ARTICLE REVIEW 4 HLTH 349 Article Review 4 Instructions This assignment is based upon the article Health Care Reform and Equity: Promise, Pitfa

ARTICLE REVIEW 4

HLTH 349

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ARTICLE REVIEW 4 HLTH 349 Article Review 4 Instructions This assignment is based upon the article Health Care Reform and Equity: Promise, Pitfa
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Article Review 4 Instructions

This assignment is based upon the article Health Care Reform and Equity: Promise, Pitfalls, and Prescriptions, found in the Reading & Study folder of Module/Week 7.

Please respond to the following:

In Health Care Reform and Equity: Promises, Pitfalls, and Prescriptions, Kevin Fiscella describes the causes of health care disparities. He argues (in 2011) that the current health care reform activities (i.e., the passage of the Affordable Care Act) offer a unique opportunity for a more equitable health care system. He further states health care reform that includes elements from six health care domains: access, primary care support, enhanced health information technology, new payment models, a national quality strategy informed by research, and federal requirements for health care disparity monitoring are the keys to increased health care equity. He cites several promises, pitfalls, and prescriptions in the six domains that can impact health care equity, ultimately deciding that these, along with effective implementation, improved alignment of resources with patient needs and revitalization of primary care can effectively produce a more equitable system
. Choose two (2) of the health care reform domains and thoroughly discuss whether and how the promises, pitfalls, and prescriptions Fiscella provides dilutes or enriches the biblical worldview of public and community health.

The assignment is to be written as a paper. One source should be given to support your response in addition to citing the assigned article, which is already embedded in the course. You should use APA format, 12 font, double space, and write between 450500 words maximum.

This assignment is due by 11:59 p.m. (ET) on Monday of Module/Week 7. A N NA L S O F FA M I LY M E D I C I N E W W W. A N N FA M M E D . O R G VO L . 9 , N O. 1 JA N UA RY / F E B RUA RY 2 0 1 1

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REFLECTION

Health Care Reform and Equity:
Promise, Pitfalls, and Prescriptions

ABSTRACT
The United States has made little progress during the past decade in addressing
health care disparities. Recent health care reforms offer an historic opportunity to
create a more equitable health care system. Key elements of health care reform
relevant to promoting equity include access, support for primary care, enhanced
health information technology, new payment models, a national quality strategy
informed by research, and federal requirements for health care disparity moni-
toring. With effective implementation, improved alignment of resources with
patient needs, and most importantly, revitalization of primary care, these reforms
could measurably improve equity.

Ann Fam Med 2011;9:78-84. doi:10.1370/afm.1213.

INTRODUCTION

T
he United States has made little progress toward greater equity in

health care quality according to the annual National Health Care Dis-

parities Reports.1 Recent health care reforms offer an historic oppor-

tunity to make inroads. In this commentary, I review key provisions of these

reforms, particularly those in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care

Act, often shortened to Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010,2 and discuss

their potential promise, pitfalls, and steps (prescriptions) needed to jump-

start progress toward more equitable health care (Table 1). I begin by briefl y

reviewing causes of health care disparities and then discuss selected, key

health care reform provisions within 6 interlocking domains: access related to

insurance coverage and costs, strengthening primary care, improvements in

health information technology, changes in physician payment, adoption of a

national quality, and improved disparity monitoring and accountability.

CAUSES OF HEALTH CARE DISPARITIES
Health care disparities related to race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status

(SES), and markers of social disadvantage result from a complex confl u-

ence of patient, clinician, and system levels factors.3 These disparities

often refl ect reciprocal infl uences between social stratifi cation and ensuing

social disadvantage and worse health4; unconscious clinician bias toward

socially disadvantaged persons5,6; separate and often unequal care7-10; and a

health care system, including primary care,11 that is ill-equipped to address

the often complex needs of socially disadvantaged patients, who often

become underserved patients.12

Equitable health care means more than elimination of bias, it also means

creation of patient-centered systems of care that support healing and caring

relationships that are responsive to patients needs, wishes, and context.13

Improving equity requires aligning health care resources and capability with

patient needs, particularly patients who have been historically underserved.12

Kevin Fiscella, MD, MPH
Departments of Family Medicine and Com-

munity & Preventive Medicine, University

of Rochester, Rochester, NY

Confl ict of interest: Dr Fiscella served on the Insti-
tute of Medicine Committee on Future Directions for
the National Health Care Quality and Disparities
Report and has consulted for the Health Resources
Services Administration.

