1. F5 Point-of-Care Assessment of
Response to High-Cost Specialty
Therapy: Real-World Experience
in Outcomes-Based Contracting
Nathan White, CPC
Sal Rafanelli, RPh
Fred Brownfield, RPh
2. Learning Objectives
1.) Explain the rationale and societal promise of outcomes-based
contracting programs to the health care industry as a whole, and the
specialty pharmaceutical industry specifically.
2.) Discuss the socioeconomic and business benefits to patients,
providers, payers, specialty pharmacies, and manufacturers of a
response-to-therapy innovative contracting program.
3.) Identify the clinical and economic considerations in designing an
outcomes-based contract as well as potential outcomes, and per
member per month or per member per year cost savings to a payer.
4.) Describe clinical algorithms and utilization management pathways
for automated non-responder risk assessment.
3. Continuing Pharmacy Education Credit
• Log-in to AMCP Learn at http://amcplearn.org/
– *PLEASE NOTE: USE THIS EXACT URL
• Follow instructions available on amcpmeetings.org
• Have available:
– NABP e-profile ID
– Birth month and birthday
– Session-specific attendance code
• Complete and submit session evaluation no later than
May 23, 2016 (5:00 PM ET)
• Information in CPE Monitor approximately 72 hours
after submission completion
4. Financial Relationship Disclosures
• Nathan White reports-
– eMAX Health: Employee
– NucleusX Market Access: Employee (Self) Salary ; is
employed by Company
• Sam Rafanelli reports-
– BiologicTx: Employee (Self) Salary
• Fred Brownfield reports having no financial
relationships with any commercial interests
during the past 12 months
5. AMCP Antitrust Guidelines
• AMCP’s policy is to comply fully and strictly with all
federal and state antitrust laws.
• This session will be monitored for any antitrust
violations and will be stopped by the session
monitor if any such violation occurs.
• Please refer to page 5 of the final program or
www.amcp.org/antitrust for more information.
8. Faculty
Fred Brownfield, BSPharm
Strategic Consultant - Innovative
Contracting, Humana Pharmacy
Solutions
Humana Inc.
Louisville, Kentucky
Sal Rafanelli, RPh
Chief Operating Officer and
Co-Founder
BiologicTx
Totowa, New Jersey
Nathan White, CPC
Managing Director, Head of Market
Access, eMAX Health, White Plains,
New York
10. Demographic Question
What title best describes your current
position?
a. Payer
b. Manufacturer
c. Consultant
d. Retail, community or hospital pharmacist
e. Academic
f. Student
g. Other
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320389
b. 320391
c. 320392
d. 320393
e. 320395
f. 320396
g. 320397
h. 320398
i. 320399
12. Learning Assessment Question #1
Out of the following disease categories,
which would benefit the most from
outcomes-based contracting?
a. Rheumatoid arthritis
b. Next-gen hepatitis C
c. Diabetes
d. Multiple sclerosis
e. Cholesterol management
f. Oncology
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320400
b. 320403
c. 320404
d. 320405
e. 320411
f. 320412
14. Learning Assessment Question #2
Of the following, what is the greatest
challenge to implementing an outcomes-
based contract?
a. Parties averse to financial risk
b. Corporate structures get in the way
c. Difficulty in gathering and analyzing
clinical data
d. Parties don’t see true value in the
arrangement
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320413
b. 320415
c. 320416
d. 320423
16. Learning Assessment Question #3
Outcomes-based contracting in the US
started in what year?
a. 2001
b. 2005
c. 2009
d. 2015
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320431
b. 320456
c. 320460
d. 320461
18. Learning Assessment Question #4
Who has been more active in promoting
movement towards an outcomes-based
contracting environment?
a. Payers
b. Manufacturers
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320462
b. 320463
22. #1: UNSUSTAINABLE COSTS
Inappropriate healthcare resource utilization leads to high costs and poor quality of care.
SOURCES:
1Becher EC, Chassin MR. Improving the quality of healthcare: who will lead? Health Aff. 2001;20:68-81.
2ASPE analysis of IMS Health NPA data from October 2009 to September 2015.
US spent an estimated $128B on “non-retail” prescription drugs in 2015.
$2.729 Trillion
2015 Total Healthcare
Spending
$457 Billion 2015 RX Spend
72% Retail
Misuse of healthcare resources in the US amounts
to roughly 30% of all healthcare costs1
30%
$2.729 Trillion
2015 Total Healthcare
Spending
“Non-retail” prescription spending represented
28% of the $457B spent on prescription drugs
RX drug spending accounted for 17% of total
healthcare spend ($457 billion)2
17%
28% Non-retail
23. #2: DISPROPORTIONATE SPENDING
90%
100%
110%
120%
130%
140%
150%
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Relative Cumulative Growth in Retail Expenditures and Retail
Prescription Units, 2009 to 20151
Retail
Revenues
Retail
Prescription
Units
In six years, a nearly 30-point gap has arisen between
retail expenditures and retail prescription units.
The widening gap between RX revenues and RX volume is indicative of trends toward increasingly high-
cost treatments and continuing price increases.
