A Turning Point in Medicare Policy

What does it take to get advocacy groups, insurance companies, foundations, and policy makers all on the same sheet of paper? In the case of caring for chronically ill older Americans, it appears that it takes a shared sense that improved outcomes, lower costs, and strong business performance are achievable – but only with cooperation, […]

What does it take to get advocacy groups, insurance companies, foundations, and policy makers all on the same sheet of paper? In the case of caring for chronically ill older Americans, it appears that it takes a shared sense that improved outcomes, lower costs, and strong business performance are achievable – but only with cooperation, innovation, and a willingness to think differently.

On January 7, we attended an extraordinary and encouraging presentation hosted by Senator Mark Warner’s office, made possible by The SCAN Foundation, and led by the Long-Term Quality Alliance (LTQA), and Anne Tumlinson Innovations (ATI). Titled “Medicare Advantage and the CHRONIC Care Act: Implementing Innovative, Non-Medical Solutions for Older Adults,” the event served to launch and support a set of newly developed guiding principles for an updated Medicare program.

The principles in question were arrived at by an unusual working group convened by ATI and LTQA. As described in the accompanying white paper, “A Turning Point in Medicare Policy: Guiding Principles for New Flexibility Under Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill,” the group was “comprised of a diverse array of national experts on Medicare Advantage and long-term services and supports.” The white paper lists the group’s members, stating their support and commitment; it’s a collection of leaders from entities that in other settings have sometimes found reason to take potshots at each other in the press or to cast blame for inaction. We are not accustomed to seeing them working together in a consensus-building process.

Members include classic advocacy groups, such as AARP, The Arc of the United States, the National Council on Aging, the Community Living Policy Center UCSF, the National Association of Area Agencies on Aging, Meals on Wheels America, and Justice in Aging. What makes the group particularly rare is the fact that all these groups worked side-by-side in a collaborative process with leading insurers such as Kaiser Permanente, Centene, CVS Health Aetna, Anthem, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, and others. Add to the mix funders such as The SCAN Foundation, The Commonwealth Fund, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and you truly have strange bedfellows. But what they’ve achieved could only be brought about by such an array – and by a shared understanding of a common challenge: to deliver better outcomes at lower cost through utilization of the new flexibility in care for the chronically ill.

Clearly, these leaders have listened to one another and reached agreement on how best to move forward and take advantage of an unprecedented opportunity: the passage of a new law named “Creating High-Quality Results and Outcomes Necessary to Improve Chronic (CHRONIC) Care Act.” Enacted as part of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, the law, as summarized in the white paper, which is subtitled “Guiding Principles for New Flexibility Under Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI),” “expands what qualifies as a supplemental benefit to meet the needs of chronically ill Medicare Advantage enrollees.”

The white paper further explains:

“Prior to the CHRONIC Care Act, Medicare Advantage plans could only offer supplemental benefits that were primarily health related, such as dental care, and had to make them available to all plan enrollees. Through the CHRONIC Care Act, Medicare Advantage plans may now offer SSBCI. These benefits may include services that are not primarily health related, such as home care, as long as the service has a reasonable expectation of improving or maintaining the health or overall function of the chronically ill enrollee. The new law also gives the Secretary of Health and Human Services the authority to waive, only with respect to SSBCI, the requirement that benefits be made available to all enrollees.”

A review of the “Guiding Principles” that the group has released indicates that they see a real opportunity in the flexibility now afforded to MA plans to tailor benefits to the needs of a particular individual, rather than to an entire class of plan beneficiaries, as required under former rules. If payers and providers can address the individual needs of the chronically ill population, not all of which are directly health-related, they may have a significant impact on health and healthcare utilization.

This working group is extraordinary, not only for including such an array of interested parties, but for arriving at a shared vision “to guide a diverse array of stakeholders as they work to develop, implement, offer, deliver, and use SSBCI.” The group also serves as hard proof that as our healthcare system continues to move towards value-based care new partnerships will arise – often putting strange bedfellows together in ways they might not have imagined just a few short years ago.

But there are tensions that are real and must continually be addressed. Providing insurers greater flexibility so that they will innovate may be necessary, but there are concerns around giving them too much freedom. It is also likely that some innovations will fail. Convening major players representing such a broad array of interests ensures that every perspective is accounted for, as the system seeks to innovate without failing the people and institutions that it serves. The principles account for a realistic balance of these interests, while providing the tools necessary for everyone to play a role in achieving the common aim.