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR

Kevin Fiscella, MD, MPH

1381 South Ave

Rochester, NY 14620

[emailprotected]

H E A LT H C A R E R E F O R M A N D E Q U I T Y

Table 1. Promise, Pitfalls, and Prescriptions for Improved Equity Under Health Reform

Health Reform
Provision Promise Pitfall Prescription

Access (insurance and costs)

Expanded coverage Coverage for up to 32 mil-
lion uninsured

Need for robust primary care system

Remaining 23 million uninsured

Absence of public option undermines
cost control for care for previously
uninsured

Revitalize primary care

Universal coverage

Expansion of Medicare eligibility and
other public options

Behavioral health parity Reduced cost barriers Does not address barriers related to
stigma related to mental health care

Integrate behavioral health services into
primary care

Elimination of co-pay-
ments for evidence-
based preventive care

Reduce cost barriers May accelerate trends toward cost
shifting to patients for medical and
behavioral care, worsening disparities

Restrict cost sharing based on percent
family income

Revitalization of primary care including the safety net
Improved physician

payments
Modest improvement in

resources
Not suffi cient to generate practice

adaptive reserve for transformation
Major payment reform

Elimination in Medicare-
Medicaid payment
differences

Potential to minimize sepa-
rate and unequal systems

Does not address gap between Medi-
care and private insurance payments.

Eliminate differences in payment by
insurance type.

Prohibit segregation of care based on
payment type within health care sys-
tems that receive federal funds.

Bonus for work in short-
age areas

Modest impact on physician
maldistribution

Too small to have signifi cant effect Comprehensive strategy to primary care
and workforce issues

National Health
Care Work Force
Commission

Potential to infl uence work
force maldistribution

Depends on authority of commission to
affect key issues

Address student selection, training,
payments, and quality of practice in
shortage areas

Improvement in federal
load repayment

Improved recruitment to
shortage areas

Does not address retention following
fulfi llment of commitment

Enhance quality of practice and payment

Collaborative Care
Network

Improvement in care coordi-
nation for underserved

Need for vibrant primary care safety
net to coordinate care

Strengthen adaptive reserve of safety
net

Piloting of new care
models

Spark innovation Modest investments may not be
suffi cient

Practice change is a continuous process

Support innovation in all practices

Greater funding for practice-based
research for underserved

Funding for primary care extension
programs

State-operated health
insurance exchanges

Opportunity to promote new
care delivery models

Not all states will opt for innovation

Health information technology
Incentives for physicians

and hospitals
Acceleration of diffusion

nearing tipping point
Does not ensure improvement in

quality

Digital divide by practice and patient

Support for quality improvement collab-
oratives that leverage health informa-
tion technology

Subsidies for safety-net practices and
training and support for patients in use
of health information technology

Payment model reform
Payment Advisory Board Potential move from volume

to value payment

Potential for changes in pri-
mary care payment

Success dependent on members of
board

Major changes in needed in quantity
and type of fi nancing for primary care

National Pilot Medicare
Payment Program

Piloting of bundled
payments

Relatively small change

Unknown impact of bundled payments
on primary care

Potential adverse impact on
underserved

Build in monitoring of effects on care
for underserved patients

National quality strategy
Formal national quality

improvement strategy
Potential to integrate multiple

elements of health reform
Potential for neglect of the physician-

patient relationship
Need to keep patient and relationships

at fore
Reporting of perfor-

mance by federal
programs

Improved accountability for
programs for underserved

Inadequate funding for implementa-
tion and PBRN research, particularly
in safety-net practices

Improved funding for practice-based
research, particularly safety-net
practices

Monitoring disparities
Enhance collection of

disparity data within
health care

Improved detection of
disparities

Assessing disparities does not assure
they are addressed

Build in continuous loops between
reporting, policy/intervention and
follow-up

Analyze disparities
trends

Identifi cation of key dispari-
ties for targeted action

Monitoring alone is not suffi cient DHHS should hold federally sponsored
programs accountable for progress in
addressing disparities

DHHS = Department of Health and Human Services; PBRN = practice-based research network.

