While the pandemic undoubtedly spurred the dramatic increase in telehealth adoption among payers and providers this year, most health care leaders agree that this new normal has become so integral to the member experience that there is no turning back.
Many payers are now adopting telehealth to accomplish a variety of objectives tied to enrollment and revenue growth. Here are 10 key areas of focus for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans in the coming year and how telehealth can help solve them.
1. Retain current plan members and attract new enrollees.
All you need to do is turn on the television at this time of year to hear about all the competing MA plans that are trying to attract your member during the “only chance they get to change plans this year.”
With so much competition in the MA landscape, you need to be at the top of your member retention game; offering covered services via telehealth is now more of an expectation than a nice-to-have member benefit.
2. Maintain or raise Star rating to 4 or 5 stars. Under
CMS Star Ratings, plans need to achieve 4 or more stars to receive a five percent bonus payment. Starting next year, the patient experience, access to care and member complaints category will start to shift from a weight of one to four over the next three years. Telehealth appointments offer quicker, simpler access to care for all; even among the 65+ population, members enjoy telehealth. Among older adults who had telehealth visits in Spring 2020,
91 percent said accessing their doctor virtually was an easy experience.
3. Improve member satisfaction and raise CAHPS scores.
The CAHPS Health Plan Survey — the
AHRQ’s measure of member experience — asks members to rate their experience with communication and access to care. Telehealth offers payers a chance to communicate in the way members prefer to in their daily lives — digitally — making it essential to a seamless member experience and broad access to providers for many of the most common doctor visits. In the age of COVID, many members will prefer remote visits whenever possible to eliminate the possibility of entering situations where they might be infected.
4. Improve HEDIS scores. HEDIS, the NCQA’s measure of plan performance, looks at utilization, outcomes, access, experience and more. Like CMS, the organization is focused on telehealth and
updated HEDIS measures this year to better align with the new wave of virtual care. Plans can leverage telehealth visits to improve their performance on these key measures.
5. Increase Health Risk Assessments (HRAs).
Annual risk assessments are a critical opportunity for your plan to update member conditions and ensure you’re getting the right reimbursement for member care. Telehealth gives plans yet another avenue to drive these visits, at a lower cost yet without losing efficacy. The added convenience makes it easier for members to “visit” and for doctors to assess more patients.
6. Provide continuity of care during the pandemic and beyond. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic,
Medicare plan member interest in telehealth has increased from 5% to 20%. COVID-19 infections are expected to continue to rise this winter, and some of your older plan members continue to delay care due to concerns about the safety of in-person visits. Virtual visits will help you ensure that members feel cared for and have access to care under their plan by allowing some care to happen remotely.
With CMS becoming increasingly vigilant about
MA plans providing ongoing chronic care management, it is even more important that plans make sure their highest-risk members are followed up with regularly and are directed to appropriate treatments for their conditions. Covering these via telehealth visits is an affordable option for plans and makes it more likely that these chronically ill members will be seen.
7. Reduce no shows with automated appointment reminders.
Just as you receive email reminders when you sign up for a webinar, sending automatic appointment reminders by email and text (not phone) goes hand-in-hand with the digital experience of telemedicine services. And, email and text reminders are proven to decrease missed appointments and drive higher revenue. In one study, patients who received
text reminders were 25 percent less likely to result in no-shows; multiple reminders increased the chances the patient would show up. If done correctly, the reminders can include the instructions and “log in” details for the telehealth visit.
8. Reduce costly duplicative care.
Plans can encourage their provider networks to use telehealth for quick virtual visits when it’s unclear if a specialist visit is necessary. And providers can be encouraged to use telehealth services for eConsults with other providers to receive guidance on patient care. Either case allows for more efficient, value-based care.
9. Catch health care concerns sooner/offer faster access to care.
On the flip side of reducing unnecessary care is identifying urgent health issues before they worsen. Offering virtual visits can, in many cases, allow a member to see the doctor sooner. It goes without saying that when your plan can identify patients in need of urgent care faster, you have a better chance of reducing ED visits and admissions, improving health outcomes and saving on the total cost of member care.
10. Provide a more coordinated care experience.Any telehealth software you use should display related clinical notes in the same view where the appointment takes place. Giving providers convenient access to see clinical data right in the same interface makes for a more streamlined appointment experience. Also important: specialists should have the ability to take notes during the appointment and send the information back to their EMR as well as to the referring provider to let them know the appointment was completed successfully and what happened, closing the loop on patient care.