shortages and dramatic increases in primary and chronic care visits.  Projections suggest worsening of this situation.  New or additional paradigms of care must be implemented to reduce these burdens.  Current health care demands provide an opportunity for health leadership to recognize and adopt additional and significant health care delivery models….

            "The federal sector has already implemented and embraced such a health care delivery model through physician-pharmacist collaboration.  This collaboration, through extensive performance data, has demonstrated that patient care services delivered by pharmacists can improve patient outcomes, promote patient involvement, increase cost-efficiency, and reduce demands affecting the health care system.  For over forty years, federal pharmacists have collaboratively managed disease through medication use, and other cognitive and clinical pharmacy services.  Although these models are accepted in the non-federal sector, utilization is often impeded due to policy, legislation, and compensation barriers…."

            Once a diagnosis is made by the primary care provider, pharmacists do manage disease and provide primary care.  Pharmacists -- Perform patient assessment (subjective and objective data including physical assessment).  Have prescriptive authority (initiate, adjust, or discontinue treatment) to manage disease through medication use and deliver collaborative drug therapy or medication management.  Order, interpret and monitor laboratory tests.  Formulate clinical assessments and develop therapeutic plans.  Provide care coordination and other health services for wellness and prevention of disease.  And, Develop partnerships with patients for ongoing (follow-up) care.  Under ACA, HHS has considerable flexibility in defining "preventive services" and "essential health benefits" as broadly as desired.  Those following psychology's prescriptive authority (RxP) quest will not be surprised to learn that in 1996, the then Director of the Indian Health Service (IHS) issued a Special General Memorandum (SGM 96-2) recognizing Clinical Pharmacy Specialists (CPSs) as primary care providers with prescribing authority.  The Dean of one of the nation's leading schools of pharmacy emphasized that clinical pharmacists must complete a four-year postgraduate program focusing on managing complex medications and are extraordinarily cost-effective.  At Kaiser PermanenteColorado, pharmacists worked with physician-approved protocols targeting patients with coronary artery disease and hit their blood pressure and cholesterol targets.  They achieved an 89% reduction in their patients' overall mortality and nearly $22,000 annual savings in health care costs per patient.  Similarly, targeting city employees with diabetes, pharmacists were successful in reducing the annual direct medical costs per worker, on average, by $1,200 to $1,872 – an estimated savings of $4 for every $1 invested.  Not surprisingly, the city has since expanded this program to cover other chronic diseases, including hypertension and asthma.

            Looking Forward:  Having retired from the U.S. Senate staff after 38+ years, I have become quite interested in the experiences of senior colleagues.  Reflections from Ed Sheridan, a pioneer in Health Psychology and now Professor/Senior Vice President & Provost Emeritus, University ofHouston:  "You certainly are correct that most of us do not think much about retirement until we decide to do it.  One reason seems to be that we are among the first generations to be free to work or retire while previous generations had mandatory retirement at age 65 (if you lived that long!).  I have only a few suggestions to offer that may be important.  If there is a prominent mistake couples seem to make, it is they do not spend enough time in discussing what each person wants from retirement before deciding to retire.  Since couples likely will spend much more time together, especially if they retire at the same time, it is essential they share what they desire and what each hopes the partner will want to do.  These discussions need to include each partner's strongest wishes for a quality life, whether each finds the other's desires compatible, what to do with potential challenges (e.g., caring for a very ill parent), and what household duties each will agree to accept.  Additionally, couples especially need to discuss what they want as a life style in the next few years.  There are lots of choices.  One consideration is to downsize one's home and use that money for other initiatives (e.g., seeing more of the grandkids, traveling, developing new interests or improving on former ones -- bridge, tennis, dancing, etc. --  teaching part time, consulting).  In my case, I find teaching undergraduates (something I did very little of in my first 35 postdoctoral years) is real fun.  It is like having an unlimited number of eager grandchildren.  Even with such discussions, couples need to realize that retirement requires that each person be willing to be very flexible since no one anticipates all the challenges that eventually will come with this new lifestyle.