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H E A LT H C A R E R E F O R M A N D E Q U I T Y

ACCESS
Improving equity begins with improving health care

system access. System access is strongly affected by

insurance coverage and cost. Minority and low-SES

patients are more often uninsured than their counter-

parts.1 Lack of health insurance is a major contributor

to health care disparities14; health care disparities are

smaller in such health systems as the Veterans Affairs,

where access is more uniform.15 ACA provisions will

eventually expand insurance coverage to an estimated

32 million uninsured persons, but the Congressional

Budget Offi ce estimates that health care reform may

still leave 23 million persons, including undocumented

immigrants, without any coverage.16

Recent reforms also offer potential for improv-

ing access to behavioral care for poor and minority

patients and for addressing disparities in behavioral

health utilization.1 Cost represents a key barrier. Parity

provisions in the Mental Health Parity and Addiction

Equity (MHPAE) Act of 2008 (https://www.cms.gov/

healthinsreformforconsume/04_thementalhealthparity-

act.asp) and ACA minimize cost differences between

behavioral and medical care. Specifi cally, MHPAE pro-

hibits health plans from imposing deductibles, co-pay-

ments, and out-of-pocket limits on mental health and

substance abuse coverage that are higher than those

imposed for medical-surgical coverage. It also prohibits

restrictions on days of hospital coverage and dura-

tion and scope of behavioral treatment beyond limits

that health plans impose for medical-surgical cover-

age. Access to behavioral health care for underserved

groups could be further enhanced through creation of

integrated primary and behavioral health care similar

to the Veterans Affairs health system.17

Health care costs contribute to disparities, even

among the insured.18 Insurance deductibles and co-pay-

ments discourage appropriate health care use,19 affecting

those with the least income. ACA will eliminate patient

cost sharing for evidence-based preventive services

covered by Medicare and Medicaid. It also authorizes

Medicare coverage for annual health assessments and

eventually eliminates the so-called donut hole in Medi-

care part D prescription coverage. Prohibitions against

exclusions for preexisting conditions and lifetime limits

on spending by health plans may provide greater benefi t

to low-SES patients who are more often affected by

chronic conditions.20 These changes may also reduce

physician decision-making time devoted to patients abil-

ity to pay21 and may incrementally move the country

toward improved health care equity. Potential benefi ts of

these changes, however, may be undermined by trends

toward increased patient cost sharing.22 Cost sharing

disproportionately affects low-income patients.23 Pre-

miums for obtaining insurance though health insurance

exchanges for the uninsured will be based on household

income, but many low-income workers may continue to

pay high premiums for employer-based coverage.

PRIMARY CARE
Access to primary care is associated with fewer dispari-

ties in outcomes.24 A robust primary care system is the

cornerstone for a more equitable health care system.

Longitudinal, caring relationships with patients provide

the opportunity to minimize stereotypes and foster

patient enablement and capability, potentially yielding

more equitable care.25,26

Revitalization of primary care is critical to health

reform success.27 ACA takes important, although mod-

est steps, in addressing critical primary care needs:

