Home‐Based Primary Care: Beyond Extension of the Independence at Home Demonstration

The Independence at Home (IAH) Demonstration Year 2 results confirmed that the first‐year savings were 10 times as great as those of the pioneer accountable care organizations during their initial 2 years. We update projected savings from nationwide conversion of the IAH demonstration, incorporating...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) 2018-04, Vol.66 (4), p.812-817
Hauptverfasser: Rotenberg, James, Kinosian, Bruce, Boling, Peter, Taler, George
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container_title Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS)
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creator Rotenberg, James
Kinosian, Bruce
Boling, Peter
Taler, George
description The Independence at Home (IAH) Demonstration Year 2 results confirmed that the first‐year savings were 10 times as great as those of the pioneer accountable care organizations during their initial 2 years. We update projected savings from nationwide conversion of the IAH demonstration, incorporating Year 2 results and improving attribution of IAH‐qualified (IAH‐Q) Medicare beneficiaries to home‐based primary care (HBPC) practices. Applying IAH qualifying criteria to beneficiaries in the Medicare 5% claims file, the effect of expanding HBPC to the 2.4 million IAH‐Q beneficiaries is projected using various growth rates. Total 10‐year system‐wide savings (accounting for IAH implementation but before excluding shared savings) range from $2.6 billion to $27.8 billion, depending on how many beneficiaries receive HBPC on conversion to a Medicare benefit, mix of clinical practice success, and growth rate of IAH practices. Net projected savings to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) after routine billing for IAH services and distribution of shared savings ranges from $1.8 billion to $10.9 billion. If aligning IAH with other advanced alternative payment models achieved at least 35% penetration of the eligible population in 10 years, CMS savings would exceed savings with the current IAH design and HBPC growth rate. If the demonstration were simply extended 2 years with a beneficiary cap of 50,000 instead of 15,000 (as currently proposed), CMS would save an additional $46 million. The recent extension of IAH, a promising person‐centered CMS program for managing medically complex and frail elderly adults, offers the chance to evaluate modifications to promote more rapid HBPC growth.
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subjects Aged
Cost Savings
Frail Elderly
frail elderly adults
Geriatrics
Growth rate
Home Care Services - economics
Home health care
home‐based primary care
Humans
Medicare
Medicare - economics
Medicare - organization & administration
Medicare costs
Models, Economic
policy
Primary care
Primary Health Care - methods
Primary Health Care - organization & administration
Program Evaluation
United States
title Home‐Based Primary Care: Beyond Extension of the Independence at Home Demonstration
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