            "Speaking of homes, I find many couples decide to own two homes, one in a warm environment for the winter and one near the grandchildren.  Most eventually realize this was a mistake.  As the grandchildren get older, they only desire a limited amount of time with the grandparents and the grandparents find they are spending a lot of money on the upkeep of two homes and this limits travel and other opportunities for stimulation.  Most people wonder what they will do with 'all their free time.'  Actually, I find there still is not enough time to accomplish what I wish to do.  I suspect our colleagues will find the same.  The one big change is that you have more control over your time but it still is not enough.

            "Having read some literature on financing retirement from organizations like AARP, I did not find their predictions were helpful to us.  One common proposal was a couple needs about 80% of their preretirement income.  In our case, we spend as much in retirement as we previously spent.  One reason may be that as a Dean and Provost, I had almost every lunch and most dinners paid for.  I also had a free car.  In addition, we received free tickets to most sports events, plays, musicals, etc. and now we pay for these items.  One item that does cost less is clothing.  In terms of finances, I do think it is important to talk with a financial planner who has no stake in how you invest and get good direction on how you can achieve your income goals.  We were fortunate in that we anticipated the Bush fiasco and we were not hurt.  However, we have numerous friends who lost 20%-35% of their retirement income by not anticipating the downturn.  It also is hard to anticipate what your needs will be if you live 30 or more additional years.

            "Healthcare opportunities also is an important topic for consideration.  Kathy and I always intended to retire to Kauai (we already had land there to build a home).  Then, having spent decades working closely with the leadership of the various health professions, we realized that we would not want to rely on obtaining care at Wilcox Hospital with its considerable rural challenges, while the closest medical center was on Oahu.  We understand that subsequently the leadership of MauiMemorial Medical Center has been seeking to fulfill this historical neighbor island gap.  Nevertheless, making the decision to be near good health care has paid important dividends for us and we are very appreciative that we recognized this need.  Aloha."

PatDeLeon – Division 29 – February, 2012

 

Thursday, January 12, 2012

PUFF, THE MAGIC DRAGON

"Lived by the Sea…."  At the end of the fiscal year, I retired from the U.S. Senate staff after 38+ years, having served from the first day of the infamous Watergate hearings.  Already the types of information readily available to me have shifted, not to mention the "demands of the moment."  I have finally had time to have a leisurely lunch with several of my favorite professional colleagues.  They say, "Puff frolicked in the Autumn mist in a land called Honah Lee."  Looking perhaps now from afar, it remains increasingly clear that the health care environment of the next decade will be dramatically impacted by the advances occurring within the communications and technology fields, and further that psychology must strive for licensure mobility and a meaningful presence within integrated health care (i.e., obtaining prescriptive authority (RxP)).

            This Fall the State of Hawaii received significant funding from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to help establish and implement the Hawaii Health Connector, an on-line health insurance exchange designed to help Hawaii's consumers find affordable health care plans.  This is viewed as a critical step towards ensuring that all residents of Hawaii will ultimately have access to high quality, affordable health care, pursuant to President Obama's Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care (PPACA) legislation.

            "Globalization – It's relevance toHawaii's Health Care Delivery System Vision.  When we were offered the opportunity to share our thoughts with the readership, we contemplated our approach.  Our curiosities led to broader questions:  How do the efforts to transform Hawaii's health care delivery system affect social change?  Does our vision of health care transformation have the opportunity to have a broader impact on social systems and our state's economic foundation?  How can key initiatives contained within the Affordable Care Act (ACA), currently being implemented in Hawaii, accomplish parallel outcomes to globalization ideologies?  What can the transformation yield so that it ties to the broader vision for the State of Hawaii… to be the conduit between U.S. and Asian markets?

