The Georgia Health Policy Center
(GHPC) develops health policy recommendations and implementation strategies
to improve health care quality, access and costs. The center moved into
the Andrew Young School in 1998 and houses a team of health care policy
experts led by James Cooney,
Monica Herk and Karen
Minyard, GHPC director, whose current work in the areas of long-term
care and end-of-life improvements, children's health and well-being, and
networks for rural health, respectively, are making a difference in Georgia.
Where is grandma today - nursing home or hospital? Is this decision made
as much by her health status as by what her insurer will pay for - and
how does that impact her health? What changes must state agencies make
to better meet the multiple needs of children in its care? How can Georgia's
rural communities improve access to insurance, physicians and other health
care providers? These are the types of issues the GHPC addresses.
"We anticipate using the GHPC long-term care study to get broader
support in the legislature for continued improvements to Medicaid,"
said Mark Trail, director of the Division of Medical Assistance in Georgia's
Department of Community Health. His hope is echoed in a variety of ways
by state and local policy leaders in elder care, children's services and
rural health who have similar expectations for the center's research and
recommendations in their areas.
As long as changing demographics and rising pressure on public resources
dictate the need for greater improvements and efficiencies in health care,
the Georgia Health Policy Center will aid governing authorities in developing
recommendations and strategies to improve services and costs for all affected
populations, ensuring that those who Ambassador Young calls "the
least of these, God's children," do not fall through the cracks.
Long-Term Care: Health Insurance Is Not Enough
Health insurance itself is not always sufficient to provide economical
access to appropriate health care services, and this is especially the
case with
long-term care services," said James
Cooney, professor of Health Administration and associate director
of the Georgia Health Policy Center.
"Most people who use long-term care services are eligible for both
federal Medicare and state Medicaid. But the policies and administration
of these public insurers are not integrated, so care patterns can lack
continuity, negatively affect quality and be unnecessarily expensive."
He warned that given the rapid growth of the elderly population, the problems
in Medicare and Medicaid long-term care policy would seriously accelerate.
Under Cooney's direction, the GHPC in 1996 began a series of studies
to better understand the problems inherent in existing long-term care
insurance financing and to identify effective options for the state. In
1999 Cooney and his associates discovered an unusual pattern of frequent
and rapid nursing facility-to-hospital transfers of the frail elderly
they labeled "the churning effect." They speculated the transfers
were related to conflicting incentives between the Medicare and Medicaid
programs. Cooney interested both the state and federal government in this
finding, and obtained support for expanded work to understand the problem
and identify public policy solutions.
"This churning phenomenon needs to be understood and its problems
dealt with," said Bill Clark, with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services (CMS) in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He
noted Cooney's latest research would link Medicaid data from the state
and Medicare data from CMS. "Only when you bring these two pieces
together do you see the full cost and consequences of care. I think it's
a very good approach - and it is also timely."
"Look at the demographics of our society," said Clark. "When
baby boomers begin to retire, in 10 to 11 years, long-term care issues
will become even more important, their cost to society far greater. These
issues can perhaps be looked at and solved more easily now than in 15
to 20 years."
Cost issues are critical to care. Georgia's Medicaid payments were nearly
two-thirds of the state's Department of Community Health expenditures
in 2000. "The Medicaid 'fact' all too frequently missed," said
Cooney, "is that although this program's aged, blind and disabled
population is the smallest proportion of Medicaid-eligible - 27 percent
in Georgia - it consumes 65 percent of Medicaid's resources annually.
"What we face, given a growing elderly population, is an alarming
increase in long-term care costs that could, unchecked, eventually consume
the total Medicaid budget," said Cooney, "unless there are serious
and coordinated policy revisions between Medicaid and Medicare."
The Center's current study focuses on more than 45,000 Georgians admitted
to long-term care service in 1999; their care and costs will be tracked
for the year before and the year after their 1999 admission. The goal
is twofold: to get a more complete look at the churning effect and its
cost and quality consequences to nursing facilities, their patients and
insurers, and to evaluate home and community-based alternatives to nursing
facilities. The study team includes Glenn Landers, associate long-term
care project director at GHPC, faculty from GSU's Robinson College of
Business and researchers from the Kerr L. White Institute for Health Services
Research.
"We pay a lot of money for long-term care," said Trail, who
runs Georgia's Medicaid program, "but without having comprehensive
access to Medicare records, we have not been able to truly measure the
costs of serving these patients or their quality of care. Cooney's research
will facilitate such access."
Trail continued, "Improved cost understanding will instruct us on
how to improve our policy and consider the most efficient use of resources.
It will instruct various long-term care providers, as well as the state,
on quality-of-care improvements. Finally, it should help open conversations
with Medicare on ways to improve care and share savings."
"It is critical to understand the patterns of use in long-term care,
and how policy decisions affect the quality of life and quality of health
care in our state and nation," said Clark. "Ultimately, in a
rapidly aging society, we must know where the inefficiencies are and find
ways to avoid placing patients in settings where they may not need to
be."
Dr. James P. Cooney, Jr., principal investigator for the long-term care
studies, has researched, taught and administered programs at Georgia State
University for 12 years. Before serving as associate director of the Health
Policy Center and professor of health administration, he was dean of Health
Sciences at GSU. While dean, Cooney facilitated the creation of the GHPC
on the Georgia State campus. Glenn M. Landers, a health policy analyst
and associate project director at the GHPC, is also researching access
to care for the uninsured with a study of the Indigent Care Trust Fund
in Georgia.