While every other stakeholder was well-represented, health systems were noticeably absent from this effort. They will likely be the last institutions to fully buy in to value-based care. Most systems today are still operating on the fee-for-service system, and few, if any, have developed expertise in managing chronic diseases, or pre- and post-acute care. These factors, along with their traditional focus on curative intervention may underlie their absence, but as everyone else works diligently to keep patients out of the hospital, and to renew the focus on value-based care, even health systems will have to evolve, or else suffer the consequences of a disruption in their markets.

There is a great opportunity to learn from this period. The working group recognizes that this is the “beginning of a path toward person-centeredness in Medicare.” They include as a principle that the SSBCI should “evolve with continuous learning and improvement.” To be successful over the long-term we will need research, with reporting requirements, as outlined under this principle. We will need some of these stakeholders to pilot innovative programs, measure and compare results, and test new ideas. Across the program, we will need to “build the evidence base” – which is one of several suggested next steps in the white paper – as these initiatives develop.

There is plenty of work to do, both to address major challenges in our approach to caring for frail elders (and everyone else) and to seize new opportunities to succeed. But this unique and surprising effort indicates that our institutions are willing to work together to be successful. And that’s a turning point.

Networking Innovations Add Value at the NIC Spring Conference

The 2020 NIC Spring Conference - March 4-6 in San Diego, CA – offers innovative options that make it easier to connect with peers and potential partners.

Each spring thousands of leaders in seniors housing and healthcare convene for 3 days of collaboration and education at the NIC Spring Conference. Attendees expand their networks, make lasting professional connections, explore partnerships, and learn about recent trends in the industry.

This year’s 2020 NIC Spring Conference: Investing in Seniors Housing & Healthcare Collaboration — March 4-6 in San Diego, CA — offers innovative new options that make it easier than ever to connect with peers and potential partners.

To ensure conference attendees connect efficiently and effectively throughout the event, “the NIC” features welcome and networking receptions, networking breakfasts and breaks, meet up points, and the highly effective networking lounges. Plus, the conference mobile app and attendee list is provided to all conference registrants in advance of the event to allow for meeting planning and scheduling with ease.

Braindate

New this year, NIC is launching braindate, a platform that facilitates experiential peer learning during the conference. Braindate will help attendees find and start conversations with other attendees who share interests or challenges for topic-driven, learning-focused conversations. Exploring partnership opportunities between healthcare organizations and seniors housing? Use braindate to break the ice and maximize networking at the 2020 NIC Spring Conference. Braindates can be scheduled using the conference mobile app, with details available on our website.

“Talk to Me About” Ribbon Wall

As conference attendees arrive on site, they’ll be invited to visit the Ribbon Wall where they can select a topic to display on their conference badge. Topics provide effective ice-breakers for fellow attendees with similar interests.

Thematic Networking

Two major networking receptions at the conference will feature thematic and geographical drivers designed to encourage discussion. The opening night’s reception will prompt discussions on seniors housing, skilled nursing, and healthcare collaboration. The following morning’s networking breakfast will offer the opportunity to gather with attendees from common regions of the country.

New Conference App Platform

The conference mobile app is the source of conference details and updates, conveniently available to attendees. The new platform for the 2020 Spring Conference mobile app will further enhance attendees’ ability to navigate all the event has to offer, including scheduling meetings with fellow attendees.

Huddle Spaces

A new feature of the Networking Lounge is a section for dedicated Huddle Space. These reservable sections of the Networking Lounge offer an effective place to conduct meetings as they provide a table, seating for six, power outlets, and storage for materials.

The 2020 NIC Spring Conference will build efficiencies in value-based care collaborations while providing the most recent trends on the real-estate based landscape. Register today, and learn how others are leading the way to prepare for — and effectively confront — the challenges of today and tomorrow in seniors housing and healthcare.

Housing and Healthcare Top Posts of 2019

As NIC Founder & Strategic Advisor Robert Kramer wrote in this blog’s first post of 2019, Welcome to Senior Care Collaboration, there’s a powerful case for healthcare and seniors housing leaders to pay attention to the disruption now occurring in their industries, and consider working together to achieve common goals. Kramer launched the year (and […]

As NIC Founder & Strategic Advisor Robert Kramer wrote in this blog’s first post of 2019, Welcome to Senior Care Collaboration, there’s a powerful case for healthcare and seniors housing leaders to pay attention to the disruption now occurring in their industries, and consider working together to achieve common goals. Kramer launched the year (and this brand-new microsite and blog), with the statement:

“Players in various healthcare silos and payors, many of whom would have had no interest in sitting down with our sector previously, are beginning to take an active interest in settings that are home to several million frail seniors with multiple chronic conditions and functional needs each day. As we recently argued in the October Insider, it will be necessary in this new environment for the seniors housing and care sector to develop new partnerships, as it collaborates with healthcare organizations, both upstream and downstream, to meet the needs of our residents in a value-based world.”

