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Episode 91: Stephen Furia on Mt. Sinai’s principles of success for direct to purchaser relationships

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Manage episode 283845650 series 1602067
Indhold leveret af Listening In (with Permission...) and Catalyst for Payment Reform. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af Listening In (with Permission...) and Catalyst for Payment Reform eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.
CPR’s Program Director, Andréa Caballero, chats with Stephen Furia, Senior Vice President, Population Health at Mount Sinai Health System, one of the largest health systems in New York with 3,000 physicians, 400 locations, and a world renown medical school. The Population Health division is the business unit within Mount Sinai that works directly with employers and other health care purchasers, providing an array of services including primary care focused near-site health centers, Centers of Excellence arrangements for specialty care, executive health programs, and, more recently, assisting employers in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Reflecting on the Mount Sinai's five years of partnering with those who pay for health care, Stephen offers a set of principles that illustrate how the health system has successfully achieved maximum value in its direct to purchaser partnerships. Those principles are: • Investing more in primary care; • Referring to high-value providers for specialty care, when necessary; • Aligning incentives to promote value; • Encouraging healthy competition among providers in a given market. Listen in to hear Stephen’s explanation of what these principles look like in action for Mount Sinai as it delivers a transformed health care experience to its more than 40 purchaser clients. For starters, the health system’s primary care offering incorporates navigation and care management services to accompany patients from symptom onset to end of treatment and takes a holistic approach to disease prevention. Sound familiar to the models of others like Iora Health and OneMedical? That’s not a coincidence, according to Stephen- these best practices have been adopted throughout the country, marking a move away from away from the disaggregated model of multiple niche vendors filling in the gaps and moving to a broader definition of what high-value primary care entails. Stephen emphasizes how benefit managers play an important role in the success of care delivery transformation. A provider like Mount Sinai may be more willing to take on financial risk in an arrangement where the employer has specific tools in place, such as communications to make employees aware of the offerings and benefit design that makes primary care an easier and cheaper options for patients to access. Finally, Stephen reiterates a resounding truth about transforming care delivery: no one can do it alone. For Mount Sinai, that means collaborating with not only the purchaser itself, to understand the purchaser’s specific needs and pain points, but with the purchaser’s advisors and health plan administrators as well.
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129 episoder

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Manage episode 283845650 series 1602067
Indhold leveret af Listening In (with Permission...) and Catalyst for Payment Reform. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af Listening In (with Permission...) and Catalyst for Payment Reform eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.
CPR’s Program Director, Andréa Caballero, chats with Stephen Furia, Senior Vice President, Population Health at Mount Sinai Health System, one of the largest health systems in New York with 3,000 physicians, 400 locations, and a world renown medical school. The Population Health division is the business unit within Mount Sinai that works directly with employers and other health care purchasers, providing an array of services including primary care focused near-site health centers, Centers of Excellence arrangements for specialty care, executive health programs, and, more recently, assisting employers in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Reflecting on the Mount Sinai's five years of partnering with those who pay for health care, Stephen offers a set of principles that illustrate how the health system has successfully achieved maximum value in its direct to purchaser partnerships. Those principles are: • Investing more in primary care; • Referring to high-value providers for specialty care, when necessary; • Aligning incentives to promote value; • Encouraging healthy competition among providers in a given market. Listen in to hear Stephen’s explanation of what these principles look like in action for Mount Sinai as it delivers a transformed health care experience to its more than 40 purchaser clients. For starters, the health system’s primary care offering incorporates navigation and care management services to accompany patients from symptom onset to end of treatment and takes a holistic approach to disease prevention. Sound familiar to the models of others like Iora Health and OneMedical? That’s not a coincidence, according to Stephen- these best practices have been adopted throughout the country, marking a move away from away from the disaggregated model of multiple niche vendors filling in the gaps and moving to a broader definition of what high-value primary care entails. Stephen emphasizes how benefit managers play an important role in the success of care delivery transformation. A provider like Mount Sinai may be more willing to take on financial risk in an arrangement where the employer has specific tools in place, such as communications to make employees aware of the offerings and benefit design that makes primary care an easier and cheaper options for patients to access. Finally, Stephen reiterates a resounding truth about transforming care delivery: no one can do it alone. For Mount Sinai, that means collaborating with not only the purchaser itself, to understand the purchaser’s specific needs and pain points, but with the purchaser’s advisors and health plan administrators as well.
  continue reading

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