American Action Forum Primer on VA Home Based Primary Care

By Doug Holtz-Eakin, President, American Action Forum

Two recent studies suggest that home healthcare should be given a close look in reforming Medicare.  The American Action Forum recently released a paper by Emily Egan entitled, “VA Home Based Primary Care Program: A Primer and Lessons for Medicare.” The goal of the primer was to summarize the working of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Home Based Primary Care (HBPC), shed some light on its effectiveness, and draw any lessons for home health in the Medicare program.

HBPC began in 1972 (with 6 demos) and serves veterans with chronic and disabling conditions who need more care than periodic doctor visits.  It uses teams of medical directors, nurses, social workers, dietitians, psychologists, pharmacists and rehabilitative therapists to provide integrated and coordinated care for the patient.

The program appears to have been a success in that participants experienced a drop of 62 percent in hospital days, 88 percent in nursing home care days, and 24 percent in overall care costs. In addition, on study concluded that participants in the HBPC program had higher scores for “health related quality of life” than a comparable control group.

All of this suggests that Medicare ought to take a close look at HBPC.  However, Medicare as it is currently structured is not set up to simply copy the VA approach, as the home health benefit has different eligibility requirements and services. Medicare’s home health benefit is focused on the homebound; not the larger number of chronically ill patients.  Moreover, Medicare permits up to 60 days of care, while the HBPC has unlimited visits as long as they are medically appropriate. Finally, Medicare is more narrowly focused on health and rehabilitation as opposed to the coordination of a team in the HBPC.  In short, taking the HBPC approach would expand the population, number of visits, and services available – a major expansion for Medicare that would have to be offset by cost-savings obtained.

It should be noted, that there is some hope on this front as well.  A recent “Clinically Appropriate and Cost-Effective Placement” (CACEP) report from the Alliance for Home Health Quality and Innovation suggests that placing post-acute care patients in the most clinically appropriate setting can deliver large savings for the Medicare program by significantly reducing hospital admission and readmission rates.  In some cases, home healthcare is the most appropriate setting.

What’s the bottom line?  The combination of the two studies raises the tantalizing possibility that a HBPC-like approach to the Medicare home health benefit might provide more and better care, and at the same time lower the cost of Medicare.  It is a lofty goal, but with Medicare’s looming insolvency, policymakers need to consider major changes with the potential for major results.

Final Rule: VA HBPC Eliminates Co-Payments for Tele-Health

Recognizing the home as a preferred place of care for veterans, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs yesterday released a final ruling that eliminates patient co-payments for in-home video telehealth care through its Home Based Primary Care (HBPC) program (read the final rule here).

VA first proposed the rule to eliminate co-pays in March 2012. With no significant opposition, the rule took effect May 7.

About the HBPC Program
The HBPC program was created in 1972 to serve veterans with chronic conditions by focusing on providing a home-based approach to healthcare. The program is an excellent example of the value and efficiency of home health. According to a presentation at the 2011 National Health Policy Forum, the program has:

  • Reduced hospital days by 62%
  • Reduced long-term care days by 88%
  • Reduced total healthcare costs by roughly 24%

For more information on the successes of the HBPC program, click here.

Why the Ruling Matters
VA has realized that co-payments can shift patients to more costly settings and increase healthcare costs. The removal of co-payments for in-home video telehealth care allows more veterans to receive clinically advanced and cost-effective care in their homes. Indeed, the barrier that might have previously discouraged veterans from using in-home video telehealth care has been removed, thus the VA hopes more users will turn to this option.

The final rule is yet another example of how the VA is advancing patient-centered policies to ensure Veterans are receiving clinically advanced, cost-effective care. This is why home healthcare leaders are encouraging lawmakers to closely consider the HBPC program as a model for future Medicare reforms.

Read More
Tom Berger, Executive Director of Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA) and John Rowan, President of the Board of Directors at VVA wrote an op-ed that appeared in Roll Call on May 8 commending the Department of Veterans Affairs Home-Based Primary Care System as a model for other programs. To read the full op-ed, click here.