The document discusses Monitor's duties around promoting integrated care and preventing anti-competitive behavior. It outlines Monitor's research into integrated care models and the perceived tensions between choice, competition, and integration. It also describes Monitor's plans to issue guidance on integration and licensing to provide clarity for providers and reduce concerns about competition, while protecting patients' interests.
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Integrating care and preventing anti-competitive behaviour
1. Integrating care and
preventing anti-competitive
behaviour
Amy Caldwell-Nichols and Catherine Pollard
Monitor’s Transition Team
September 18th, 2012
2. Contents:
Introduction to Monitor’s duties and functions
Our research into integrated care
Choice, competition and integrated care
Plans for the future
3. The NHS Commissioning Board have
a leading role around integrated care
NHS CB and CCG duties
“The NHS CB has a duty to promote integrated care where it would
(a) improve quality (including outcomes) or efficiency of services; or
(b) reduce inequalities between persons, in respect of access or the
outcomes achieved.
Promoting integrated care
CCGs have a parallel duty to promote integrated care where it would
(a) improve quality (including outcomes) or efficiency of services; or
(b) reduce inequalities between persons, in respect of access or the outcomes achieved
4. Monitor has duties to enable integrated care
and prevent anti-competitive behaviour
Monitor’s primary duty
“Protect and promote the interests of people who use health care services by promoting
provision of health care services which —
(a) is economic, efficient and effective, and
(b) maintains or improves the quality of the services.”
Enabling integrated care
Enable health care services to be delivered in an integrated way where this would:
(a) improve quality (including outcomes) or efficiency of services; or
(b) reduce inequalities between persons, in respect of access or the outcomes
achieved.
Prevent anti-competitive behaviour
Prevent anti-competitive behaviour in the provision of health care services where this is
against the interests of patients and services users.
5. Integrated care does not have an agreed
definition, but a consensus is emerging
Integrated care is primarily about patients’ experience of
care – it is not necessarily about structures, organisations
and pathways…
…it is about ensuring better outcomes for patients and
service users
The patient or user perspective should be the organising
principle of service delivery
6. We commissioned some research to
guide our policy
Issue Recommendation
Currently perceived as Design strategy to enable
Pricing
barrier integration
Develop guidance to provide
Competition Perceived tension
clarity and dispel concerns
Continuity of Provider distress is risk and Design failure regime to take
service opportunity consider impacts
Licence is the foundation for Licence condition options
Licensing
regulation and guidance
..and corporate • Work closely with other sector players
initiatives • Clear communications
7. We are often asked about how choice
and competition fit with integrated care
Information sharing
?
Cooperation
Forms of integrated service
offer
Merged integrated care
organisations
8. From a competition perspective, 5 forms of
integration have been identified for focus
More Formal Less Formal
Virtual
Mergers teams
Alliances
Clinical
Joint Networks
Ventures
9. How might Monitor assess individual
cases?
Majority Few Rare
Self-Assessment Issue identified Enforcement
Regulator sets Regulator screens Regulator compares
rules out vexatious any competition
complaints impacts to patient
Regulator benefits
publishes Regulator assesses
guidance materiality Decision to permit
or prohibit
Regulator offers
informal advice
10. What will Monitor do to address
concerns?
Make it clear that Monitor is a regulator that knows that its main duty
is to protect and promote the interests of people who use health
care services
Engage with providers and commissioners
Issue guidance and other explanatory materials, in particular:
Choice and Competition Framework for commissioners
Guidance for providers on integrated care, choice and
competition licence conditions
Give advice – possibly in advance of pilots or experiments, as the
CCP does today
Encourage innovation within clear boundaries