Jun 30, 2022
I wanted to remind everyone about this show from last year because it’s becoming increasingly relevant. We have this weird thing going on where everybody seems to be talking about physician incentives and payments and financial implications but so often disregards patient incentives and payments and financial implications.
Consider that we’re at a place in the time-space continuum where it is inarguable that financial toxicity has become clinical toxicity. Patients are increasingly in huge numbers abandoning care, splitting pills, doing all kinds of things to save money that are clinically toxic. And these are patients with “good insurance” that we are talking about here.
So, here’s a role play: Provider organization is actually paying doctors for outcomes. In wanders a patient with a huge deductible. Doc says, “Wow, Patient … so important that you take your insulin or med as directed or get a follow-up on that scary colonoscopy finding.” Patient says, “Sorry, Doc. Can’t afford it.” And the doc gets dinged because the patient outcomes are avoidably poor.
That’s what this show with Dr. Mark Fendrick digs into: aligning patient incentives (aka benefit designs etc) with value-based payments on the provider side. And with that, here’s your encore:
And here I thought I knew a lot about value-based care. In this healthcare podcast, I am speaking with Mark Fendrick, MD, who is the director over at the University of Michigan Center for Value-Based Insurance Design. This conversation is for those of you who already know pretty much about value-based care concepts. If you do not, I’d go back and listen to, say, Encore! EP206, with Ashok Subramanian, before this one.
Dr. Fendrick talks in this healthcare podcast about what it takes for value-based care to happen in the real world. No kidding, it’s about making sure that reimbursement is aligned with good things (no great surprise there).
But two light bulb moments I had in this conversation with Dr. Fendrick:
Healthcare is not like a consumer market where the expensive things are usually a better version of the cheap things. For all you economists out there, you don’t want the demand curve to be elastic when what’s cheap and what’s expensive has no correlation to quality or necessity. Nobody should be super flabbergasted when a $35 cure-all supplement peddled on YouTube makes some random influencer a millionaire. That’s how supply and demand works.
Much to ponder in this episode.
A. Mark Fendrick, MD, is a professor of internal medicine in the School of Medicine and a professor of health management and policy in the School of Public Health at the University of Michigan. Dr. Fendrick received a bachelor’s degree in economics and chemistry from the University of Pennsylvania and his medical degree from Harvard Medical School. He completed his residency in internal medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was a fellow in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program.
Dr. Fendrick conceptualized and coined the term Value-Based Insurance Design (V-BID) and currently directs the V-BID Center at the University of Michigan (vbidcenter.org), the leading advocate for development, implementation, and evaluation of innovative health benefit plans. His research focuses on how clinician payment and consumer engagement initiatives impact access to care, quality of care, and healthcare costs. Dr. Fendrick has authored over 250 articles and book chapters and has received numerous awards for the creation and implementation of value-based insurance design. His perspective and understanding of clinical and economic issues have fostered collaborations with numerous government agencies, health plans, professional societies, and healthcare companies.
Dr. Fendrick is an elected member of the National Academy of Medicine (formerly IOM), serves on the Medicare Coverage Advisory Committee, and has been invited to present testimony before the US Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions; the US House of Representatives Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health; and the US Senate Committee on Armed Services Subcommittee on Personnel.
05:00 Is back surgery high-value care?
05:51 If care is patient to patient, how is high-value care decided
upon?
06:40 “Flintstones delivery: We have to move from the sledgehammer
to the scalpel.”
11:14 “Almost all of the services that we recommend to reduce cost
sharing … do not save money.”
12:30 “I didn’t go to medical school to learn how to save people
money.”
17:03 “When a patient and their clinician agree … the patient
should be able to get that [service] easily, and the clinician
should be paid generously.”
18:01 “When patients and providers are aligned, they do much
better.”
19:59 What services are deemed high value, and what services should
be pre-deductible?
21:50 “Are primary care visits high value? … The answer is, it
depends.”
25:55 What are V-BID’s core pillars to address value-based
care?
28:04 How does Dr. Fendrick’s method of value-based care and
reimbursement actually enable better consumerism?
29:51 What do providers think about changing reimbursement on
low-value and high-value care?
30:58 “We have incentives that are run amok.”
32:12 EP176 with Dr. Robert Pearl.
32:49 “It’s all about incentives.”
33:43 “You do have the funding; you just have to have the
courage.”
Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
If care is patient to patient, how is high-value care decided upon? Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“Flintstones delivery: We have to move from the sledgehammer to the scalpel.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“Almost all of the services that we recommend to reduce cost sharing … do not save money.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“I didn’t go to medical school to learn how to save people money.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“When patients and providers are aligned, they do much better.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“Are primary care visits high value? … The answer is, it depends.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“We have incentives that are run amok.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
“You do have the funding; you just have to have the courage.” Mark Fendrick, MD, of @UM_VBID discusses #valuebasedcare on our #healthcarepodcast. #healthcare #podcast #vbc #digitalhealth
Recent past interviews:
Click a guest’s name for their latest RHV episode!
Erik Davis and Autumn Yongchu (EP371), Erik Davis and Autumn Yongchu (EP370), Keith Hartman, Dr Aaron Mitchell (Encore! EP282), Stacey Richter (INBW34), Ashleigh Gunter, Doug Hetherington, Dr Kevin Schulman, Scott Haas, David Muhlestein, David Scheinker, Ali Ucar, Dr Carly Eckert, Jeb Dunkelberger (EP360), Dan O’Neill, Dr Wayne Jenkins, Liliana Petrova, Ge Bai, Nikhil Krishnan, Shawn Rhodes, Pramod John (EP353), Pramod John (EP352), Dr Eric Bricker, Katy Talento, Stacey Richter (INBW33), Stacey Richter (INBW32), Dr Steve Schutzer (Encore! EP294), Lisa Trumble