The Challenge
uccess in healthcare is complex. At the core, success means enabling people to live better lives. It is a struggle to balance over one thousand external measures of performance—all created with the intent of transforming healthcare—with the University of Utah’s internal culture of continuous improvement. In order to reduce the dissonance for frontline healthcare providers, the University of Utah has focused on a definition of value in healthcare that balances seemingly competitive pressures.
“The United States healthcare system continues to struggle with extremely high cost and variable quality of care. This year alone, the United States is projected to spend $2.8 trillion on healthcare, comprising approximately 18% of the entire U.S. gross domestic product . . . For individual families, healthcare premiums have doubled in the past 10 years, reducing income gains for average families and for the providers that treat them. Despite these great costs, health outcomes are no better in the United States compared to other less costly countries, including ongoing preventable morbidity and mortality . . . The future success of the U.S. healthcare system and the U.S. economy as a whole are completely dependent on our ability to measure and improve healthcare value. Although this concept seems quite simple, understanding and measuring both quality and cost are quite complicated.”
Background
2001: Starting with Quality
Early quality metrics were mostly process metrics that measured compliance with evidence-based guidelines.
Our efforts to improve quality shifted from a focus on accreditation to delivery of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) first round of publically reported measures of quality and safety. We used the measures as a starting point to improve patient care. The result was compelling improvement. Over four years, Utah moved from middle of the pack to #1 in quality in the competitive University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) Quality and Accountability Scorecard in 2011. For the past seven years in a row, Utah has achieved a top-10 ranking from UHC (now Vizient) by organizing and improving across hundreds of measures of quality.
2009: Adding Service
Despite improving outcomes, our patients continued to struggle with the system. They found it difficult to find the right providers, to schedule appointment in an appropriate timeframe, and they spent time waiting and waiting for care. Inpatient stays were marked with uncertainty and confusion. Although guidelines were consistently followed, patients felt disrespected by both the process and care teams. In 2009, Senior Vice President A. Lorris Betz, MD, PhD, challenged the organization to provide every patient with an exceptional experience, every time. He believed that “healthcare is not truly great unless the patient thinks it is.”
“Healthcare is not truly great unless the patient thinks it is.”—A. Lorris Betz, MD, PhD
Across the system, providers and teams began intently listening to their patients. Through feedback, both inpatient and outpatient teams organized to meet patient needs and improve the consistency of experience. Care became more efficient, coordinated, and compassionate. Our organization came to understand that quality included both the outcomes achieved and the experience of care.
2012 Defining Value and Understanding Cost
Senior Vice President Vivian Lee, MD, PhD, MBA, took the helm as the system’s senior leader in 2011. She celebrated the system’s success with both quality and service, and brought a new challenge. Could we deliver the best outcomes and service at a lower cost? In 2014, Dr. Lee wrote we must focus “on the fundamentals—the continuous pursuit of quality and service with a stronger emphasis on efficiency, cost, and effectiveness” and “the time has come to measure the costs of our care delivery, to assess our outcomes in the context of the costs required to achieve them, and to manage our health care system with the efficiency and effectiveness our country and our patients deserve.”
“The time has come to measure the costs of our care delivery, to assess our outcomes in the context of the costs required to achieve them, and to manage our health care system with the efficiency and effectiveness our country and our patients deserve.”—Vivian S. Lee, MD, PhD, MBA
Value would be defined as an equation, which would include both numerators of Quality, Service, and a denominator, Cost. Improvement in any one area must be weighed by the impact on the others. The definition moved Value from an abstraction to organizational focus.
Making Cost Visible
In order to rapidly improve, we needed to understand our costs. There are legitimate barriers to understanding costs in healthcare. The most significant barriers are the complexity of cost accounting systems and the difficulty in accurate attribution to individual physicians. Dr. Lee challenged leaders from Decision Support, the Enterprise Data Warehouse, and Medical Informatics to overcome these barriers. The result is Value Driven Outcomes (VDO), a nationally recognized analytics tool which identifies the root causes of low value (Get the VDO backstory on Algorithms for Innovation). This tool puts cost information in the hands of individual providers and improvement teams to empower value-driven decision making—empowering hundreds of healthcare workers to make the right changes for their patients’ value stream.
Reflection
Singular Definition
Michael Porter and Tom Lee called organizations to action in their article “The Strategy that Will Fix Healthcare”. We have defined value through the Value Equation. Clarity on this premise allows our organization to overcome perceptions of mission conflict and to focus our efforts, decision making, and resource allocation on achieving our true north—improving value for patients.
Importance of Ratio Thinking
A ratio is defined as the measure of one input in terms of the other. Pursuing value means measuring costs and outcomes (VDO), and working to improve both. We can no longer afford time nor energy wasted in pursuit of isolated improvement. Improving quality without careful understanding of cost, or reducing cost without measuring impact on outcomes or experience decreases patient value. Once clinicians, teams, and the organization have the measures at hand, finding solutions that improve one or more outcomes without raising costs or lowering quality becomes the norm. Using ratio thinking, the consequences of improvement become more reliable, more predictable, and more intentional.
The Future of Patient Reported Outcomes
As we focus on value as an organization, there is a need to expand our measures to identify clinical and patient-centered outcomes in addition to process measures of quality. With the focus expanding beyond the episode of care (e.g., clinic visit, inpatient admission), we have the opportunity to define success as achievement of the patient’s desirable outcomes. Defining and collecting patient-reported outcomes is our next step in the value journey.
Mari Ransco
Chrissy Daniels
What does healthcare really cost to deliver? And does the cost really make a difference in patients’ health and experience? The University of Utah tackled this problem with the creation of Value Driven Outcomes (VDO), a program to enable local clinical decision makers to lead improvements in care delivery relative to cost, quality, and service.
We asked Zac Watne, Utah’s payment innovation manager (he gets paid to understand the volatile world of payment reform) to give us a primer on “bundles.” Regardless of change happening in healthcare, thought leaders predict that payment reform, and specifically bundled payments, are here to stay. Why? Bundles deliver care with improved outcomes at a lower price all over the United States.
When Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan Chase & Co. announced their plans to partner up and tackle “the ballooning costs of health care,” our industry underwent a collective shudder. Thankfully, Utah’s payment innovation manager Zac Watne is back to help us unravel the complexity.