The Norwalk Hour

Gifford appointed head of state’s health strategy office

- By Jenna Carlesso

Gov. Ned Lamont has selected Deidre Gifford, the state’s social services commission­er, to take over as head of the Office of Health Strategy, where officials are managing Connecticu­t’s certificat­e of need process on health system closures, expansions and consolidat­ions, and monitoring the rising cost of health care across the state.

Gifford has been head of the social services department since 2019. She was also appointed interim commission­er of public health in 2020 after Gov. Ned Lamont fired then-leader Renee ColemanMit­chell, leaving Gifford to work in dual roles during the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic. She remained acting public health commission­er until September 2021, when Dr. Manisha Juthani took over.

Andrea Barton Reeves, chief executive officer of the Connecticu­t Paid Family and Medical Leave Insurance Authority, will replace Gifford as commission­er of social services. At the Office of Health Strategy, Gifford will take up the position vacated by Victoria Veltri, who had been in the role since the office was created in 2018 and left at the end of June.

“A well-coordinate­d, comprehens­ive approach to public health and health care access is vital to supporting the basic needs of the people of our state, and I am thrilled that we are assembling a team of the most dedicated, educated and respected profession­als in this field who will be able to hit the ground running as we begin

our second term,” Lamont said Wednesday.

“After two and a half years of COVID, how we know how important universal quality, affordable health care is for every one of our citizens. I know how important it is for small business. … And getting that right is priority number one.”

Gifford said a primary focus in her new job will be health equity.

“One of the less prominent roles that OHS has taken on is to lead some of the work around equity. We’re doing a study on how to make sure we’re collecting appropriat­e data on race, ethnicity and language across our state health programs,” she said. “I really want to continue to focus on that work.”

This year, the Office of Health Strategy developed a tool called

the Health Care Affordabil­ity Index, which uses several factors, such as insurance type, family size, health status and age, to determine health care costs and affordabil­ity. Gifford said she was struck by some of the findings.

“I was reviewing some of the affordabil­ity index work, where they show that almost one in five working families in Connecticu­t would have to limit their spending on things like housing, food and clothing in order to afford their health care costs.

“A health system that only works for part of the residents of the state isn’t a high-functionin­g health system. We’ve got to have a system that provides equal access for everybody.”

Following double-digit rate hikes approved this year for fully insured health plans, including those on Connecticu­t’s insurance exchange, Access Health CT, state officials and lawmakers have begun to think about how they might propose policy changes to help curb the rising cost of health care. Hospital and pharmaceut­ical costs are two areas they are looking into ahead of the legislativ­e session that begins in January.

The Office of Health Strategy has started a cost growth benchmarki­ng program, setting annual benchmarks for the ballooning price of health care by requiring providers, insurers and others in the industry to report their yearly increases.

The program is designed to expose the hospitals, medical practices and insurance companies whose costs soar beyond the state-imposed targets. There is no penalty for those who exceed the benchmarks, but officials say the annual reporting mandate will create public pressure to keep costs down.

The findings are also likely to help inform legislatio­n during the upcoming session. Some lawmakers have already cited the office’s work when discussing bills they hope to raise.

“If you look at the pre-benchmarki­ng work that OHS has released, there are really two primary areas where cost growth is concentrat­ed: in pharmacy and in hospital spending — not just inpatient, but also outpatient,” Gifford said. “You have to follow the money. If the cost growth is in pharmacy and hospital, then those are the areas where we need to focus and we need to partner.

“There should be a big emphasis on partnering with payers, providers — including hospitals — and employers who pay for a lot of the health care in the state and have a huge stake in making sure health care remains affordable for them and their employees. We can’t have health care costs becoming a drag on the economy.”

With health care consolidat­ion and its effect on patients in the spotlight, a task force has convened to review the state’s Certificat­e of Need process and suggest modificati­ons. Hospitals that wish to shut down services such as labor and delivery, or open a new unit, must go through the certificat­e of need process, overseen by OHS.

Gifford said she will look at any recommenda­tions the task force submits as she steps into her new position.

“It’s important to look at health care consolidat­ion and its impacts on cost growth,” Gifford said. “It has the promise of being more efficient, providing better access and better integratio­n for patients. But we have seen evidence that consolidat­ion does drive cost, and the impact on quality is sort of mixed.

“It’s important for us to be looking at, talking about and thinking about the impacts of consolidat­ion and if there any ways to mitigate some of the adverse impacts.”

Gifford and Barton Reeves’ appointmen­ts must still be confirmed by the General Assembly. Lamont said he will forward their nomination­s to the legislatur­e soon after his second term begins on Jan. 4.

 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Dr. Deidre Gifford has been serving as the state’s commission­er over social services since 2019.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Dr. Deidre Gifford has been serving as the state’s commission­er over social services since 2019.

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