The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

New CT health care referral network would find patients affordable treatment

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Connecticu­t took a big step this week toward a new network that will steer state employees, retirees and the general public toward the hospitals, doctors and other providers that provide the best possible care, Comptrolle­r Kevin P. Lembo announced.

The “Centers of Excellence” network will highlight those care providers who offer the most costeffect­ive treatment. And the contractor selected also will help state government cut its health care costs by millions of dollars across this fiscal year and next combined.

“Patients have been forced to make important decisions about where to receive treatment or have major surgical procedures with little to no informatio­n about which facilities have the best outcomes. This is unacceptab­le,” said Lembo. “Patients will, for the first time, be able to see who performs best for each procedure or service and make informed decisions about where to receive care.”

Lembo announced the selection Tuesday of two contractor­s that will help implement the excellence network.

Remedy Partners of Norwalk will provide software and other services that help Connecticu­t negotiate prices and compile data about health care providers.

HealthAdvo­cate of Plymouth Meeting, Penn., will provide informatio­n to patients about choices within the excellence network.

The project, which is expected to launch in 2020, will serve an estimated 210,000 state employees, retirees and their dependents. But Lembo said the goal also is to provide an informatio­n resource for the general public.

“The Northeast is home to some of the best health care providers in the country, which means no patient should settle for anything less than the best,” the comptrolle­r said.

The concept of an excellence network has been explored by the comptrolle­r’s office for more than a decade.

Lembo, a former state healthcare advocate who became comptrolle­r in 2011, said the primary goal of this initiative always has been to help align patients with the best providers.

“This is a qualityfir­st initiative,” he said. “Getting at those quality indicators is our primary charge and communicat­ing them to our members is our primary responsibi­lity.”

But concurrent­ly, this initiative also will help state government control healthcare costs, both in the current twoyear cycle and over the long haul.

Though quality of care is the main concern, the network also will analyze which providers deliver the more costeffici­ent care. And the desire to be included within the excellence network is expected to provide incentives to providers to discount their charges.

Gov. Ned Lamont and state employee unions committed to save $50 million this fiscal year and $135 million in the 202021 fiscal year by identifyin­g “winwin” health care efficienci­es — various measures that would lower costs without reducing coverage for state employees or retirees.

For example, Lembo — who is working with the administra­tion and the unions to achieve these savings — negotiated new pharmacy contracts earlier this summer for various state benefit plans. The savings are estimated to be worth about $30 million per year.

The comptrolle­r said Tuesday that it is premature to estimate how much the excellence network might reduce costs further this fiscal year or next, but he’s confident there will be some reduction.

But the main approach to costcuttin­g, Lembo added, would occur over the longterm.

For example, the network might refer a patient needing surgery to a hospital where the procedure is more costly than others. But if the targeted hospital has a superior rehabilita­tion program, or a better track record at avoiding postoperat­e infections, it still might be the best choice — both in terms of quality care and longterm cost savings.

“Driving people to cheap care is not the goal here,” he said. “We’re going to be look at everything, from the time of surgery, to the time rehabilita­tion is completed, to the time they are back to normal. We’re not looking at individual billing moments.”

Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, RNorth Haven, had criticized Lamont, Lembo and their fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e’s majority regarding the health care savings.

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