payment reform, enhancing the training pipeline,

transforming practice, and buttressing the primary

care safety net. ACA provisions include establishment

of a National Health Care Workforce Commission,

increased support for workforce training (Title VII

and the Prevention and Public Health Fund), cultural

competency training, enhanced payments, expansion of

health centers, and piloting of new care models. ACA

also provides bonus payments to primary care physi-

cians under Medicare and eliminates differences in

payments between Medicaid and Medicare for primary

care. It further provides Medicare bonuses to primary

care physicians who work in shortage areas, helping

to minimize geographically related disparities. These

reforms may begin to minimize disparities in resources

between primary care practices whose patient popula-

tions differ by social disadvantage. These reforms could

also conceivably reduce de facto segregation in health

care by insurance type (eg, faculty practices vs clinics),

although federal regulations prohibiting intra-insti-

tutional segregation of care by insurance type within

systems receiving federal funding may be needed. To

be sure, modest increases in payments alone will not be

suffi cient to address the maldistribution of primary care

physicians, much less avert a primary care shortage.28

Poor and minority patients are at greater risk for

lacking primary care; those with access are more often

seen within resource-strapped safety-net practices,

such as federally qualifi ed community health centers

(FQHCs), hospital clinics, and a small portion of com-

munity physicians.7,29 Strengthening the primary care

safety net is critical to ensuring access after expansion

of insurance coverage.

FQHCs are the most important source of primary

care for underserved patients, currently serving 20

million patients who are largely minority and of low

income.30 FQHCs will likely remain the key source for

primary care to underserved groups under health care

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H E A LT H C A R E R E F O R M A N D E Q U I T Y

reform.30 ACA invests heavily ($11 billion) in FQHC

expansion, potentially doubling the number of patients

served. Annual federal loan repayment for physicians

working in underserved areas increases to $50,000

(from $35,000), part-time practice is now permitted,

and teaching time within FQHC is now counted for

repayment. Furthermore, ACA supports establishing

new teaching health centers and provides new systems

of payment for this teaching.

These investments alone are not suffi cient to ensure

transformation of care within FQHCs. Enhancement

in health center fi nancing will be needed to generate

an adaptive reserve (ie, capability of practices to imple-

ment and sustain change)31 to facilitate FQHC practice

redesign.32 Federal support is needed to sustain and

advance quality improvements previously initiated

through the Health Disparities Collaboratives.33 Inno-

vative training programs are also needed to develop

future medical home leaders for the underserved.34

ACA also supports establishment of the commu-

nity-based Collaborative Care Network Program

to support local consortia of health care providers

(including health centers) to coordinate and inte-

grate health care services for low-income uninsured

and underinsured patients. Potentially, this provision

could foster innovative, community-wide solutions

for care for underserved patients, including promo-

tion of patient capability.35 Success will depend on the

strength of local partnerships and creation of sustain-

able models of primary care delivery that effectively

coordinate use of community resources.

ACA aims to transform health care quality (including

primary care) through a series of small but potentially

synergistic steps.27 It promotes piloting of new care

models, including medical homes, chronic disease man-

agement teams, and integration of medical and behav-

ioral health care. State-run health insurance exchanges

provide states with the opportunity to establish new

primary care models. If successful, these models could

reinvigorate primary care while creating systems of care

that provide the time, resources, and capability needed

to respond to the needs of underserved patients.11,36

The path to transformation will not be easy. As

the Patient-Centered Medical Home National Dem-

onstration Project has shown, transformation is a

slow, challenging process, requiring high motivation

and often external support.31 Toward this end, ACA

authorizes the creation, but no corresponding fund-

ing, for primary care extension programs designed to

assist primary care practices in quality improvement.37

Funding for this program is critical if primary care is

take full advantage of reforms. Without buttressing

key resources in primary care and addressing adaptive

reserve within practices,38 the combined stress of care

for more (newly insured) patients coupled with pres-

sure to transform practice, could undermine patients

care, demoralize primary care clinicians, and hinder

progress toward a more equitable system.

HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
Adequate health information technology, including

availability of electronic health records (EHRs), is one of

the pillars for transforming primary care and improving

health care quality and equality.39 Adoption has been

relatively slow, but a tipping point may be near. By 2009,

44% of offi ce physicians in the United States reported

use of some type of EHRs.40 With funding through the

American Recovery Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009

(http://www.recovery.gov/About/Pages/The_Act.aspx),

physicians and hospitals will receive fi nancial incentives

through Medicaid or Medicare for acquiring and engag-

ing in federally defi ned meaningful use of EHRs. Federal

certifi cation of EHR vendors for meaningful use should

spur improvements in EHRs.41 Features, if suffi ciently

user-friendly, such as patient registries, reminders, deci-

sion support, computerized order entry, and electronic

prescribing, offer the potential for improving equity

through improved tracking, population management,

standardization of care, and possibly reduced decision-

making bias.42 Establishment of regional Health Infor-

mation Technology Extension programs and Beacon

Community Cooperative Agreement programs may fur-

ther facilitate technology diffusion, infrastructure, and

exchange capabilities within regions across the country.