Since then, there has been a significant surge in new partnerships, M&A activity, collaborations, and other business initiatives that draw seniors housing and healthcare closer together, often featuring innovative models and new thinking on how to improve outcomes while achieving robust business performance. This trend has been reflected in a long list of headlines focusing on new deals being inked, from major investments by the likes of Amazon, CVS, Walmart, Microsoft, Humana, and other giants, to smaller collaborations and partnerships between seniors housing and healthcare players across the country.

Our recent recap of that news, all of which is carefully, and regularly, curated and presented on the resources page of this website, was selected for Ziegler’s “Senior Living Finance Z-News’ Recommended Reading List” for Q4, 2019.  It’s already one of our most-read blog posts for the year, which likely reflects a growing interest among industry decision-makers in staying informed on the latest deals and innovations in healthcare collaboration.

Kramer’s welcome post also announced what readers could expect: “The ‘Housing and Healthcare’ blog will feature interviews, original articles and analysis, along with commentary on news items and trends. It is a platform both for NIC to distribute analysis and for contributors to voice their perspectives.” Indeed, the blog has featured exclusive interviews with some of the industry’s most influential leaders and produced widely read articles featuring their unique insights. Our two top posts for the year feature such insights from two of the industry’s most respected CEO’s.

The most-read “Housing and Healthcare” blog post for 2019 is “Investor Bets on Medicare Advantage,” which focuses on the investment strategy of former Brookdale Senior Living head John Rijos, and his newly-formed healthcare investment firm, Chicago Pacific Founders (CPF). The post, which blends insights from Rijos with an overview of Medicare Advantage trends, draws attention to what may be an important opportunity for others in the industry, presented with context and some perspective on the underlying drivers of the strategy. We believe its popularity is due in part to interest in a recognized leader, and partly by an interest in understanding how to approach major changes in our healthcare system, which are already beginning to impact the seniors housing and care sector.

Close behind our top post, by only a hundred or so views, is “Marquis Embraces Mission of Collaboration,” another piece that features the insight of a well-known leader in seniors housing and care. CEO Phil Fogg, Jr. discusses Marquis Companies’ I-SNP strategy as an important part of his vision for the business – and for his residents. His exclusive interview with NIC provides blog readers a connection with a leader who is innovating in the space and is willing to outline how he views the market today. The post ends with Fogg directly addressing blog readers: “His advice: Providers should decide whether they want to own or outsource ancillary services. Those providers without the management bandwidth, financial resources, and enough residents or patients to enjoy the benefits of scale should find partners and collaborate with them. Fogg said: “The worst thing someone can do is nothing.”

Specific pain points and solutions, garnered from real partnerships, are featured in our third most-read post of the year. “Collaboration vs. Competition: How to work with a home health agency” features an exclusive interview with Sarah Walmsley, national director of strategic partnerships at Bayada Home Health Care. NIC’s interview focuses on how seniors housing leaders can create better resident experiences and extend length of stay by collaborating well with outside agencies, rather than refusing to work with “competitors.” Walmsley offers practical insight and advice on managing those partnerships.

Some of our posts are intended to shine a light on developing trends, innovations, and investments in the future that may have a real impact on seniors housing in coming years. “America’s New Hub for Innovation is Focused on Senior Care,” is the result of Bob Kramer’s attendance at a major ribbon-cutting in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The post features Direct Supply’s Innovation & Technology Center, a multi-million-dollar investment focused entirely on improving seniors housing and care. After reporting on the center’s mission and focus, this top post ends with Kramer’s quote, “We are truly fortunate to have an innovation center like this, totally devoted to issues around senior care and senior living.”

Our final top post rounds out the group with another opinion from Kramer. In “Good Care Transitions Are Not Enough,” Kramer appeals to seniors housing and healthcare leaders alike on the subject of improving collaboration in order to improve outcomes. He points out a real problem: in a siloed system, “Each time you hand off to a new setting, the senior healthcare professional in that setting becomes like a dog marking its territory. They routinely overrule the other silo.” Kramer’s post provides a thoughtful, constructive perspective on the issue, and links to a recently published white paper for further reading. We believe that kind of insight on a real problem affecting millions – as well as the post’s directness and potential for controversy – is likely responsible for its popularity.

Look for this blog to continue to deliver exclusive interviews, insights, news, and commentary on the quickly developing phenomenon of housing and healthcare collaboration. As our most-read posts of 2019 clearly indicate, there’s real interest in developing collaborations to improve outcomes and build robust business performance. And you need only subscribe to stay informed of the very latest developments in 2020.

