The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce

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A Presentation of the Colorado Health Institute 303 E. 17 th Avenue, Suite 930 Denver, Colorado 80203 www.coloradohealthinstitu te.org @CoHealthInst (Twitter) The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce What impact will health reform have on Colorado’s health professions workforce and access to primary care? Hot Issues in Health Care Legislative Conference November 11-12, 2010 Garden of the Gods Club Colorado Springs, CO

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The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce. What impact will health reform have on Colorado’s health professions workforce and access to primary care?. Hot Issues in Health Care Legislative Conference November 11-12, 2010 Garden of the Gods Club Colorado Springs, CO. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce

Page 1: The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce

A Presentation of the Colorado Health Institute303 E. 17th Avenue, Suite 930Denver, Colorado 80203www.coloradohealthinstitute.org@CoHealthInst (Twitter)

The Affordable Care Act and Colorado’s Health Care Workforce

What impact will health reform

have on Colorado’s health professions workforce and

access to primary care?

Hot Issues in Health Care Legislative ConferenceNovember 11-12, 2010Garden of the Gods ClubColorado Springs, CO

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What can Colorado expect in numbers of newly insured?

Once the ACA has been fully implemented, CHI has estimated that:

Over 550,000 Coloradans will be newly insured

238,000 will remain uninsured

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Health insurance is just the beginning step on the path to access to health care

Access to health insurance

Access to health care

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Factors affecting access to health care

In addition to having a health insurance card, access to care also depends on the:

• Absolute supply of the health care workforce

• Specialty distribution of health care providers

• Geographic distribution of health care resources

• Policies governing provider practices

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Lessons from Massachusetts

“Expanding access to health insurance without expanding access to care can turn a positive development into widespread patient and practitioner frustration.”

SOURCE: Bodenheimer, T and Hoangmai Pham. (2010) “Primary care: current problems and proposed solutions.” Health Affairs 29(5):799-805.

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TITLE V of the Affordable Care Act: Health Care Workforce

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Title V: Health care workforce provisions

• The purpose of this section of the Affordable Care Act is to:

“Improve access to and the delivery of health care services for all individuals, particularly low-income, underserved, uninsured, minority, health disparity, and rural populations.”

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Overview of Title V provisions

• Establishes a National Health Care Workforce Commission

• Establishes a Health Care Workforce Development grant program

• Establishes the National Center for Health Care Workforce Analysis

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Overview of Title V provisions (cont.)

Other provisions include:• Authorizes funds to encourage expansion of the health care

workforce• Authorizes grants and programs to enhance health

professions’ education and training• Appropriates funds for scholarships and grants to support

existing health care workforce• Authorizes grants to academic heath centers to establish

new or expanded primary care residency programs

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Strategic state workforce planning in Colorado involves…

• Deciding where Colorado needs to go to create the preferred health care system and workforce

• Determining what we need to know to get us there

• Developing an action plan that will enable Colorado to achieve the preferred system

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Physician supply model

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CURRENT

WORKFORCE Current active

physician workforce

[36 medical specialties,

year of medical school

graduation, gender, medical school location (U.S./Canada vs. all other

countries), type of degree

(MD/DO), major professional

activity (direct patient care vs.

others]

NEW ENTRANTS

New entrants [1st

year residents + physician in-

migration into

Colorado]

EXITS FROM THE

WORKFORCE

Separation from

workforce [out-of-state migration + retirement +

death]

Physician Supply

DATA SOURCE: HRSA Model – 2005 AMA Physician Master File

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Counting is only the beginning…

In addition to knowing how many physicians we have in Colorado, we need to know:– The ratio of primary care to specialty care

providers– What other health care professionals provide

primary and specialty care? In what capacity? In what quantity?

– The distribution of the health professions’ workforce geographically

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Primary care practitioners include:

Family practice physicians, internists, geriatricians, general pediatricians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants

Health Care System

Primary care is the foundation of the health care

system

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Why primary care matters…The Four Pillars of Primary Care:

First Continuity Whole Coordination

Contact of person of Care Care Care Care

SOURCE: Starfield B. (1998). Primary care: balancing health needs, services, and technology.. New York: Oxford University Press.

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Promising models of primary care delivery

• Patient centered medical homes• Collaborative interdisciplinary

teams• School-based health centers• Improved provider coordination

via Electronic Health Records (EHR)

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Primary care supply, Colorado and the U.S.

