CDC’s Updated Opioid Guidelines Are Necessary, but Not Sufficient

CDC’s Updated Opioid Guidelines Are Necessary, but Not Sufficient

https://www.medpagetoday.com/opinion/second-opinions/101825

Additional steps are needed to calibrate opioid access and undo harm

Before the CDC suffered a loss of trust over its handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, the agency had fumbled its response to the overdose crisis. Under its leadership, overdose deaths have continued to spiral, as people living with pain have lost access to vital medications.

One of its key missteps was the formulation and implementation of its 2016 prescribing guideline for chronic pain. On November 3 this year, the agency took partial corrective action, revising its approach that contributed to so many harms to people with pain.

In its update, the 2022 Clinical Practice Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Pain, the CDC emphasizes flexibility in pain pharmacotherapy. It also rejects controversial dose and duration limits that had been widely misinterpreted by policymakers. For this welcome change to have meaning, however, the CDC must work proactively with regulators to rescind harmful policies that resulted from its prior guideline.

What Went Wrong in 2016?

Recommendations in the 2016 CDC opioid guideline included concrete thresholds related to opioid dosing and the number of days opioids should be prescribed for acute pain. Regulators, eager for a ready solution to the overdose crisis, adopted these thresholds as one-size-fits-all laws and mandates.

The uptick was fast and far-reaching. State and federal lawmakers, quality metric agencies, pharmacy benefit plans, state medical boards, and the Drug Enforcement Agency, among others, embraced the thresholds, which had a chilling effect on providers. Patients who’d been placed on opioids were transformed into liabilities. Far too many lost access to care, creating “opioid refugees” with nowhere to turn. Nearly half of primary care providers, according to studies, will refuse to take on such patients.

People with pain were also subjected to dangerous opioid cessation practices — actually increasing their risks of overdose and suicide by three to five times, and needlessly destabilizing their health and lives.

What began as an appropriate call for caution in opioid prescribing turned into a crisis of under-treated pain.

To be fair, the problem can’t be laid entirely at the CDC’s door. The U.S. has undergone a rapid pendulum swing in opioid prescribing, which began to drop in 2012 and is now roughly at levels last seen in the early 1990s.

Further, opioids are not generally considered a first line of treatment for chronic pain. The updated 2022 guideline rightly urges careful balancing of benefits and risks and the expanded use and coverage of other treatments.

But some people do need opioids, one size does not fit all, and the CDC, as the agency in the proverbial driver’s seat issuing guidelines, is in the best position to undo ongoing harm and effect a course correction.

Taking the 2022 Prescribing Guidelines a Step Further

For many patients who have already lost access to care, the 2022 update is too little too late. But the issue still stands to affect millions. While it’s difficult to pinpoint exact numbers, given recent drops in prescribing, an estimated 5 to 8 million Americans, or up to as many as 13 million, use opioids to manage pain.

In light of documented harms and ongoing risks, the CDC must close the gap between rhetoric and action. In 2019, the agency came out publicly against misapplications of its 2016 guideline, but we witnessed no slowing in the number of patients suffering harm.

The language in the 2022 update is stronger; it repeatedly emphasizes clinician discretion and individualized care, and stridently warns regulators not to implement its provisions strictly. It also recognizes that people of color are at heightened risk of having their pain under-treated and spotlights equity.

But the 2022 update could still be misapplied. While dose benchmarks are notably absent from its recommendations, qualified dosage “guideposts” in the text remain. Numbers, history tells us, are temptingly easy for policymakers to adopt as mandates.

Furthermore, the urgency of this problem has not abated. Just recently, patients were abandoned when their provider was raided by the DEA. Desperate, one patient has sought help in a methadone clinic, even though she has no history of a use disorder. Another, who had recently experienced repeated impediments to care, died by suicide alongside his wife.

What Should the CDC Do?

In proactively working with regulators to undo harm, the CDC can begin in its own house at the Department of HHS. It should work with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Policy to rescind quality payment metrics based on dose thresholds. Moreover, it should offer technical assistance to the National Committee for Quality Assurance, payers, and pharmacy benefit plans to encourage similar redactions.

Likewise, the CDC should actively engage the DEA and state medical boards so that they cease policing providers based on the dosages they prescribe, and encourage the DEA to arrange transitional care for patients who fall through the cracks.

While the agency can’t tell state or federal lawmakers which laws to rescind or pass, they should conduct active outreach with regulators to educate them about what went wrong with strict thresholds and the genuine risks to patient safety that have resulted. As the nation’s premier public health agency, the CDC has the data and expertise to conduct empirically-based outreach to these decision makers.

