Healthcare costs in the United States continue to climb as we proceed to transition
away from a fee-for-service system of care to value-based care delivery. The principal
aim of this delivery transformation toward value is to maximize patient-centered outcomes
at the lowest possible cost. For instance, a key aspect of the thesis underlying the
Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act—an important
piece of legislation driving the transition—is that incorporating electronic health
records (EHRs) and other information technologies into the workflow of the healthcare
delivery system stands to enable population health management and bring about enhanced
value. The HITECH Act, in addition to encouraging the spread of EHRs to unprecedented
levels, has led to the digitization of physician order entry, paved the way for broad
patient electronic access, and spurred providers to send data to immunization registries
and public health agencies. Despite these strides, there have been no formal efforts
at the federal level to improve the referral process by leveraging EHRs and other
digital information systems. We know that the careful management of the referral process
is an important element in terms of delivering high-value care.[1] We posit that EHRs can further drive transformational value if they deliver the
referral decision support providers need.
The referral process influences a significant portion of healthcare spending. Specific
referral behaviors are dictated by providers' preferences and practice patterns much
like other tests and orders controlled by providers.[2] Referrals directly impact the quality of healthcare delivered. While appropriate
referrals to cost-efficient specialists can enhance care quality, overuse of referrals
or referrals to less meticulous providers can lead to increased spending without a
return in value. Thus, a thoughtful and concerted effort centered on driving value
through optimizing the referral process has the potential to improve the delivery
of healthcare services. This is especially true given the growing number of referrals.
The proportion of ambulatory visits resulting in a referral has increased substantially
over time, doubling from 1999 to 2009.[3] Trends and best practices related to provider referrals are largely understudied,
but there is significant variability in referral practices across the United States.[4] Consequently, improvement of referral processes represents a key potential source
of value creation, particularly as this process relates to primary care providers
who stand at the forefront of referrals. In fact, early savings among Massachusetts
ACOs were largely ascribed to changing referral patterns to low-cost specialists.[1]
Traditionally, primary care providers refer their patients to specialty providers
within their organization (if they are part of a multispecialty organization or academic
health system), or to providers selected based on a primary care provider's subjective
sense of a specialist, or, worse yet, referrals are made on a more arbitrary basis
to the first available specialist provider in the area who accepts the patient's insurance.
A third of the healthcare spending in the United States may be waste (i.e., unnecessary
and/or inefficient and/or overpriced) and the largely haphazard approach to specialty
referrals is likely contributing.[5]
Success in managing total costs of care will depend on making good referral choices,
and this in turn suggests that primary care providers may want to use “smart” digital
tools embedded in the EHR (the centerpiece of their current workflow) to assist them
in making referrals. To maximize effect, such a solution does not necessarily need
to be built by EHR providers, but their functionality ought to be contained within
these systems given that they already host a bulk of physician actions. Digital solutions
that exist outside of the EHR will be cumbersome for providers to adopt, given how
closely their workflows are tied to the EHR interface. As the reimbursement system
continues to migrate toward paying providers for value (i.e., outcomes deflated by
total costs), such an analytical tool will be hotly demanded and buy in from primary
care providers will occur naturally even if there is an initial learning curve that
impairs provider efficiency temporarily. EMR vendors would compete with one another
on functionality and price to win market share and features would be consistently
updated to remain competitive. An analytical solution conveying relative cost and
quality for individual specialists in a primary care provider's catchment area would
be a much-needed advance, as would institution-based guidelines for which referrals
are or are not likely to deliver value. But costs are notoriously hard to assess in
healthcare. If one goes to the supermarket, the prices for food are transparent. In
contrast, the costs associated with even common procedures have been very hard for
institutions to determine, despite laws in many states trying to improve transparency.[6] In order for digital referral support tools to be useful, they must incorporate
accurate costs of care (i.e., the total liability for the cost of care owed by patient
and/or third-party payer). The success and failure of such tools can be tallied by
assessing changes to referral patterns after solution implementation, including the
associated total costs of care for a given population of patients.