Aligning Senior Housing and Care

Kate Nicholls of Investments at Ventas, Inc. explores the opportunities and challenges of senior housing and care integration With options for senior housing and care integration continuing to evolve—and the discussions around the options increasing in frequency and volume—senior living operators may be starting to tune in.

Kate Nicholls of Investments at Ventas, Inc. explores the opportunities and challenges of senior housing and care integration

With options for senior housing and care integration continuing to evolve—and the discussions around the options increasing in frequency and volume—senior living operators may be starting to tune in.

Although the senior housing value proposition has not traditionally included healthcare, it has included offerings known to positively impact residents’ overall health, such as socialization, nutrition, and assistance with activities of daily living. With changes in Medicare and potential future healthcare payment reform, seniors housing providers find themselves in a position where formal involvement with healthcare may make more sense.

In the December issue of the NIC Insider newsletter, Kate Nicholls, Director, Investments at Ventas, Inc.,  offers insights into the opportunities and challenges for seniors housing operators looking to align with healthcare.

Nichols details why alignment may offer positive opportunities and prepare operators for future success, covering points such as:

  • why improved care coordination may lead to better outcomes,
  • the opportunity for increased revenue,
  • potential for cost savings, and
  • how the healthcare industry is moving in this direction.

Nicholls also lays out potential risks operators should consider when evaluating healthcare alignment:

  • potential high cost to implement,
  • increased regulatory risk,
  • government reimbursement,
  • distraction to the core business, and
  • unanswered questions.

As Nicholl’s points out, “There is no one right answer, but operators and investors should avail themselves to all of the information available to decide what is best for their respective businesses.”

Read Kate Nicholls’ full article,Senior Housing and Care Integration: An Opportunity or a Threat?,” in the December issue of the NIC Insider newsletter.

 

145,000 Jobs Created in December, Below Consensus View

145,000 Jobs Created in December, Below Consensus View

The Labor Department reported that there were 145,000 jobs added in December. This was less than the consensus estimate of 160,000 and marked the 111th consecutive month of job gains. For all of 2019, employers added 2.11 million jobs. That was a slowdown from the increase of 2.68 million in 2018 and ranked 2019 eighth for job growth in the past 10 years.

Revisions also subtracted a number of jobs to the prior two months. The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for October was revised down by 4,000 from 156,000 to 152,000 and the change for November was revised down by 10,000 from 266,000 to 256,000. Combined, 14,000 jobs were subtracted from the original estimates. Monthly revisions result from additional reports received from businesses and government agencies since the last published estimates and from the recalculation of seasonal factors. After revisions, job gains have averaged 184,000 over the last three months, below the average monthly gain of 223,000 in 2018 (note that this will likely be revised down based on the recent preliminary benchmark revision estimate which indicates that private payrolls were over-counted by 43,000 per month in the twelve months ending in March 2019).

Health care added 28,000 jobs, and has added 388,000 jobs in 2019, similar to the increase of 359,000 in 2018.

The December unemployment was unchanged at 3.5% in December, a 50-year low. Average hourly earnings for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls rose in December by three cents to $28.32. Over the past 12 months, average hourly earnings have increased by 2.9%. For 2018, the year over year pace was 3.0% and in 2017 it was 2.6%. Reasons why wages are not growing faster include the retirement of highly paid baby boomers and relatively weak productivity growth.

The labor force participation rate, which is a measure of the share of working age people who are employed or looking for work was unchanged at 63.2% in December, which was the highest since August 2013.

The December employment report will support the Fed’s “on hold” stance, at least for the time being. In December, the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged and signaled it would stay on hold through 2020, keeping the Fed and its policies on the sidelines during the election year. “Our economic outlook remains a favorable one despite global developments and ongoing risks,” Chairman Jerome Powell told a press conference in mid-December following the FOMC meeting in Washington. He continued that “As long as incoming information about the economy remains broadly consistent with this outlook, the current stance of monetary policy likely will remain appropriate.”

In October, the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by 25 basis points to a range between 1.50% to 1.75%. This was the third cut in as many months. But Chairman Powell indicated that it may be the last cut, at least in the short term, creating the “on hold” stance viewed by many in the market.
Fed officials also released new quarterly forecasts. These showed:

  • The median estimate for the fed funds rate is at 1.6% at the end of 2020, 1.9% in 2021 and 2.1% in 2022. Thirteen officials expect rates to stay on hold next year, while four see a hike as appropriate.
  • The jobless rate is expected to be 3.5% by late 2020, the same as it is now. The long-run unemployment rate is seen at 4.1%, down from 4.2% in September.