            "Let's start with globalization:  Globalization, as defined by the Rockefeller Foundation, is the technological, social, and economic process by which people around the world have grown inextricably interdependent.  In 1998 the University of Hawaii's School ofSocial Sciences presented a seminar on Globalization in which Fred Riggs presented dimensions of globalization that included economics, political science, sociology, psychology, anthropology, communications, and geography.  Concepts of globalization can be similarly applied to a state level as the focus is on benefits being shared widely such that economic and social challenges can be overcome.  Collaboration among individual communities and across the state can lead to positive outcomes across boundaries, whether socioeconomic, political, etc.  A shared goal of globalization is to promote the well-being of humanity.  In order to achieve this, systems are integrated.  Information is transported more readily which also contributes to health promotion, social advancement, and improved economic viability.

            "The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), a transformational initiative in health care, was passed in March 2010.  Its goals are to increase access to care, to expand health care coverage, and to increase the focus on prevention.  Like globalization, it is intending to promote well-being.  The health of communities is directly linked to individuals' abilities to contribute positively to the economic viability of their communities as well.

            "Hawaii is demonstrating progress in implementing federal health reform through several initiatives underway statewide.  They include: the Hawaii Island Beacon Community, the Hawaii Health Information Exchange/Regional Extension Center, and the Hawaii Health Connector (insurance exchange).  Each is described below.  Hawaii Island Beacon Community:  Established in May 2010, this federally funded collaborative project ($16.1 million grant) is administered through the College of Pharmacy at theUniversity of HawaiiHilo.  Its goals include: improving access to health care, chronic disease prevention, focused reductions in health disparities of Native Hawaiians and other at-risk populations, and increased use of electronic health records to support information sharing between primary care providers.  Hawaii Health Information Exchange (HHIE) and Regional ExtensionCenter (REC):  Established in 2009, the HHIE is focused on the implementation of a statewide health information exchange that will ultimately feed into the national health information network.  Its goals are to transform the current state of health care into one that coordinates care, reduces costs (for patients and providers), addresses the needs of the aging population, and provides incentives to engage patients in a proactive approach to their health care.  The REC, also established in 2009, provides technical support to health care providers who are striving to meet the meaningful use requirements (electronic health records use) as described in the ACA.  HawaiiHealth Insurance Exchange:  Act 205, signed into law in 2011, established the Hawaii Health Connector (the state's health insurance exchange).  HHS has awarded the State a total of $15.4 million to plan for and establish the exchange.  States are operating under a very short timeline to implement their exchanges (by January 2014).  Its goal is to create a marketplace for individuals and small businesses to purchase health care insurance.

            "Each of these initiatives has a role in transforming Hawaii's healthcare delivery system but will only affect social change in the broader framework of health and healthcare transformation.  Hawaii's Governor Neil Abercrombie also wants to transform the healthcare delivery system.  His vision includes creating a patient-centered system that relies on comprehensive primary care, empowering a team of care-givers that expertly deliver medical, behavioral health, pharmaceutical, nutritional, and care coordination.  The Governor's vision also includes developing and deploying a robust system of timely feedback and information to improve provider performance and transparency in reporting to guide consumer choices.

            "These changes in healthcare will be reflected in Hawaii's economy as the cost for public and private insurance is stabilized but it also represents new career opportunities for our residents who might never aspire to be clinicians but can contribute meaningfully as care coordinators.  This model of healthcare also offers hope for sustainability for rural and isolated communities that can't attract a physician or specialist in this era of shortages.

            "Our ultimate vision for health is one where no group suffers disparities and the effects of poverty, lack of education, and other social determinates are erased.  Improving the economy, creating new jobs that value community and cultural competence, and prioritizing patient experience and engagement all contribute to that vision.  Healthcare transformation must be an on-going community-wide effort and we believe Hawaiiis ready for the challenge" [Coral Andrews, Hawaii Health Connector; Beth Giesting, Hawaii Healthcare Transformation.]