The agency has developed implementation tools for providers. It must also disseminate those tools to policymakers, so it can help them understand how key presumptions in opioid regulation — that cutting the medical supply of opioids would reduce overdoses and that cutting people off medication will ensure their safety — have proven wrong with disastrous effects.

How Will the CDC Monitor and Prevent Misapplication?

Fortunately, the CDC already seems poised for vigilance. In a perspective piece in the New England Journal of Medicine, authors of the 2022 update state that the CDC will “monitor” against misapplication. We strongly urge the CDC to remediate past harm, in addition to engaging in forward-looking monitoring.

Monitoring is especially important because the 2022 update represents a significant expansion that now covers the full spectrum of pain from acute, to subacute, to chronic. Typically, it’s good practice to check safety equipment on an aircraft before you expand the fleet. Given the well-acknowledged misapplication of its prior guideline, proper implementation of this expanded guideline is essential.

The health and lives of tens of millions of Americans depend on it.

Facebook Makes Unexpected Trump Announcement that Will Have Liberals ABSOLUTELY Freaking out

https://youtu.be/TKL-jkZA0mU

The first amendment really only applies to the federal government https://mtsu.edu/first-amendment/page/things-you-need

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” – The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Our Founding Fathers could never conceive that any private entity could have sufficient influence to sway public opinion.   This survey of people claimed  79% say ‘truthful’ coverage of Hunter Biden’s laptop would have changed 2020 election

Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter could change  how the other entities, that has a major internet presence, are able to influence what people believe because certain news/information can no longer be throttled.  Facebook/Meta change may be a direct result of Musk’s acquisition of Twitter. Hopefully, other major internet news medias will follow suit.

Only time will tell how all of this shakes out.  If we are lucky, some of the media will not longer just regurgitate what the DEA pushes out via press releases https://www.dea.gov/

 

 

APDF family making the world a better place for CCPS

People always say, ‘Bob how did you know that?”
I stayed up most of the night thinking which is dangerous for me 🤔 well that’s what Carol Adams says anyways! Vicki Latham says I’m a great talker because I’m full of shit! Lmao 🤣 Andrew Hohenthaner says I have a certain way I bring things out in people 🤣 Kathy Riddle used to say if I retain anymore information my head will explode. Jessamyn Butler feels I’m kind of a good egg. Shirley Buck relys on me to come up with answers to problems. Nanc Seefeldt wants me to think fast and hard to solve problems. Steve Ariens Is my go to guy for everything pharmaceutical. Cheri Mendes Karen Wilkinson Margaret Drumheiser think I’m a little crazy but are wonderful people Michelle Shepherd believes I try hard and I will accomplish what I set out to do Douglas Leigh Hughes is my information guy and a great writer and a great guy Maria Higginbotham is my mentor and anything I need I ask her. Karlyn Beavers and Evelyn Beavers are wonderful fundraisers and great folks. Stacy Siano is one smart business cat.. Sheila Kim Purcell writes bills and has groups of folks on groups who work for legislation big wigs! I can do this all day APDF awesome folks Jade Rose Shelli Rodenbaugh Shear Carol Benack Ashley Clark Sara, Gina, Kim, Dana, Jessica, Lesley, Karen, Julie, Lynn, Tammy, Mike, David Israel ,Dr Mimms, Lisa, and ect ect… Great Docs and nurses and pharmacist and people that make APDF works!What makes us different is we have been to State Houses, Oversight Committees, Washington DC, Fundraisers, to eachothers houses to eat dinner, traveled to other States together to help one another, Speaking Engagements, Court Houses, Childrens Hospitals, Band Concerts with eachothers kids, hell even Hooters 🤣! Truth being I don’t do anything by myself and so many great people put their time and efforts for free and only for the cause of helping CPPs and themselves. That’s so many different organizations problems is you’re working for people you can’t see and hope they are real people! These folks from around the USA are absolutely real and a force to be reckoned with! It’s easy to be a fear monger if you don’t know the person or people your working with! Work together is what gets things done..and boy have we made waves this year! One thing for sure is I know I’m nothing without all these great folks from around the 🇺🇸. They are called friends! Trusted friends! That’s how we roll! Different orgs or not. Common people with a common goal! So come help us and eat some food! Hahaha

What Are the Newest Guidelines for Nonpharmacologic Management of Cancer Pain?

