杨贵妃传媒視頻

Skip to content

In Iowa, Accountable Care Begins To Make A Difference

For years, Phil Bretthauer was one of the most expensive patients at UnityPoint Health in Fort Dodge, a small town in western Iowa. The 70-year-old was frequently in and out of the hospital with heart attacks, COPD and prostate cancer.

鈥淚 always keep thinking, there鈥檚 something else coming,鈥 says Bretthauer. 鈥淚f it鈥檚 going to happen, it鈥檚 going to happen to me.鈥

In Iowa, Accountable Care Begins To Make A Difference

Home health nurse Tammy Bennett visits Phil Bretthauer鈥檚 apartment and goes over all 17 of his medications (Photo by Jenny Gold/KHN).

His primary care physician, Dr. Lincoln Wallace, was worried about the same thing. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a demoralizing position to be in to watch a guy like Phil go out the door and to anticipate that he鈥檒l have some event that will likely either threaten his life or end up in the end of his life, and you have little or no way to stop it from coming,鈥 says Wallace.聽

But this year, UnityPoint 鈥 which includes multiple hospitals and doctor practices in Iowa — decided to do something to stop the expensive cycle of illness and readmission for patients like Bretthauer. The hospital signed on to become an accountable care organization, a Medicare program created by the Affordable Care Act that economists say could be a pathway to the holy grail of health care鈥攑roviding better care at a lower cost.

Listen to this story

Click below to listen to the accompanying NPR story:

Here鈥檚 how it works: a group of doctors and hospitals get together to form a network responsible for taking care of a group of Medicare patients鈥攊n this case, about 9,000 Iowans.聽 If the network can prove it鈥檚 keeping those patients healthier and spending less money to do so, it gets to keep some of the savings. The ACO can then use that money to do things Medicare doesn鈥檛 usually cover鈥攍ike reaching out more to patients at home. But if the ACO does not succeed, it may face a financial penalty.

ACOs have become one of the most talked about new ideas in Obamacare, touted as a way to help fix an inefficient payment system that rewards more, not better, care. About 4 million Medicare beneficiaries are now in an ACO, and more than聽聽have signed up for either the Medicare program or a private ACO. An estimated of the U.S. population is now being served by an ACO.

鈥楴ow, I Have Some Way To Get Care To Them鈥

Wallace, who is not only Bretthauer鈥檚 physician but is also medical director of UnityPoint鈥檚 ACO, in charge of managing other doctors in the program, believes the ACO has dramatically changed some patients鈥 care.

鈥淣ow, if I have someone with multi-organ system stuff or I know that they鈥檙e alone, I have some way to get care to them. And we can only do that because our system is able to figure out a way to make it work financially,鈥 he says.

One of the most important aspects is care for patients among primary care doctors, specialists and other providers.

Wallace started by identifying the patients, like Bretthauer, who were sickest and costing the most. At the time, Bretthauer had recently spent three weeks in the hospital after a heart attack, followed by another two weeks in a rehab facility. When he finally got home to his apartment, he was sick, alone, and depressed.

鈥淚 was just so down. I didn鈥檛 have anything to do. I鈥檇 get up in the morning and sit in this chair for eight hours,鈥 Bretthauer recalls.

Wallace formed a team to care for Bretthauer, made up of doctors, nurses and home health workers.

At the center is home health nurse Tammy Bennett, who visits Bretthauer at his apartment every week or so聽 to check in on him and go over all 17 of his medications.

鈥淗e needs to know why he鈥檚 taking it, what he鈥檚 taking, and we need to make sure we鈥檙e all on the same page. And if there are any changes, I notify the doctor,鈥 explains Bennett. During a recent visit, Bennett discovered that Bretthauer was accidentally double-dosing on one of his medications.

When Bennett can鈥檛 be there, a telemonitor at Bretthauer鈥檚 apartment collects and transmits his vital signs. This allows UnityPoint to know exactly what鈥檚 going on at any given moment and make changes, possibly averting an emergency room visit.

And Bretthauer says he is much more engaged in his health now. 鈥淚 feel protected. If something goes wrong, I call them, they get involved. It makes me feel safe,鈥 he says.

Team Work Throughout The System

UnityPoint鈥檚 expanded focus on monitoring and data collection extends beyond the home and into the hospital. With the help of an electronic medical record system, the hospital now collects data on each of their physicians to monitor how they鈥檙e doing compared to their peers.

In Iowa, Accountable Care Begins To Make A Difference

Phil Bretthauer calls a bingo game at the rehab and retirement facility where he was a patient just a year ago (Photo by Jenny Gold/KHN).

鈥淲e know what each guys per member per month costs are. I can even drill it down in terms of age, diagnoses, how many people are doing well with their cholesterol control, their diabetes control, their immunization rates,鈥 says Dr. Wallace.

And if a doctor isn鈥檛 doing so well, Wallace approaches them with the facts and some potential solutions. Usually they adjust, he says.

But there are some things that can鈥檛 be quantified. Earlier this year, Phil was hospitalized for major depression. When he got out, he was worried he鈥檇 be back to sitting in that chair, eight hours a day. Nurse Bennett knew she had to do something to keep him from slipping back into a depression.

鈥淭ammy asked me what do you like to do? And I said well I鈥檝e announced at a NASCAR track, and I was involved in baseball,鈥 says Bretthauer. So Bennett helped him get a gig announcing at the little league games six nights a week.

And when baseball season ended, she helped him volunteer at the rehab facility where he鈥檇 been a patient just a year before. Bretthauer visits the facility few times a week now鈥攕pending time with residents and his favorite: calling the Bingo games.

Bretthauer says being part of UnityPoint鈥檚 new efforts has been a lifesaver. And as for the hospital, their care really has gotten better. Patients, including Bretthauer, are healthier and aren鈥檛 coming to the hospital as often.

And while the hospital system has not saved enough money to get a bonus just from Medicare yet, they鈥檙e hopeful for next year.

This article was produced by Kaiser Health News with support from .

Related Topics

Cost and Quality Health Industry