Medicare
Advantage plans and industry experts support CMS’s focus on social determinants
of health (SDOH) for new plan benefits but are concerned about its approach.
September 24,
2019 - CMS efforts to empower Medicare Advantage plans to tackle
social determinants of health (SDOH) led mainly to the expansion of existing
benefits but not the addition of new benefits, stakeholders told the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation (RWJF) in a recent study.
“Plans were
supportive of new benefits but were reluctant to expand offerings rapidly,” the
study, which outlined viewpoints from payers, industry experts, and other
relevant stakeholders stated. “They say most Medicare Advantage plans expanded
benefits in piecemeal fashion, most often addressing meal delivery and adult
day care.”
The Medicare
Advantage population, particularly dual eligibles, need assistance in social
determinants of health but until now Medicare Advantage plans have not had
enough flexibility to provide it.
Additionally,
industry experts have pointed to deficiencies in chronic disease outreach, the
report noted. Despite estimates that 70 percent of Medicare beneficiaries in
2018 had at least one chronic disease, a study showed that Medicare Advantage
and Medigap beneficiaries did not receive enough follow up regarding
their chronic disease management.
To curb the
inefficiencies in both areas, CMS extended Medicare Advantage’s
benefits for 2020 specifically to increase beneficiaries’ options in chronic
disease management and handling social determinants of health.
In a series of
interviews conducted both before and after CMS made these changes, RWJF
researchers found that creating MA benefits to address the SDOH is easier said
than done. The interviews with five key payers, industry experts, and other
stakeholders revealed that most believe the CMS changes to be a positive step
forward, but the guidelines still need some work.
CMS will only allot
about $107 per Medicare Advantage beneficiary per month to develop and sustain
these benefits, according to some interviewees.
“I think it’s awesome
that the opportunity is here now, but in order to get plans to buy in and this
to be scalable and sustainable, I think there are just some other changes that
are going to have to happen,” said an unnamed interviewee.
The interviewees
offered three ways that CMS and Medicare Advantage plans could change their
approach to produce the desired results.
First, if CMS allowed
payers to target their benefits based on social needs data in addition to
clinical criteria, interviewees stated that the effect might align more with
CMS’s intentions.
Currently, CMS only
allows payers to target their benefits based on clinical criteria. Interviewees
commented that data such as emergency department visits, ICD -10Z social
adversity codes, and other social determinant indicators can better assist
payers in identifying beneficiaries who need intervention through a new
benefit.
Second, the industry
experts focused some of their comments on Medicare Advantage plan improvements,
namely broadening Medicare Advantage plans’ experience with social determinants
of health.
For some
interviewees, that meant working with a Medicaid product, though others
disagreed, arguing that the target audience for Medicare Advantage is
critically different from Medicaid. One interviewee recognized Medicare
Advantage plans’ technological and contracting deficiencies, which require
improvement.
Some interviewees
suggested intermediaries between Medicare Advantage payers and organizations,
but others commented that this approach might force providers’ payments even
lower as payers must pay for middlemen.
Third, interviewees
pointed out that increasing certain supplemental benefits in Medicare Advantage
could create health disparities between Medicare Advantage and traditional
Medicare beneficiaries. Geographic factors, such as rebates and provider
networks, could also drive disparities.
One interviewee also
noted that the disparities could extend even into Medicaid as providers find
they can get higher reimbursements through Medicare and Medicare Advantage.
Despite the need for
improvement, four of the five payers interviewed planned to expand their
programs.
Food insecurity was
the top social determinant of health that payers chose to address. Three of the
five payers along with industry experts noted that meal delivery was often
included in plans’ expansions. Some payers targeted their efforts, using
clinical data, to identify patients who had diabetes, cardiovascular problems,
or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Daytime assistance
for seniors was the second most prevalent benefit expanded under the new CMS
requirements, with two insurers offering a day care option.
Two payers also said
they offer home safety improvements, personal home helpers, and navigator
support by phone.
Only one payer
covered transportation and one insured acupuncture and massage therapy.
Although payers’
uptake of the new benefits was slow and they shared reservations about the future,
experts anticipate higher usage in 2020. All five interviewed payers were
considering or committed to scaling up 2019 benefits and adding new benefits
for 2020.
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