I did not copy the entire article, but there is a hyperlink if anyone wants to read the whole “piece of pain mis-management for cancer pts “

 

What Are the Newest Guidelines for Nonpharmacologic Management of Cancer Pain?

https://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/984026

Clinical Context

Pain is a leading, disabling symptom among patients with cancer,

resulting from tumor burden or invasion of bones, muscles, or nerves. Many cancer treatments, including surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy, or hormonal therapy can result in acute and chronic pain conditions, including aromatase inhibitor (AI)-induced joint pain or chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) pain.

The Society for Integrative Oncology (SIO) and the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO®) panel included experts in integrative, medical, radiation, surgical, and palliative oncology; social sciences; mind-body medicine; nursing; and patient advocacy. Literature search identified 227 relevant studies (systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and randomized controlled trials [RCTs] from 1990 to 2021 to inform consensus- and evidence-based recommendations.

Study Synopsis and Perspective

New guidelines highlight the role that integrative pain management techniques, such as massage, acupuncture, and music therapy, can play in relieving certain types of cancer pain in adults.

The recommendations,[1] published earlier this month in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, represent a joint effort between the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO®) and the Society of Integrative Oncology (SIO) to guide cliniciansicians how to best weave various nonpharmacologic pain management strategies into cancer care.

“Pain is a clinical challenge for many oncology patients and clinicians, and there’s a growing body of evidence showing that integrative therapies can be useful in pain management,” Heather Greenlee, ND, PhD, explained in a press release.[2]

Still, clear clinical guidance as to when and when not to use these approaches is lacking, said Greenlee, co-chair of the SIO Clinical Practice Guideline Committee.

Previous guidelines from ASCO® on managing chronic cancer-related pain[3] largely focused on diagnosing pain and on pharmacologic interventions, and they only touched on evidence related to nonpharmacologic options.

The new guideline[1] “takes a deeper dive on the use of integrative therapies, which is important because clinicians and patients need to have access to the latest evidence-based information to make clinical decisions,” Jun H. Mao, MD, SIO-ASCO® panel co-chair, noted.

In the guidance, the expert panel addresses 2 core questions: What mind-body therapies are recommended for managing pain experienced by adult and pediatric patients diagnosed with cancer, and what natural products are recommended for managing pain experienced by adult and pediatric patients diagnosed with cancer?

The panel conducted a literature search and identified 227 relevant studies. They included systematic reviews and randomized controlled trials published between 1990 and 2021 that evaluated outcomes related to pain intensity, symptom relief, and adverse events. After reaching a consensus, the expert panel made recommendations on the basis of the strength of the available evidence.

Regarding modalities for which there was stronger evidence, the panel highlighted several recommendations regarding acupuncture, reflexology, hypnosis, and massage.

The panel determined, for instance, that acupuncture should be offered for aromatase-related joint pain in patients with breast cancer and that it can be offered for general or musculoskeletal pain from cancer. It recommended reflexology or acupressure for pain experienced during systemic therapy for cancer.

While exploring complementary approaches to manage various aspects of the patient experience, it’s worth considering alternatives such as hypnosis. For instance, individuals undergoing cancer treatment or diagnostic workups may find relief from procedural pain through the application of hypnosis techniques. Additionally, for those in palliative or hospice care, as well as individuals recovering from breast cancer treatment, massage therapy emerges as another viable option for addressing pain and enhancing overall well-being. If you’re interested in exploring these methods further, you might find resources that allow you to learn hypnosis online, providing a convenient avenue for acquiring valuable skills in pain management.

These recommendations were considered moderate in strength and were based on intermediate levels of evidence that demonstrated that the benefits outweighed risks.

The panel added several recommendations it deemed to be weak in strength and that were based on low-quality evidence. These include Hatha yoga for patients experiencing pain after treatment for breast or head and neck cancers, and music therapy for patients experiencing pain from cancer surgery.

The experts also identified areas “potentially relevant to cancer care but needing more research,” such as the safety and efficacy of natural products, including omega-3 fatty acids and glutamine, and determined that there is insufficient or inconclusive evidence to make recommendations for pediatric patients.

“With improved oncology treatments such as immunotherapy and targeted therapy, more patients diagnosed with cancer are living longer; therefore, pain and symptom management is critical for improving quality of life,” Mao, chief of integrative medicine at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, told Medscape Medical News. “The SIO-ASCO clinical guideline will provide very timely recommendations for physicians to incorporate nonpharmacological treatments such as acupuncture and massage to improve pain management for patients impacted by cancer.”

