Abstract

Introduction:Faced with growing populations of older, medically complex patients, health systems are now incentivized to deliver cost-effective, high-value care. We evaluated a new method that builds upon existing Medicare spending concentration studies to further segment these expenditures, revealing use patterns to inform care redesign.Methods:We obtained monthly Medicare expenditure data and derived baseline comparison data using typical methods for identifying a yearly high-cost subpopulation. We then applied the new methodology, ordering monthly patient expenditures from highest to lowest to more extensively segment the baseline data. Our evaluation examined the following within the new more extensive segmentation: monthly expenditure distribution, corresponding patient counts, and occupancy of specific patient subgroups within the extended segmentation of baseline data.Results:Compared to the baseline data, we found further spending concentration, with 16.7 percent of high-cost patients being responsible for about two-thirds of baseline expenditures. The remaining 83.3 percent of the high-cost subpopulation exhibited lower spending, collectively accounting for about one third of baseline expenditures. Additionally, we found that unique patient subgroups occupied different segments over time, with specific subgroups comprising 8.3 percent of the study subpopulation patients migrating into and out of each highest spending segment, accounting for almost half of monthly baseline expenditures.Conclusions:With monthly health care expenditures concentrated among small numbers of migrating patients, our evaluation suggested potential cost-effectiveness in tiered care delivery models, where small subgroups receive direct, active care interactions, while the remainder experience surveillance-level care, designed to both address ongoing medical needs and to detect emergent migration.

Highlights

  • Faced with growing populations of older, medically complex patients, health systems are incentivized to deliver cost-effective, high-value care

  • Study Aim Our aim was to build upon existing Medicare spending concentration studies by investigating a new method for more extensively segmenting expenditures, to answer three specific study questions: 1) What is the monthly distribution of aggregated spending resulting from the new, more extensive segmentation? 2) What is the corresponding monthly distribution of aggregated patient counts? 3) What is the occupancy of specific patient subgroups within the segmentation of aggregated patient counts and expenditures?

  • In the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Care Management Program [21], skilled care managers were each assigned to about 200 high-risk Medicare patients at a time, with about 15 percent of the assigned patients (n = 30) receiving active care at any one time

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Summary

Introduction

Faced with growing populations of older, medically complex patients, health systems are incentivized to deliver cost-effective, high-value care. We found that unique patient subgroups occupied different segments over time, with specific subgroups comprising 8.3 percent of the study subpopulation patients migrating into and out of each highest spending segment, accounting for almost half of monthly baseline expenditures. Studies of Medicare expenditures can shed light on utilization patterns intrinsic to people in the U.S 65 years and older, as well as providing context for demonstrations of comparative cost-effectiveness. Such characterizations could inform approaches for designing health systems to more efficiently meet the needs of America’s growing population of older adults

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