Slower diffusion of this technology to practices

serving minority patients, however, could have the

unintended consequence of worsening health care dis-

parities by further widening inequalities in resources

between providers.43 In addition, powerful incentives

may be needed to promote effective information

exchange between systems and between patients and

providers. Last, in the absence of targeted initiatives,

the digital divide in knowledge and access to technol-

ogy could worsen disparities when practices begin

to implement online scheduling, patient portals, and

patient health records.44

PAYMENT MODELS
New payment models may potentially promote equity

by fostering quality improvement, including the devel-

opment of new care models, such as the patient home,

potentially better suited to meet the needs of poor and

minority patients.11 Payment systems that reward pay-

ment for health care value (ie, better quality relative to

cost) rather than volume might produce better align-

ment between patient needs and resources.

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H E A LT H C A R E R E F O R M A N D E Q U I T Y

ACA innovations designed to enhance value include

allowing providers who are organized as accountable

care organizations to share in cost savings, creation

of an innovation center within Centers for Medicare

and Medicaid Services (CMS), establishment of an

independent payment advisory board, reduction in

hospital payments for hospital-acquired conditions,

and establishment of a national Medicare pilot program

to develop and evaluate bundled payments (a type of

limited capitation). Provided that bundled payments

take into account the greater health care needs of

underserved patients and do not penalize safety-net

providers,45 they offer the potential for promoting

equity by redirecting resources to health care value and

population health. As with any major reform, however,

unintended consequences are possible. Implementation

of bundled payments could discourage accountable

care organizations from enrolling underserved patients

because these organizations may fear potentially higher

costs, unless payments take into account patients social

disadvantage in addition to case-mix.46 Bundled pay-

ments could also undermine the sustainability of small

private practices that often provide care to underserved

patients in many rural communities.

A NATIONAL HEALTH CARE QUALITY
STRATEGY
Equity represents a core dimension of health care

quality.47 Efforts to promote health care quality offer

potential for promoting equity, particularly if efforts

include explicit focus on addressing disparities48 or pro-

duce zero defects.49 ACA directs the Secretary of the

Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) to

develop a national quality improvement strategy includ-

ing selecting and reporting on uniform quality measures

by federally sponsored programs. The secretary has

charged the Agency for Healthcare Research and Qual-

ity (AHRQ) with leading this effort. The appointment

of quality improvement maven, Donald Berwick, to

lead CMS may further energize health care reforms.

ACA calls for equity to be one of the considerations in

the development and selection of quality of measures.

Improved measurement of quality and equity could

focus more attention and resources on addressing health

care disparities and aligning resources with needs.

A shift in federal research funding priorities is nec-

essary, however, to fully enable a national strategy to

improve health care quality and reduce disparities.50 In

2007, the United States spent 4.5% of total health care

expenditures on biomedical research, but only 0.1%

on health services research.51 The National Institute

of Health (NIH) director, Francis Collins has made

research relevant to health reform an NIH priority,52

but this new NIH priority presumably refers mainly to

comparative effectiveness research rather than research

designed to optimize health care delivery. The ACA

has also upgraded the National Center on Minority

Health to an NIH institute. Although this change bodes

well for improved community-based health disparities

research, it is not clear whether it will shift funding

toward health care disparities research. A center of inno-

vation will be established within CMS. Even so, devel-

oping and implementing a national quality and disparity

strategy will require adequate and stable PBRN funding

(eg, to support practice facilitators who can boost prac-

tices adaptive reserve), particularly implementation of

new care models within safety-net practices.53 Given the

growing federal investment in FQHCs and their pivotal

role in addressing disparities, research funding is needed

to inform optimal care delivery models in these sites.