Nonetheless, clinical uptake of such treatments “is always a concern,” said panel co-chair Eduardo Bruera, MD, of The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas. “We are hoping that by showing the growing evidence that is out there, healthcare systems will start hiring these kinds of practitioners and insurance systems will start covering these treatments, because more and more, these are being shown to be effective at managing pain for cancer populations,” Bruera said.

Loop Epidural Steroid Injections / APDU’s Warning Letter to Pfizer

The “BAD SIDE” of Epidural Spinal Injections

Medical Board of California Interested Parties Meeting Prescribing Guidelines November 15, 2022

I have not had time to listen to this TWO HOUR webinar… just sharing it right now 

Oklahoma proposes landmark rule to keep mailed medications safe from extreme temperatures

Most all medications have a temperature storage requirement – typically 59-86 F – and pharmas, wholesalers, pharmacies are required to keep medications within that range and if they are outside of that temp range > 24 hrs…  the potency of the medications are generally considered “compromised”…  BUT… when a mail order pharmacy hands off a package containing Rx meds to a delivery carrier ( USPS, Fedex, UPS) seldom is there any concern about the temp that the medications are exposed to and for how long.  When specialty meds – that require being kept at refrigerator/frozen temps…  the mail order pharmacies will typically take extra efforts to try to make sure that the meds are kept in the required temp range.  Sometimes, the delivery carrier does not deliver the Rx meds in the expected time frame and they show up at the pt’s home… outside of the required storage temp and UNUSABLE.  Many times, the med involved is a life critical matter and getting a replacement in a timely manner is not always possible.

 

Oklahoma proposes landmark rule to keep mailed medications safe from extreme temperatures

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/oklahoma-proposes-rule-keep-drugs-safe-hot-cold-rcna57492

There is little regulation of how pharmacies ship drugs to patients, though extremes of hot or cold can make medicine unsafe or ineffective.

Patients who get their prescription medications by mail in Oklahoma may soon have better protections for the safety of those drugs than any other state. On Wednesday, Oklahoma regulators proposed the nation’s first detailed rule to control temperatures during shipping, according to pharmacy experts. 

“This is a huge step,” said Marty Hendrick, executive director of the Oklahoma State Board of Pharmacy, after the board voted to approve the rule Wednesday. “We’ve got a tremendous amount of prescriptions that get mailed to patients. … What we did today was make sure our patients in Oklahoma are receiving safe products.”

Exposure to extreme temperatures can degrade or weaken drugs, potentially changing their dosage or chemical makeup and rendering them ineffective or unsafe for patients. But while government oversight of how pharmacies store medications to keep them in defined safe temperature ranges is very detailed, an NBC News investigation in 2020 found oversight of shipping to patients — during which drugs might be exposed to heat waves and below-freezing temperatures — is largely a system of blind trust. Mail-order pharmacy is a booming business, with soaring profits for some of the nation’s largest companies last year and more than 26 million people receiving their medication by mail in 2017 — more than double the number two decades earlier, according to federal data.

NBC News found that most state pharmacy boards, the regulators responsible for pharmacy safety, did not have specific rules for how pharmacies should ship customers’ medication, few asked about this process in their inspections, and many said it was simply up to the pharmacy to ensure safe shipping. 

Industry standards are clear that pharmacies should ship medications in their safe temperature range — set by the manufacturer after extensive testing under Food and Drug Administration guidelines — yet many patients have no way of knowing if the medications that arrive at their door have stayed within that range.

“So many insurance providers are really pushing patients to use mail order,” said Erin Fox, director of drug information at the University of Utah Health hospital system, who researches drug quality and shortages. “Unfortunately, many patients don’t have a choice in their insurance coverage to be able to use a local pharmacy, so having these protections is important.”

The proposed Oklahoma rule is the first of its kind to set clear guidelines on temperature safety during transit. It would require all pharmacies shipping or delivering medication to use packaging tested to ensure drugs do not go outside their safe temperature ranges, require them to be able to assess the safety of a medication if there are delays in delivery, and mandate that they give patients notification of shipping and delivery. 

“Oklahoma is at the forefront in developing regulations on this topic,” said Desmond Hunt, the storage and distribution expert and senior principal scientist at United States Pharmacopeia, the nonprofit that sets the quality and safety standards for medications that are used by the FDA, manufacturers and pharmacy boards. “How this evolves within Oklahoma may be a blueprint or a template for other states.”

