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All Eyes on Vermont's Health Reform Experience
This past June, the SCI program convened health officials
from five states to Burlington, Vermont to witness Vermont’s health reform efforts
in action. The timing was particularly
appropriate given the recent focus on elements of Vermont’s Blueprint for Health in the
national health care reform debate in Congress.
The Blueprint started at one pilot program site in 2003 as a new way of
looking at the practice of medicine and chronic care treatment. The program was refocused and expanded with
passage of Vermont’s
2006 comprehensive health reform bill, the Health Care
Affordability Act. Perhaps one of the most important elements of the
Blueprint is the creation of “community care teams” which facilitates the
collaboration of nurses, health educators, and social workers to better enable
patients to manage their own chronic conditions. Most of the extra services provided by the
team are paid for through grants from the Vermont Department of Health, the
state’s three major health insurance companies, and Medicaid.
In an Associated
Press article on Vermont health reform, SCI’s Director, Enrique
Martinez-Vidal, explained that the Blueprint program “is the model for a
delivery system redesign that has great potential for cost savings as well as
the improvement for the health of the population of this country.” Currently,
participating commercial carriers, Medicaid, and the State, who is providing the
portion that would apply to Medicare beneficiaries, are paying participating
physicians an additional care coordination fee based on the practice meeting
certain criteria for being a medical home; in addition, community health teams
are being supported, to provide multidisciplinary care assistance to all
participating practices. The future vision of the delivery system redesign and
payment reform is that eventually providers will be paid for the totality of
care and not for every episode of care. While not enough time has lapsed for the
data to prove the value of the model, Vermont has started to see a reduction in
emergency room visits.
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