MONITORING HEALTH CARE DISPARITIES
ACA directs DHHS to evaluate health and health care

systems to enhance collection and reporting of health

care data by race, ethnicity, sex, primary language,

disability, and rural residence. Similar directives are

included in EHR meaningful use requirements. Avail-

ability of these data will facilitate better assessment and

implementation of interventions to address disparities by

health plans and hospitals.54 ACA directs DHHS to ana-

lyze data to detect and monitor trends in health dispari-

ties for each federally conducted or supported health

care or public health program or activity. These require-

ments may facilitate greater accountability for assessing

and addressing health care disparities within federally

sponsored programs. With suffi cient commitment from

DHHS leadership, this requirement could potentially

result in a systematic effort by federally sponsored

programs to publicly report on and address health care

disparities within their programs. These efforts could

be aided by changes in the National Healthcare Qual-

ity Report and National Healthcare Disparity reports

recommended by the Institute of Medicine.55 Included

are national priorities in areas of quality and disparities,

improved actionability including accountability, and an

expanded quality framework that includes the domains

of health care access and health care infrastructure

required to improve quality and equity. Closing the

feedback loop between quality and equity reporting and

corrective federal, state, and local policies will be critical

given the enormous complexity of reforms.

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
Health care reforms, many not slated for enactment

until 2014, offer an unprecedented opportunity to cre-

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H E A LT H C A R E R E F O R M A N D E Q U I T Y

ate a more equitable patient-responsive health care

system. ACA targets access by expanding insurance

coverage and the FQHC safety net. Further legislation

will be required to address access for the remaining 23

million uninsured. Other provisions related to costs

may improve equity, but trends toward greater patient

cost sharing may offset gains unless ways are found to

mitigate their impact on low-income persons.

Health reform also offers promise in a number of

areas besides system access, including primary care,

health information technology, payment reform, a

national quality strategy, and disparity monitoring.

Two fundamental challenges lie in the way. The fi rst

challenge is aligning health care resources with patients

needs. At the level of the patient visit,11 practice,7 and

hospital,9 resources are misaligned.12 Health care reform

takes small steps toward addressing this problem, but

trends toward pay for performance and bundled pay-

ment could worsen this mismatch if they fail to account

for the needs of underserved patients and practices

serving them.56,57 Ultimately, systems of payments must

account for patient morbidity as well as patient com-

plexity,58 including contextual capability related to lan-

guage, culture, health literacy, and disempowerment.

The second challenge relates to revitalization of

primary care, particularly for underserved patients.

Whether health reform promotes equity may depend

partly on how health reforms affect key relationships,

not only between clinicians and patients, but also

between clinicians and other team members. This

means creating systems that provide the time, space,

and interpersonal relationships necessary to ensure

high quality primary care. It also means creating pri-

mary care teams in which all members experience and

training are optimally utilized.59 With the diffusion of

health information technology and emerging changes

in payment, transformation to team-based care may

prove to be primary cares greatest challenge. Emerg-

ing data suggest that teams improve patients health

status.60 Transformation to team care, however, is

enormously challenging. Transforming primary care

requires not only major changes in medical training61

but also supportive infrastructure, such as primary care

extension programs and learning collaboratives. Fed-

eral agencies charged with implementing health reform

should take notice.

Assuming health care reforms survive the loom-

ing political and legal land mines during the next four

years, primary care will likely confront a period of

extraordinary change. Success in creating a more equi-

table and patient-responsive health care system may

depend in part on our ability as primary care clinicians

to seize these opportunities and champion systems of

care responsive to the needs of all patients.

To read or post commentaries in response to this article, see it
online at http://www.annfammed.org/cgi/content/full/9/1/78.

Key words: Healthcare disparities; health care reform; primary care;
health policy

Submitted July 20, 2010; submitted, revised, October 18, 2010;
accepted November 7, 2010.

Acknowledgement: Adjuah van Keken assisted with the preparation of
this manuscript.

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