COLORADO• 29% of all Colorado

physicians identify themselves as primary care providers

• 47 % of Colorado’s rural physicians identify themselves as primary care providers

U.S.• 35% of all U.S.

physicians identify themselves as primary care practitioners

• 49% of U. S. rural physicians identify themselves as primary care practitioners

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Primary care physician supply and demand:Status quo + universal coverage, 2005-2025

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1,000

3,000

5,000

7,000

9,000

11,000

2005 2010 2015 2020 2025

Primary Care Demand Primary Care Supply Demand -All Coloradans Covered

131451 940

1,551SHORTAGE

+322

+347

+370+390

DATA SOURCE: 2005 AMA Physician Master File

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Declining interest in primary care specialties among physicians

A 2007 survey of fourth year medical students at eleven U.S. medical schools found:

•2% were planning a career in general internal medicine•5% were planning a career in family medicine•12% were planning a career in general pediatrics

SOURCE: Hauer, K. et.al. (2008). “Factors associated with medical student’s career choices regarding internal medicine.” Journal of the American Medical Association 300(10): 1154-64.

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“Show me the money…”The Primary Care Wage Gap

Specialists % aboveprimary care

• Surgeons 48%

• Internal medicine & pediatric 36%sub-specialists

• Other Specialists 45%

SOURCE: Leigh, JP, et.al. (2010). “Physician Wages Across Specialties.” American Medical Association

170(19):1728-1734.

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Rural physician wage gap in Colorado

• 49% of Colorado’s rural physicians in a FT primary care practice reported an income of less than $150,000/year

• 23% of Colorado’s rural physicians in a FT specialty practice reported an income of less than $150,000/year

Source: 2009 Rural Physician Survey, Colorado Health Institute,

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Between a rock and a hard place…

“A primary care physician with an average panel of 2,000 patients would spend 17.4 hours per day providing recommended acute, chronic, and preventative care.”

“Given current fee schedules, primary care practices would fail financially with considerably smaller patient panels.”

SOURCE: Bodenheimer, T and Hoangmai Pham. (2010). “Primary care: current problems and proposed solutions.” Health Affairs 29(5):799-805.

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Factors affecting access to primary care

Models of care and scope of practice matters…

• Utilization of nurse practitioners and physician assistants can expand the supply of the primary care workforce without sacrificing quality

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2005 2010 2015 2020 20250

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000Primary Care Demand Primary Care Supply

Supply/demand model: Primary care PAs 2005-2025

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SHORTAGE

131270

399

485

DATA SOURCE: 2005 PA data, Peregrine Management Corporation

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Supply/demand model: Primary care APNs 2005-2025

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2005 2010 2015 2020 20250

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000Primary Care Demand Primary Care Supply

231

406495

660 SHORTAGE

DATA SOURCE: 2005 APN Data, Peregrine Management Corporation

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Geography matters…

The primary care workforce-to-population ratios vary significantly depending on where one lives in

Colorado

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Provider practice policies matter…

• Have practices adopted a collaborative model of care that includes advanced practice nurses and physician assistants as primary care providers?

• What types of insurance types practices accept?

• Are practices are accepting new patients? What types of patients?

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Colorado’s rural physicians report…

Payer Source % reportingPractice closed to Medicaid adults 24%

Practice closed to Medicaid children 21%

Practice closed to CHP+ children 18%and pregnant women

Practice closed to Medicare patients 11%SOURCE: 2009 Rural Physician Survey, Colorado Health Institute

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Other health care providers critical to ensuring comprehensive primary care• Registered nurses• Dentists• Dental hygienists• Physical therapists• Occupational therapists• Clinical pharmacists• Clinical psychologists, clinical social

workers and other mental health providers

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Understanding supply and demand factors related to mental health care supply: Where to start?

• Count ‘em up…distribution of mental health providers by county- 11 Colorado counties have no LCSWs or Clinical

Psychologists; another 16 counties have 3 or less

• A second cut…provider-to-population ratios- Excluding 0s; mental health professionals rates

range from a high of 23.3 in Boulder to a low of less than 2 per 10,000 in Conejos, Crowley, Elbert, Prowers, Rio Grande and Saguache counties 30

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Putting all the workforce pieces together

Access to insurance coverage is just the beginning• What gets counted matters• Provider specialty choice matters• Provider policies matter• Models of care and scope of practice matters• Geography/distribution matters

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Workforce issues in Colorado aided by provisions in Title V of ACA

• Appropriates $1.5B to National Health Service Corps to recruit primary care providers in health shortage areas

• Awards grants to expand primary care training programs

• Awards grants to train physicians committed to serving in underserved rural communities

• Awards grants to academic health centers to expand primary care residency programs in community and rural health clinics

• Redistributes Medicare-funded residency slots for primary care and general surgery

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Expansion of training programs for allied primary care workforce

• Grants for training programs in generalist, pediatric and public health dentistry

• Demonstration grants to train or employ alternative dental health care providers

• Grants for training programs in geriatrics, chronic care management and long-term care

• Grants for recruiting and training of mental/behavior health providers for children and adolescents

• Loan repayment program for public health and allied health professionals

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What role for state policymakers?

• Regulatory• Incentives• Community solutions• Let the market figure it out• Workforce planning

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What do you think?