Pennsylvania

In response to Pennsylvania’s growing chronic disease burden and its impact on healthcare spending, the Governor issued Executive Order 2007-05 on May 21, 2007. This order created the Pennsylvania Chronic Care Management, Reimbursement and Cost Reduction Commission, also known as the Chronic Care Commission. The Commission proposed and then implemented the Pennsylvania Chronic Care Initiative (CCI) designed to achieve four strategic goals:

  • Widespread use of a new primary care reimbursement model that rewards PCMH care based on the Chronic Care Model.
  • Broad dissemination of the Chronic Care Model to primary care practices across Pennsylvania, through regional chronic care learning collaboratives. 
  • Achievement of tangible and measurable improvement in patiient satisfaction, access to care, health outcomes and quality of life.
  • Reduction in the cost of providing chronic care with the reduction of avoidable hospitalizations and emergency room visits and mechanisms to ensure that some of the savings are realized by all entities paying for health care. 

The first rollout (Southeast PA) started in May 2008 and six more learning collaboratives were launched through December 2009, involving a total of 152 mostly small and medium-size primary care practices and 640 providers (75% of the practices have 5 or fewer FTE providers). In four of PA’s seven regions, 17 payers, including Medicaid, provided $30 million in infrastructure payments to practices to support transformation. Since 2009, the state’s contracts with Medicaid managed care organizations (MCOs) have required MCOs to participate in the CCI. Phase II of the CCI began in January 2012 with funding from the Multi-payer Advanced Primary Care Practice demonstration.

CHIPRA: 
Yes
MAPCP: 
No
Dual Eligible: 
No
2703 Health Home: 
No
CPCi: 
No
SIM Awards: 
Yes
PCMH in QHP: 
No
Legislative PCMH Initiative: 
Yes
Private Payer Program: 
Yes
State Facts: 
Population:
12,759,200
Uninsured Population:
10%
Total Medicaid Spending FY 2013: 
$21.0 Billion 
Overweight/Obese Adults:
64.5%
Poor Mental Health among Adults: 
35.5%
Medicaid Expansion: 
Yes

Medical Home Innovations at the State Level

2014-04-24 13:00 to 14:00

Medical home implementation and innovation at the state level plays an important role in improving health care quality while reducing costs. Several states are leading the nation in efforts to study and implement integrative primary care, and are showing impressive improvements in cost and quality outcomes. This month's webinar will provide an overview of the innovative work being done in participating Multi-Payer Advanced Primary Care Practices across the country and will highlight recent results from Independence Blue Cross' medical home model in Pennsylvania. 

Announcement Type: 

Highmark to expand patient-centered medical home efforts to improve care and health outcomes for members

Highmark Press Release

Based on the success of its one-year pilot program, Highmark Inc. announced today that it is expanding its patient-centered medical home (PCMH) initiative to include nearly 1,050 primary care doctors in more than 100 physician practices that cover about 171,000 Highmark members in western and central Pennsylvania and West Virginia. The original program, initiated in 2011, included 160 primary care doctors in 12 practices that cover about 45,000 members.

News Author: 
Leilyn Perri

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Pennsylvania
Go to top