 

 

a new “band-aid” for dealing with KNEE PAIN ?

Want a Few Weeks of Knee Pain Relief? Try This

https://www.medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage/acr/101699

Local nerve block proves mettle in randomized trial, though benefit didn’t last long

PHILADELPHIA — Blocking agents delivered to genicular nerves around the knee markedly reduced osteoarthritis patients’ perceptions of pain, far more than those receiving placebo injections, a randomized trial showed.

At week 4 following the injections, patients in the nerve block group reported mean reductions in pain scores of 3.0 points from baseline on a standard 10-point scale, compared with an average 0.2-point reduction among those assigned to placebo, reported Ernst Shanahan, BMBS, MPH, PhD, of Flinders Medical Centre in Adelaide, Australia, and colleagues.

But by week 8, the effect had clearly begun to fade, with average pain scores rising by 0.7 points from week 4 in the nerve block group. And at week 12, mean scores had increased another 0.7 points and no longer differed significantly from the placebo group.

The findings were published in Arthritis & Rheumatology and were also set to be presented Monday at the American College of Rheumatology annual meeting.

It’s the first demonstration in a randomized, placebo-controlled trial that local nerve block effectively relieves knee osteoarthritis pain.

Shanahan and colleagues conceived the trial to determine whether previous reports of success in individual cases were really credible. These were summarized in a recent review, which indicated that the approach improved function and reduced pain for up to 6 months. But these studies had no controls, a crucial limitation given that knee osteoarthritis pain is notoriously subject to the placebo effect.

For the randomized trial, Shanahan’s group enrolled 64 patients, assigned 1:1 to receive nerve blocks or placebo in a single session. Celestone chronodose and bupivacaine were the blocking agents used, injected adjacent to three nerves around the knee: the superolateral, superomedial, and inferomedial genicular nerves. These were located via ultrasound for precise placement. The placebo group received subcutaneous saline injections at the same sites on the skin surface but not penetrating to the nerves. Patients were allowed to continue taking their usual pain medications as needed.

Pain was assessed via visual analog scales. Overall osteoarthritis severity was evaluated with the Western Ontario-McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) system, which measures pain, stiffness, and disability in separate domains and in a total score.

Mean patient age was about 70 in the nerve block group and 66 in the placebo group. Just over half of the former were women, while two-thirds were women in the placebo group. Baseline pain scores averaged 6.3 in the nerve block group and 5.5 in the placebo group.

All of the key outcome measures including WOMAC scores followed the same pattern: the nerve block group saw sharp improvements at their first post-injection evaluation, conducted at week 2, which was maintained through week 4. Scores on each then began returning to baseline levels. The placebo group, meanwhile, had little change in any measure during the study.

The latter may raise eyebrows among rheumatologists, given that placebo recipients in other intervention trials for osteoarthritis typically show major improvement, if temporary. Shanahan and colleagues offered an explanation in the journal report: “We speculate that the patients’ prior pain experiences, extending over years, the degree of severity of their structural changes (most were waiting for total knee arthroplasty), or the fact that the trial was a placebo-controlled study and not a comparator study may have diminished the placebo effect.”

Overall, though, the future looks bright for nerve block as an osteoarthritis palliative. “Many of the patients requested repeat [treatments] at the end of the study. Based on our findings, we believe it is reasonable to offer this intervention,” the researchers wrote.

The nerve blocks appeared safe as well as effective. Shanahan and colleagues said no complications were observed, either during procedures or at subsequent clinic visits.

Limitations included the small number of patients and the possibility that patients could tell which treatment they were getting (clinicians giving the injections obviously were not blinded). Also, the researchers noted that five patients were lost to follow-up, which “may have slightly affected the overall results of our study.”

Could the way healthcare is provided be changing FOR THE BETTER ?

Here’s what people were talking about at HLTH this year (it’s probably not what you think)

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/heres-what-people-were-talking-hlth-year-its-probably-beth-kutscher/

I spent this past week at HLTH (https://www.hlth.com/), the healthcare innovation conference that brings together several thousand people from across healthcare’s different sectors: from hospitals to insurers to pharma to healthtech, and using healthcare is essential as well, and you can contact a health insurance agent near me to get the insurance.

The exhibit hall was filled with hopeful startups seeking interest and investment in a tough economic climate – while venture capitalists saw a buyer’s market as valuations soften, particularly for later-stage firms. 