            The Past Is Prologue For The Future:  The future for our nation's health care delivery systems will embrace integrated, interdisciplinary, and patient-centered cross-disciplinary care.  No longer will the individual professions be encouraged to practice in isolated, silo-oriented environments.  Bringing science directly to the clinician will become an increasing policy priority.  At the final Senate Labor-HHS-Education appropriations subcommittee hearing which I attended, the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and several of his colleagues testified on the NIH's Investments in Innovation strategy: accelerating discovery through technology; applying science to prevention; enhancing theU.S. economy and global competitiveness; and, advancing translational science.  When asked what the single most important clinical intervention was, in their professional judgment, each of the NIH directors quickly spoke to the value of regular exercise.  Finally, the psychosocial-cultural-economic gradient of quality care is being formally recognized at the highest policy levels.  No one discipline can possibly know (or reasonably consider itself to be) the totality of health care – collaboration is absolutely critical.

            In the early stages of psychology's prescriptive authority quest, visionary Linda Campbell worked closely with her Georgiapharmacy colleagues to develop a psychology-friendly training program.  Recently, theCollege of Pharmacy at the University ofHawaiiHilo (UHH) has been similarly engaged in collaborating with psychology.  "On August 25, 2011, I attended the Board of Regents meeting to answer any questions posed by Board members concerning the MS in Clinical Psychopharmacology program we were developing.  This program had already progressed through the entire University ofHawaii at Hilo review process.  This last step would officially allow the UHH College ofPharmacy to offer the program.  After a brief introduction, and overview of the program presented by the Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, UHH, the floor was opened for questions.  The question and answer session lasted approximately 30 minutes.  Some areas of concern voiced were: the sustainability of the program, the Continuing Education process of program graduates, and the current situation regarding the graduate's ability to prescribe.  I believe that I was able to adequately answer all of their questions.  The University President showed her support of the program by interjecting her opinion on administrative maters raised by the Board.  She stated that this is provisional approval, and that all provisional programs must come back to the Board again, before they officially becomeUniversity of Hawaii programs.  The vote was overwhelmingly in favor of the program with one negative vote [Ed Fisher, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, UHH].

            As we indicated earlier, Licensure Mobility is a critical issue for all clinicians.  Reciprocity of pharmacy licensure is currently possible across all the States, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia and is facilitated by a national licensure transfer process and a national jurisprudence exam.  There is no multi-state compact, however, as in nursing.  The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) provides these national mobility resources as a service to member state boards of pharmacy and to licensees.  NABP also provides the Model Pharmacy Practice Act and updates it regularly.  The Model Act addresses key issues, including the regulatory framework for collaborative drug therapy management (CDTM), agreements between pharmacists and physicians, nurse practitioners, and other prescribers.  It facilitates pharmacists' patient management activities which include the initiation, modification, and cessation of medications.  Psychology could learn much from pharmacy's experiences.

            Over the years, I have been particularly impressed by the heroic efforts of Bill Howelland Vicki Vandaveer in struggling with the underlying applicability of licensure (and APA accreditation) for our Industrial-Organizational (IO) colleagues.  There are clearly several areas in which the legitimate interests of health care providers and non-health care providers essentially clash.  For example, Must all doctoral programs be APA accredited?  Are pre- and post-supervision requirements relevant?  The considerable mobility needs of national/international IO psychologists may be more pressing that those presently experienced by most clinicians.  And, Do not most state licensure exams focus more on clinically-oriented content than IO colleagues would find relevant to their work?  How do other professions address similar concerns?  Collectively, we must elevate our consideration of addressing the underlying issues of competence, timeliness, and consumer protection.  "Puff, the magic dragon lived by the sea.  And frolicked in the Autumn mist in a land called Honah Lee."  Aloha,

 

Pat DeLeon, former APA President -- Division 55 -- January, 2012