Child Policy Initiative Supports Governor's
Action Group
GHPC's
Child Policy Initiative received a major gift from United Parcel Service
in 2001 that enabled it to expand its scope beyond child health into a
broader range of child policy issues. Its early findings got the attention
of Governor Roy Barnes, who asked the initiative to provide research support
for his Action Group for Safe Children, formed in January to recommend
policies to improve the state's child protective services.
The Action Group will present policy recommendations on how to improve
Georgia's placement system for children going into state custody. With
these findings, the state plans to develop a more effective and compassionate
model to replace its current system. The initiative's new director, Monica
Herk, and her staff are collaborating with the Governor's Office of Planning
and Budget to provide key technical support, background research and information
to help shape discussions.
"The Child Policy Initiative's role in supporting this group will
be instrumental in focusing the array of public, private and nonprofit
service providers on solutions that work. It will help them improve quality,
facilitate access and improve efficiency by coordinating all services
provided to children and families," said Sally Rosser, member of
the Governor's Action Group for Safe Children and an AYSPS Advisory Board
member.
"The issues the state is facing are very complex. In the past our
approach has focused on narrow pieces of the child and has failed to interconnect
the multiple agencies and private providers that all have an impact on
children and families," said Rosser. "The initiative's multidisciplinary
approach, supported by rigorous academic research, will allow greater
opportunity for successful outcomes."
Herk agrees. "Even if a child initially has only one problem in
his or her life, that problem can ultimately affect the child along multiple
dimensions - emotional, physical, educational and so on. Many of the children
the state encounters are facing more than one issue in their lives. A
multidisciplinary approach allows us to examine all effects more fully
and view the child as a whole.
"In addition to our work with the Governor's Action Group, the Child
Policy Initiative provides broad policy research that is relevant to the
state," said Herk. "To improve outcomes for Georgia's children,
we must look systematically at what has worked, what doesn't work and
promising options for the future. We're looking at positive programs within
Georgia and nationally at other models that hold promise for the state."
Monica Herk joined the Child
Policy Initiative in November with nine years of child policy and advocacy
experience in Georgia. Most recently she served as the executive director
of Healthy Mothers, Healthy Babies of Georgia, a nonprofit organization
devoted to promoting maternal and child health.
Networks for Rural Health a National Model
Rural Georgians want better access to insurance, physicians and other
health care providers. GHPC's Networks for Rural Health has found that
this population recognizes the linkages that exist among their health
systems, health status and the economic viability of their communities,
yet many fear their health care systems are crumbling.
Networks
for Rural Health (NRH) was contracted by the state's Office of Rural Health
Services to provide intensive technical assistance to Georgia communities
with fragile health care systems. "With the first project we helped
communities develop some great planning ideas, but they often lacked the
resources to implement them," said Tina
Anderson Smith, interim director for NRH.
So NRH began building relationships with foundations in Georgia that
led to a new round of programs including the Access Georgia Rural Health
Matching Grants Initiative, a partnership of the Philanthropic Collaborative
for a Healthy Georgia and the Georgia Department of Community Health.
Access Georgia couples technical assistance with grants. In January, nine
rural health care collaboratives serving 37 counties were awarded nearly
$1.8 million by the Department of Community Health, the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and the Philanthropic Collaborative to improve service access
and eliminate health disparities in rural Georgia. NRH directs the initiative
and provides a broad range of technical assistance to help ensure the
grantees' success. "These collaboratives are community-based,"
said Anderson Smith, "and have expanded beyond health care providers
to include local governments, business leaders, faith-based organizations
and other civic groups."
In addition to working at the community level, NRH is advancing state-level
initiatives that will build community capacity and strengthen rural Georgia's
health care infrastructure. For instance, rural physicians are critical
to successful collaborations, yet it has been difficult to get them involved.
In response, the NRH is working with the Fanning Leadership Institute
at the University of Georgia and all state medical schools to tap into
this core of rural physician champions. NRH expects to launch the first
"Rural Physician Leadership Institute" in the fall to grow this
essential leadership base.
"Georgia has emerged as a leader in the community health system
development arena because of investments that have been made to improve
access to health care and health status throughout the state. State government,
foundations, communities and the Georgia Health Policy Center at AYSPS
have all made major investments, and the results are getting recognized,"
said Anderson Smith.
She said a lot of people are looking to Georgia to learn what to do.
With the Community Health Systems Development Institute, "We are
helping other states develop the infrastructure to do this work statewide,
as we have done here." Its second annual conference is in June.
Karen
Minyard in May agreed to serve as director of the Georgia Health Policy
Center. She has worked for years with rural Georgia communities to help
design systems that provide access to health care as private, state and
federal revenue streams decrease. Tina Anderson Smith, rural health systems
developer for the GHPC, travels the state helping rural communities assess
systems, collect and evaluate data, plan and implement strategies for
building viable local health systems and regional partnerships.
For more information go to the Georgia
Health Policy Center, to Georgia
Kids.com, and to the Networks
for Rural Health.
Photos from top: 1) Monica Herk; 2) James Cooney; 3) Sally Rosser; 4)
Karen Minyard, GHPC director, and Dean Bahl
|