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Thomas Bodenheimer Department of Family and
Community Medicine, University of California at San Francisco,
School of Medicine, 1580 Valencia Street, Suite 201, San
Francisco, CA 94110, USA
tbodie{at}earthlink.net
In developed nations, the care of people with chronic
disease consumes a large portion of the total expenditure on health. Yet chronic disease is often poorly treated and inadequately prevented. Disease management was introduced in the 1990s as an attempt to improve
the quality and reduce the cost of caring for people with chronic
disease. The peculiar configuration of disease management programmes in
the United States may provide lessons for countries seeking solutions
to the problem of caring for patients with chronic disease.
This article is based on a Medline search using the term
"disease management," review of websites run by companies engaged in running disease management programmes, and 20 interviews with experts and company executives who work in disease management.
Over the past quarter century, the United States has searched for
ways to control the growth of healthcare costs. Rather than rely on
governmental regulation, the United States has chosen to use the
private marketplace as an instrument of cost cutting.
In the 1980s, the vehicle chosen by large employers and the federal and
state governments to control costs was the health maintenance
organisation.1 Many entrepreneurs interested in making
profits leapt at the opportunity to rescue the healthcare system while
earning a dollar. By 1998, the quick fixes offered by commercial health
maintenance organisations, such as reducing hospital admission rates
and cutting payments to physicians and hospitals, had run their course.
The costs of health care rose again, and Americans reacted strongly
against the fact that executives working for health maintenance
organisations were earning millions while seeming to deny treatments to
sick patients.2
During the mid-1990s, a new movement to control costs developed in the
American healthcare marketplace: disease management.
3 4
This concept was initiated by pharmaceutical companies because they
feared that health maintenance organisations would cut the amount that
they paid for drugs just as they had reduced payments to physicians and
hospitals. Drug companies use databases of drugs that have been
dispensed to identify which patients have chronic diseases and they
then offer educational services to those patients. The drug industry
believed that it could convince employers and health maintenance
organisations to pay for these services and could sell more of their
products as part of the bargain.
4 5
By 1999, about 200 companies were offering disease management
programmes for illnesses such as diabetes, asthma, and congestive heart
failure. Some disease management companies are associated with
pharmaceutical firms: many are not. These disease management companies
sell their programmes to health maintenance organisations, employers,
and hospitals. The disease management industry has been touting its
potential to improve the care of patients with chronic illness while
reducing costs. The website of the Disease Management Purchasing
Consortium and Advisory Council (www.dismgmt.com), perhaps the most
influential organisation in the industry, proclaims: "There is
nothing so powerful as an idea whose time has come."
Who are some of the companies offering disease management services? Who
purchases services from these companies? Do they improve the care of
patients with chronic disease, and do they reduce costs?
Disease management companies come in all shapes and sizes. Cardiac
Solutions, for example, began offering disease management services in
1994. The company has contracts with large health maintenance
organisations such as Humana, Oxford Health Plans, PacifiCare and
United HealthCare. About 9000 patients with conditions such as
congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, hypertension, and
hyperlipidaemia have received services through Cardiac Solutions. Patients who have recently had a myocardial infarction, angioplasty, bypass surgery, or uncontrolled congestive heart failure may enrol in
the company's programme, which offers the services of a disease manager who arranges for the patient to receive help with quitting smoking, reducing cholesterol concentrations, managing stress, exercising, and monitoring of weight and diet to reduce the need for
emergency room or hospital care.6
Control Diabetes Services is a subsidiary of the pharmaceutical
manufacturer Eli Lilly, a manufacturer of insulin products. Since 1992, Control Diabetes has entered into contracts with health maintenance
organisations and other health insurers, giving the company access to a
population of 5 million, including 300 000 people with diabetes. The
company has provided services to over 15 000 people with diabetes,
offering educational sessions and tracking concentrations of glycated
haemoglobin, the frequency of retinal exams, and other measures.
