County plan gets funds to improve care
Federal grant is aimed at boosting quality while also cutting healthcare costs.
Many residents of Los Angeles County might soon find they are getting more attention and questions from their doctors.
That’s because L.A. Care Health Plan — a public plan in L.A. County with more than 1.8 million members — received a $15.8-million federal grant last week to help change the way physicians interact with patients and deliver care.
The funding, part of the Transforming Clinical Practice Initiative, is supposed to help achieve a key goal of Obamacare: Improve primary and preventive care and thereby reduce healthcare costs. The Affordable Care Act promotes the idea that keeping people healthy, both by providing quality care to patients and catching diseases early, prevents the need for expensive medical care and saves money in the long run.
“Supporting doctors and other healthcare professionals change the way they work is critical to improving quality and spending our healthcare dollars more wisely,” U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said in a statement.
The department awarded a total of $685 million to 39 medical groups, healthcare systems and professional organizations across the country as part of the initiative.
In L.A. County, coaches will visit the offices of 3,100 clinicians who are part of the L.A. Care Health Plan, which serves patients in two government-subsidized insurance programs: MediCal and Covered California. The coaches will work with doctors to improve coordination of care and reduce serious illnesses, said Mary Franz, the plan’s senior executive director of health information technology.
Patients will receive more health information and be asked to play a more active role in their medical care, she said.
In some cases, a doctor’s office may proactively reach out to patients who need help with nutrition and improving their diet, she said.
There will be an emphasis on care that can avoid or reduce costly treatment in the future, including working more closely with diabetes patients to manage medicines and what they eat.
Franz’s team will collect data during the four-year grant period to learn what works and what doesn’t, she said.
“We’re very excited about this,” she said. “That we can provide this ... for the underserved population, that really means a lot.”
Another Southland organization, Children’s Hospital of Orange County, also received a grant, of $17.6 million, through the initiative. The money will be used to examine ways to reduce costs associated with six common pediatric conditions, including asthma, headaches and acne.