An early example of a digital referral support–related solution has been the use of
physician report cards by the states of New York and Pennsylvania for cardiac surgery.
In the early 1990s, the states of New York and Pennsylvania began publicly releasing
surgeon-specific data on coronary artery bypass surgery. There was a notable decrease
in in-hospital mortality in both states soon after the introduction of the public-reporting
system, and in New York lower performing surgeons were more likely to move clinical
locations or switch careers altogether.[7] However, despite encouraging results, surveys in 1997 and 2001 revealed that most
cardiologists neither relied on the surgeon-specific data in making their referrals
to surgeons nor did they share these data with patients. More recent examples of report
card–like solutions include the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services' Physician
Compare and Hospital Compare solutions, which publicly reports quality data. Unfortunately,
evidence suggests that so far, these datasets are not routinely utilized by primary
care providers.[8] Ideally, digital decision aids to optimize the referral process should be embedded
directly into primary care providers' workflow within existing EHRs. Such a decision
aid would need to be supported by a database compiled of provider-level cost and quality
data from all major third-party payers in a catchment area; the data could be organized
by location/region, medical condition, certain patient characteristics, and/or by
providers who accepted certain insurance carriers. With the advent of narrow networks
(i.e., healthcare coverage plans with a limited number of providers in a given catchment
area), it will be especially important that the list of in-network providers for a
given patient be kept up to date in order for such a tool to truly add value clinically.
A potential barrier to implementing such referral management solutions is the fact
that some primary care providers argue that such referral decision-support tools would
have no impact in an age where much of the American population self-refer themselves
to many specialists without provider input. However, this should change under value-based
care with benefit plans and provider reimbursement aligned to enhance healthcare value.
Patients will benefit if they can be guided to low-cost, high-quality specialty providers.
Another barrier in implementing EHR provider referral support solutions may be establishing
a common understanding of the specific healthcare costs specialists ought to be accountable
for, in addition to understanding the associated quality metrics and appropriate length
for a given episode of care. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has historically
defined surgical procedures in episodes of care up to 90 days postprocedure with various
associated quality measures (e.g., readmission and complication rates). Adhering to
these, episode lengths and quality measures and focusing support tools to optimize
surgical procedures would be a pragmatic initial approach. Care should also be taken
to exclude costs associated with catastrophic illness clearly unrelated to the surgical
procedure in question.
Another major concern is risk adjustment. The best specialists often care for the
sickest patients. Without considering the many factors that influence patients' healthcare
costs and outcomes (e.g., health status, socioeconomic status, and demographic information),
primary care providers could easily utilize referral support tool data to arrive at
erroneous conclusions; or worse yet, specialists may limit access to certain patients
who might threaten their quality or cost performance. There are various acceptable,
albeit imperfect, risk adjustment models that ought to be used in the proposed digital
referral decision aids. The HHS-/CMS-HCC risk adjustment model has served as the basis
of Medicare Part C and Part D reimbursement for many years. This model and others
should be implemented within provider referral support solutions and they should be
updated and replaced as new advances in risk adjustment come along.[9]
[10]
Despite these issues, we believe that implementation of digital provider referral
support tools within now widely adopted EHRs will be a key innovation for improving
the delivery system. Such tools need to be built and then used in concert with other
innovations and solutions aimed at enhancing the referral process like digitally facilitated
provider-to-provider “curbside” visits and telemedicine consults. Overall, referrals
have not yet received enough attention in the drive to achieving value-based care.
If the right incentives are implemented, providers will realize the potential enhanced
referral management tools will have on their performance and they will demand and
then implement these solutions, though there will clearly be bumps along this road.
Multiple Choice Question
What has been the trend of the proportion of ambulatory visits resulting in a referral
from 1999 to 2009?
Correct Answer: The correct answer is A, doubled.