Merck-Medco is a pharmaceutical benefits manager (an organisation that
pays pharmacy claims for health insurers) owned by Merck, a large
pharmaceutical manufacturer.7 In 1993, Merck-Medco Managed
Care began developing disease management services for more than 20 illnesses including asthma, diabetes, depression, migraines, and peptic
ulcer disease.6 The company has access to 50 million
people who are receiving pharmaceutical benefit services from
Merck-Medco and is able to identify which people have which chronic
disease on the basis of the drugs that they purchase. Merck-Medco sends
mailings to patients educating them about their illnesses.
Salick Health Care provides oncology services using proprietary
practice guidelines developed by prominent oncologists.8 The company was acquired by AstraZeneca, the pharmaceutical company that markets bicalutamide for prostate cancer and tamoxifen for breast
cancer. Salick delivers its services through a network of comprehensive
cancer centres and breast cancer centres.
Not all disease management services are performed by specialised
disease management companies. Many such services are offered in-house
by health maintenance organisations, medical groups, and hospitals.
Lovelace Clinic in New Mexico has been a leader in developing disease
management programmes for illnesses such as asthma, coronary heart
disease, epilepsy, low back pain, and osteoporosis. Kaiser-Permanente,
the University of Pennsylvania, and the Henry Ford Health System have
also developed their own disease management programmes.
When a disease management firm enters into a contract with a
client GlaxoWellcome's self management programme for people with asthma has
reported that the number of nights patients were awakened by asthma
symptoms decreased from 1.3 to 0.67 per week as a result of patients
attending educational sessions led by respiratory therapists, nurses,
or pharmacists. Participants reported a 78% decrease in the number of
days spent in hospital as a result of their asthma and a reduction of
49% in emergency room visits associated with asthma.6
GlaxoWellcome manufactures salbutamol (albuterol) and salmeterol asthma inhalers.
Diabetes Treatment Centers of America has boasted of a 10% reduction
in concentrations of glycated haemoglobin among the patients it manages
and a 26% reduction in healthcare costs as a result of reducing the
number of days patients spent in hospital and visits to the emergency
room.9
Humana, a large health maintenance organisation, has a contract with
Ralin Medical to launch a programme for patients with congestive heart
failure. Humana claims to be saving $850 (£531) for each member each
month for patients enrolled in the programme. Ralin is paid only if it
saves money for Humana, and the two organisations share the savings.
The programme claims that hospital admissions decreased by 60% and
total medical costs went down by 55% as a result of nurses making home
visits and maintaining frequent contact by telephone with patients with
heart failure.6
A programme to manage patients with depression, which was supplied by
Integra, is claimed to have reduced costs associated with the illness
by 56% in two years while achieving clinical improvement in 81% of
participants as measured by questionnaires completed by both patients
and providers.6
Academic medical journals have published well designed studies showing
that costs have been reduced and outcomes improved by disease
management efforts particularly in the area of cardiology. In one trial
of nurse directed management of patients with congestive heart failure,
readmission rates and medical costs were lower in the intervention
group than in the control group.10 In another study
comparing patients with congestive heart failure before and after
intervention, a home based system run by nurses reduced rates of
hospital admission and emergency room visits and improved patients'
functional status and exercise capacity.11 In a similar programme aimed at reducing the risk of coronary heart disease, the
intervention group had higher rates of smoking cessation, lower
concentrations of low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and greater
functional capacity than the control group.12
It is too soon to draw firm conclusions about whether disease
management programmes save money. The research organisation Interstudy
identified some surprising results. Only 43% of health maintenance
organisations with diabetes management programmes reported that these
programmes had saved money, and only 27% saved money through
implementing their asthma programmes.6 The figure for
asthma treatment is surprising since proper management of asthma would
be expected rapidly to reduce the number of days spent in hospital and
visits to the emergency room. The data on diabetes are expected since
most savings from diabetes care appear in later years as long term
complications are prevented. Well designed, long term, non-proprietary
studies are needed to confirm the potential cost savings and
enhancement of outcomes to be expected from disease management programmes.
