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EditorialEditorial

Bending the Trends

Karen DeSalvo and Andrea Harris
The Annals of Family Medicine July 2017, 15 (4) 304-306; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2101
Karen DeSalvo
1New Orleans, Lousiana
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  • For correspondence: karen.desalvo@gmail.com
Andrea Harris
2Washington, DC
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  • health care reform
  • health care costs
  • social determinants of health
  • health equity
  • public health
  • Public Health 3.0

In this issue of the Annals of Family Medicine, Dr Johansen adds to our understanding that despite efforts to control health care costs over the past 2 decades, we are quickly approaching a reality in which health care spending subsumes one-fifth of our economy, which is well above our international peers.1,2 As Dr Johansen notes, this rising spending is the result of continued utilization of higher cost services such as specialty and hospital care, as well as increased prices. Increases in health care spending are not associated with better outcomes or more equitable health. The health status of the people in the United States continues to be burdened with high rates of chronic disease and for the first time in generations, life expectancy is declining.3

The Triple Aim has been the national call to action that drives the goals of “improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, and reducing per capita costs of health care.”4 To date, the strategy for achieving the Triple Aim has been predominately focused on improving the health care system through the adoption of value-based payment design in lieu of fee-for-service payment models, and on reducing variability in health service delivery.5 Early results indicate that cost growth is slowing and that innovative delivery models are improving quality and safety of care and decreasing unnecessary utilization such as avoidable hospital readmissions.6

ADDRESSING THE SOCIAL NEEDS

As delivery system reform has progressed, payers and health systems are assuming greater financial risk for health outcomes. Even the highest performing health systems are finding the medical model insufficient to adequately constrain costs and improve health outcomes due to the social needs of their patients. Failure to appropriately contextualize the health care plan can have significant consequences.7 Providing the best quality care for a patient with COPD in the clinical setting is an important goal. But if that patient cannot afford the medication or does not have access to transportation for their follow up care, their disease will quickly become uncontrolled, leading to worse health outcomes and higher utilization-related costs.

In response, public and private payers are piloting payment models that encourage the health care system to address social needs. For example, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently announced the Accountable Health Communities demonstration model that encourages health care providers to build linkages with community organizations, such as Meals on Wheels, that can address their patients’ social needs such as hunger or poor nutrition.8 Pay-for-success models, such as the South Carolina Nurse Family Partnership, are a version of social impact bonds that go a step further by encouraging community linkages and providing resources to support them.9

Community-oriented primary care providers are especially likely to welcome these types of payment models and the new technologies that support them because addressing the social factors of health is fundamental yet complex and rarely compensated. Encouragingly, evidence is building that addressing social factors improves health outcomes at a lower cost10,11; investing in coordinators who connect patients to social services can save between $15 and $72 billion annually.12

ADDRESSING THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

Though integrating health care with social care is critical for improving health at a lower cost, reforming payment models alone is insufficient.13 Leaders must work to create healthy communities by addressing factors further upstream such as the environment, housing, transportation, and access to healthy food and safe spaces. By moving to a public health model, rather than a purely medical model, communities can create the conditions where everyone can be healthy and reverse health disparities.14–16

This undertaking requires collaboration and resources from many community sectors, and cannot be the sole responsibility of the health care system. The promising news is that communities across the country are pioneering a new approach to improving the health of their communities by addressing all the determinants of health.17,18 These “Public Health 3.0” communities are coming together to create new umbrella organizations to set a shared vision and shared goals about the health of their communities, to share data and funding, and to coordinate activities aimed at improving health. Their efforts are showing promise, including improvements in health outcomes and reductions in mortality.19,20 For patients with COPD, this would mean not only that their community’s health care system can link them to support services for their social needs, but also that they can live in smoke-free housing.

DISRUPTION NEEDED TO CREATE AFFORDABLE, EQUITABLE HEALTH FOR ALL

These collaborations will only be successful if we address the social needs of our patients and make structural changes to funding and accountability for individual and community health. First, clinical teams should identify and support the social needs of our patients with the rigor they would apply to avoiding other medical errors. Second, health systems should show leadership by holding their executives accountable not only for outcomes for their patient population, but also for the health outcomes of their communities. Third, communities can only advance health if they have access to timely, specific data. Data availability will require continued focus on creating a culture of data sharing for public health advancement. Fourth, federal and state policy makers should work with states to maximize funding flexibility to accommodate local innovations aimed at investing in upstream social determinants of health. Fifth, education of the clinical and public health workforce should encourage an understanding of the social determinants of health and provide training in working across sectors. Sixth, it will require an increase in investment in the social determinants of health. Currently, US spending on social services is on par with other Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries, but we spend a significantly greater proportion on health care. This spending pattern may need to change if we seek to improve health outcomes.21

CONCLUSION

The health system that Johansen describes is one that has been on a relentless path of increasing high-cost utilization without clear return on investment. While the health system is working to achieve the triple aim by improving the health care delivery system, it alone will not be sufficient to bend the cost curve and reverse declining life expectancy and increasing disparities. This will be true even if we build better delivery models that address the social needs of patients. To improve overall population health, we will need to embrace disruptive models of health that address health care needs as well as the social factors and enable leaders to build healthier communities that support affordable, equitable health for all.

Footnotes

  • Conflicts of interest: authors report none.

  • Received for publication March 22, 2017.
  • Accepted for publication April 26, 2017.
  • © 2017 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

References

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The Annals of Family Medicine: 15 (4)
The Annals of Family Medicine: 15 (4)
Vol. 15, Issue 4
July/August 2017
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