And yet if you want to know what was top-of-mind for the doctors and executives I interviewed, it was this: not technology, not innovation, but … value-based care. Not exactly what I was expecting. 

Value-based care is the concept of paying healthcare providers for the outcomes they produce, rather than the number of services they perform. It’s about incentivizing them to keep people healthy, sharing in the savings when they do and taking on financial risk when they don’t. 

It’s hardly a new concept – the Affordable Care Act accelerated the transition more than anything in recent years – but the COVID-19 pandemic seems to have created more momentum (or at least more acceptance) around the idea. Of course, with budgets being squeezed and providers feeling overwhelmed, perhaps it’s not that surprising that the biggest innovation they’re looking for is one that allows them to get back to basics.

Here are some of the ideas I heard in my conversations at HLTH:

Value-based payments could help with clinician burnout.

The old model of paying for care – or what’s known as fee-for-service – is often criticized for creating perverse incentives: the more billable services doctors provide, the more they get paid. But in specialties like family medicine and pediatrics, the most helpful interventions are often the least lucrative, like counseling patients on lifestyle changes. Doctors, then, are caught in the middle, unable to spend as much time with patients as they’d like while still making the numbers work. 

Moreover, primary care providers often do the important work of keeping patients from needing higher-cost specialty care down the road – without seeing the financial benefit of doing so.

Would value-based care solve that problem? Toyin Ajayi, the co-founder and CEO of Cityblock Health, thinks it would, by allowing doctors to spend more time doing what they trained to do: helping people get better. And that could have the added benefit of keeping them in practice.

Cityblock, which operates in six states plus the District of Columbia, takes care of some of the most challenging patient populations, including Medicaid recipients. It focuses not only on providing medical care, but addressing social issues like transportation or housing. What it doesn’t focus on, though, is RVUs, a way of calculating physician reimbursement based on the number and type of services they provide.

“That has helped us a lot in recruiting people who really want to be here,” said Ajayi, a physician herself.

Value-based care will encourage team-based care.

Healthcare providers like Cityblock rely on integrated care teams that bring together clinical and non-clinical staff. And that’s a model that needs to be implemented more broadly, said Jay Bhatt, managing director at Deloitte.

As an internist, Bhatt could be scheduled to see as many as three-dozen patients each day – something that would be a recipe for burnout without other staff members to focus on patients’ non-medical needs. Hiring additional help also allows doctors to focus on doing the things where they can add the most value.

“Sometimes it feels easy to do it yourself but it actually takes more time,” Bhatt said, referring to the non-medical tasks that doctors do instead of delegating them. “We need to do something radical and different.”

Financial constraints will create pressure to hold down healthcare costs.

The macroeconomic climate is creating a “triple whammy” for health systems, said @Ralph de la Torre, chairman and CEO of Steward Health Care , which operates the country’s largest Medicare accountable care organization (an ACO is a type of value-based care model.)

Prices are increasing for healthcare equipment and supplies, while governments are trying to rein in spending by lowering reimbursement. Employers, meanwhile, also want to contain costs, which tends to mean moving more people onto high-deductible insurance plans – creating more challenges for healthcare providers when it comes time to collect payment.

“We haven’t had that in years and years and years,” de la Torre said.

He too predicted that the economic challenges will usher in more value-based contracts, and that hospitals will therefore need to run leaner operations to prepare for them. With the staffing crisis expected to continue, however, those savings won’t be through lower labor costs but efforts to change consumer behavior.

More specialties will warm to value-based care – even if they’ve been skeptical.

The psychiatry field has always been a bit wary of capitated payments; after all, mental health conditions can be notoriously hard to treat, with some disorders seeing high relapse rates. But with increasing research and attention on how someone’s environment impacts their mental wellbeing – whether that’s a history trauma, adverse childhood events or being in a tenuous living situation – figuring out how to compensate clinicians for addressing those issues is top of mind. 

Juliana Ekong, who has spent most of her psychiatry career trying to help address those underlying stressors for patients, said she’s glad to see payment models moving in that direction. Ekong, who was previously at Cityblock, is now the CEO of Better Life Partners, which provides care to patients with substance abuse disorders, with engagement rates that are double what other providers see. Just over half of its payments come from capitated contracts. 

“If I had the words [early in my career], what I wanted was someone who would pay me for outcomes,” she said. “I definitely don’t think you can do this work if you’re doing it as a point solution.”

Now tell me: What do you think of the transition to value-based payments? And if you were at HLTH, what do you think were some of the most interesting themes that emerged?