Risk & Business Magazine California Fall 2017 | Page 7

MEDICAL MANAGEMENT MATTERS right vendors to satisfy the client. events (and the claims that they generate)? Make no mistake—there are no two vendors in the self-funded health plan space who do things exactly the same (if there were, they would have merged by now!). It’s the plan advisor’s role to play matchmaker and bring to the table those vendors who are the right fit for the group. Furthermore, not only does the advisor help marry vendors to the client but the advisor makes sure that those vendors will integrate together so that the plan has one cohesive benefit offering that serves its members well and responsibly. And the third purpose is to help you select which bolt-on products and services are actually going to generate a return on investment (ROI) for your self-funded health plan. That shiny new toy may look awfully appealing—the fancy event the vendor throws and the enormously compelling guest speaker. Too often I see groups buy products and hire specialty vendors because they were enticed by the shimmer, but had they analyzed their data, they would have known that the investment was a waste of time and money! Why buy biometric screening blood draws (a proposition one of my clients was recently considering) if only seven people on your health plan have skipped their annual physicals while the other five hundred people already got the blood draw during their physicals? Do you really want to invest time and money into redoing blood work on all those people just to help only seven?!? Your data should help you determine which investments are going to generate meaningful clinical outcomes for your patients and financial outcomes for your plan! There is one other absolutely essential piece that the best advisors bring to the table— actionable data. Don’t make the mistake of thinking that the data you gathered from a fully-insured-to-self-funded conversion is all that you need. Every self-funded group needs ongoing data aggregation and analysis to ensure that it is optimally managing its health plan to meet the goals and objectives that it established when it went self-funded. In addition to being a critical performance measurement tool, this data should also serve at least three other key purposes. First, it should be a tool that your medical management vendor utilizes to identify members who need to be engaged with medical management services. Data without action is death! If the clinicians in charge of helping your members get the right care, at the right time, in the right place, and for the right price are not utilizing your group’s medical and pharmacy data as a member identification and engagement outreach tool, then you’ve got the wrong medical management vendor! Further, the tool needs to be one that is actuarially certified for its predictive risk modeling accuracy. Yes, your data can be used to predict the future! Additionally, your medical management team—that group of nurses and physicians you count on to help your members—should be using those predictions to engage patients and prevent those future health events. We all know it, deep down inside, that healthier people file fewer claims. But there’s significant merit to focusing your efforts (and investments) on helping those individuals whom you can see coming down the pike as future catastrophic claimants! Why would you not want to help those individuals avoid those cataclysmic health expertise they need, what questions to ask their providers, what treatment options are scientifically proven to be most helpful for their particular condition or situation, what a fair price for their healthcare services would be, and how to utilize their health insurance to their optimum benefit. An elite medical management program will help to identify the right patients for assistance (both those sick right now today and those likely to be sick tomorrow), and engage with them to ensure that they are getting the right care, at the right time, in the right place, and for the right price. Yes, it’s a lot of work. Yes, you have to do significant ongoing communication with your employees. Yes, your people will love you for giving them a helping hand during a painful (often literally) period in their life. Yes, you will see significant cost benefits from doing superior medical management. But ultimately, it’s not about the money. That’s just a happy coincidence of doing the right thing for the people who keep your business running day after day. + I alluded to the role of medical management in engaging members of your health plan, but I want to be very specific here and drill down on some critical elements. Your medical management component, and selecting the right one, is probably the most critical decision you will have to make as a health plan sponsor. Whether you are fully insured or self-funded, if you do not have the right team of nurses and doctors helping the members of your health plan to efficiently and effectively navigate both the health delivery and health plan systems, then you are doing those members (and yourself) a huge disservice. It is virtually impossible for patients to know which providers have the 7