Fueled by consumer expectations, cost pressures, regulatory actions, and, most recently, COVID-19, many health care provider organizations are pursuing value-based care business models. Our new four-part blog series explores critical recovery considerations for leaders emerging from the pandemic to the new reality of value-based care, as well as steps to take for long-term success.
A confluence of internal and external factors is driving the health care industry’s investment in value-based care business models, with implications that span strategic, financial, clinical, operations, technology, and change management for provider organizations.
In the traditional landscape surrounding health care payment models, many providers were given the latitude to protect their core business and adopt a wait-and-see approach to value-based care and what it might mean to their business. Now, as health care executives survey the state of local market conditions, it’s likely that one of these factors—consumer expectations, cost pressures, regulatory actions, or COVID-19—is evident and already influencing either their organization’s strategy or that of a major competitor.
Explore these above value-based care motivators, along with case examples, in our first blog post on value-based health care payment models.
Shifting to value-based care is no longer a decision between protecting the core or positioning for transformation. In health care’s new reality, it’s becoming a requirement to stay viable.
Macro trends like those described in part 1 of our series have accelerated adoption of value-based payment models as providers and payers continue to shift away from fee-for-service (FFS) structures. Once health care providers gain a sense of urgency to adopt a value-based care model, the question then becomes, “Where do we start?”
For organizations just beginning to develop a strategy for the transition to value-based care, the journey often starts with a current-state assessment. The goals of the assessment should be to determine market dynamics, evaluate key capabilities that enable success in value-based contracts, and formulate what a financially sustainable value-based care strategy looks like. Here are the four steps parties should take:
A value-based care road map brings together findings from a well-developed fact base, capabilities assessment, and financial analysis to plot future activities on a timeline and help prioritize resources, effort, and organizational focus.
Throughout the first two parts of this four-part series, we have examined some of the key questions and challenges we often see provider organizations tackle as they increase participation in value-based care (VBC) arrangements. From the initial motivators that prompt leaders to move away from fee-for-service (FFS), to smart first steps they can take once in VBC, provider systems often face many of the same struggles in their journey to becoming more risk-capable organizations. Early on, the journey can feel like straddling two canoes- a now commonly used metaphor for having one foot moving in the directly of your FFS business, incentive by volume of services, with the other foot moving slowly in the opposite direction.
Explore these “no-regrets” initiatives along with case examples in this blog to realize quick wins, show faster return on investment to key stakeholders, and create savings that can be put towards long-term strategic, value-based initiatives.
“No regrets” initiatives should be explored early on in an organization’s VBC journey to realize quick wins, show faster return on investment to key stakeholders, and create savings that can be put towards long-term strategic, value-based initiatives.
The fourth and final part to the series highlights providers who have reached what we call the “tipping point” for value-based care. These providers have reached maturity in their payer relationships and are driving impact on patient outcomes, provider engagement, and market and financial results. They have built essential capabilities to drive success, including:
From our experiences with these organizations, we know that transformative success hinges on the wraparound services described in this series.