Disease management programmes have the potential to improve care
and reduce the costs of chronic illness. However, certain characteristics of the disease management marketplace may cause concern. Disease management in the United States, whether outsourced to
a corporate vendor or performed within a commercial health maintenance
organisation, largely takes place within the for profit healthcare
sector. Problems that are likely to arise in the disease management
movement mirror difficulties that have surfaced in health maintenance
organisations. Perhaps disease management advocates can learn from the
experiences of health maintenance organisations over the past two decades.
Questionable cost savings
Summary points
The goal of disease management programmes is to improve the
quality and reduce the cost of caring for patients with chronic disease
Many disease management programmes in the United States are run by
commercial firms that sell their programmes to employers, health
maintenance organisations, and hospitals
Some disease management programmes cut costs and improve outcomes,
however the data are not conclusive for the disease management movement
in general
Commercial disease management programmes may take needed money away
from actual caregiving in order to enhance companies' profits
Disease management should be performed within healthcare institutions
and be integrated with primary care rather than being outsourced to
specialised commercial entities
![]()
Methods
![]()
Why disease management?
![]()
The disease management marketplace
![]()
Costs down, outcomes up
often a health maintenance organisation or large employer
to provide services, the firm selling the services must convince the
client that it will reduce the client's costs. Ideally, the firm can
also bring about an improvement in the outcome of those patients with a
chronic disease. Some studies have identified reductions in costs and
improvement in outcomes, although such studies are seldom randomised,
double blinded, or peer reviewed, and the data supporting the
conclusions may be proprietary rather than public.
![]()
Hazards of commercial disease management
Data initially showed that health maintenance organisations
reduced the costs of health care, especially hospital care, when
compared with traditional fee for service healthcare institutions.13 Yet a recent study has suggested that
health maintenance organisations are able to reduce hospital costs by less than 1% per year.14 Enthusiasm for health
maintenance organisations by large employers who saw them as the answer
to reducing healthcare costs is waning as employers' expenses resume
their upward trend.
15 16
Is it possible that the
promising cost savings of disease management will similarly evaporate
in a few years?
Profit should not be the measure of success
A number of health maintenance organisations have pulled out of
less profitable markets.18 Similarly, disease management
firms could forsake certain diseases or certain populations because of
business considerations. In contrast, community oriented programmes are
based in part on meeting medical needs rather than purely on achieving
commercial success.
The disorganisation of care
Health maintenance organisations that provide care through
contracted networks of providers fragment the delivery of health care.
Physicians are frequently unable to send patients to specialists,
ancillary services, or hospitals near their offices because those
facilities do not have contracts with the patient's health maintenance
organisation. Similarly, disease management firms, by removing the care
of patients from the coordinating function of their primary care
physicians and channelling them to one programme for diabetes, another
for hyperlipidaemia, and yet another for congestive heart failure, can
create major irrationalities in the organisation of care.4
Skimming off profits
With their high levels of administrative expenditures and
executive compensation, health maintenance organisations have skimmed
billions of dollars from the healthcare economy.
19 20
Disease management companies could do likewise. Take the example of a
disease management firm that enters into a contract with a medical
group to organise classes for patients with diabetes. The firm
subcontracts with local diabetes centres to provide classes. Funds flow
from the medical group to the disease management firm to the diabetes
centre situated in the same building as the medical group. Would it not
be more efficient for the medical group to send patients with diabetes
directly to the diabetes centre without going through the disease
management middleman?
| |
Conclusion |
|---|
Disease management programmes show promise in improving the care
of patients with chronic illnesses. But commercial disease management
may have damaging, unintended consequences for healthcare systems.
Healthcare institutions should initiate in-house disease management
programmes that assist primary care physicians in doing a better job
rather than outsourcing growing portions of health care to specialised
commercial outfits.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Competing interests: None declared.
| |
References |
|---|
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