SOURCES:
1ASPE analysis of IMS Health NPA data from October 2009 to September 2015.
24. #3: ACCESS BARRIERS
SOURCES:
1www.express-scripts.com; www.caremark.com
2http://khn.org/news/large-employers-look-to-tighten-control-of-costs-for-expensive-drugs/
Barriers to novel drug access will continue to grow with PBM exclusion lists and employer-driven cost
containment measures.
48
72
80
38
49
76
97
124
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Drug Exclusion Trends for CVS
Health and Express Scripts
ESI CVS
CVS and ESI grew their formulary exclusion lists by 67%
and 61% respectively from 2014 to 2016.
33%
29%
29%
29%
18%
55%
53%
35%
34%
32%
Mandatory SPP
Prior authorization
Supply limit
Personalized care management
Localized drug management
Employers Increasingly Take Steps
To Control Specialty
Pharmaceutical Costs2
2016 2015
Localized drug management
Personalized care management
Supply limit
Prior authorization
Mandatory SPP
25. #4: INTERNET OF THINGS (IoT)
Real-time, real-world data will become easily available as the IoT grows rapidly over the next decade.
SOURCES:
1http://www.wallstreetdaily.com/2016/02/10/internet-of-things-big-data-healthcare/ (infographic above)
2http://www.lairdtech.com/solutions/embedded-wireless/what-connected-hospital/connected-hospital-infographic
3.7 Million
97%
10%
Medical
Devices in US2
WiFi Adoption Rate
in Hospitals
Medical Devices Enabled
With WiFI
318.9 Million (2014)
5,723
US Population
Improved
Patient Care
Objectives of
“eConnectivity”
Facilitation
of Data Flow
John Chambers, former CEO of Cisco, predicts
500 billion connected devices by 20251.
“eConnected”
hospitals
26. OUTCOMES-BASED CONTRACTING IN EUROPE
Outcomes guarantees have been established in European markets for more than a decade.
All outcomes-based contracts in Europe involve a
significant financial risk component.
SOURCES:
http://www.ispor.org/research_pdfs/35/pdffiles/PHP15.pdf
Patient Population
(or sub-population)Patient
Response
Dependent
Response
Assumed
Cost-
Effectiveness
Cash
refund
Replacement
stock
Pay for
consequence
Longer
treatment
required,
drug free
of charge
Higher
dose
required,
drug free
of charge
Pre-agreed
price
increase
Pre-agreed
price
decrease +/-
rebate
Price
adjusted +/-
cash transfer
variable
determined
by data
Failure
Maximum
treatment
cost/patient
Unit of
Analysis
Outcome
Measure
Terms of
Settlement
27. ESI excludes
atorvastatin
Novartis
ESI
sacubitril/valsartan
AbbVie
ESI
HepC
BCBS patient-centered
care program
MERCK
Cigna
sitagliptin/metformin
EMD Serono
Cigna
interferon b-1a
Gilead
Cigna & Catamaran
HepC
Amgen
Harvard Pilgrim & ESI
evolocumab
2005 20162010
OUTCOMES-BASED CONTRACTING IN THE US
Sanofi
Health Alliance
risedronic acid
Outcomes-based contracting in the US had a stalled start in 2009, and began in earnest in 2015.
Amgen, AbbVie, Novartis, and Gilead have publicly announced
outcomes-based contract discussions over the past 18 months.
SOURCES:
eMAX Health Research
29. RESEARCH OBJECTIVES
eMAX Health conducted research via a web survey with manufacturers and payers.
OBJECTIVE 3
Pinpoint contract
structures that have
greatest likelihood
of success
OBJECTIVE 2OBJECTIVE 1
Understand top
reasons why
outcomes-based
contracts are
challenging to
implement
Understand which
therapeutic
categories and drug
classes are
important for
outcomes-based
contracting
discussions
The principal goal is to better understand perceptions and opinions of the
current outcomes-based contracting landscape.
30. ABOUT THE SAMPLE
The research was conducted via an internet survey with representatives from both payers and
manufacturers who had a moderate to advanced topical knowledge of outcomes-based contracting.
Small R&D only
biotech/pharma
2%
Other
4%
Regional
managed
care
organization
9%
National
managed
care
organization
13%
Small commercial
biotech/pharma with
at least one
commercially
available product
13%
Midsize
commercial
biotech/pharma
with products in
multiple
therapeutics
areas
17%
Pharmacy benefit
manager
19%
Big pharma/biotech
23%
Combined Sample: Organization Types
n=46
Primary Research Sample
National and
regional
commercial
payers
n = 17
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
n = 29
Representatives of pharmacy benefit managers and large pharmaceutical/biotech
companies represent 42% of the experts surveyed.
31. External
relations
21%
Integrated Care
Management
4%
Pharmacy
71%
Specialty
4%
ABOUT THE SAMPLE
Within the manufacturer cohort, we obtained insights from stakeholders in HEOR, field managed markets,
and payer strategy; within the payer cohort, pharmacy and external relations were most prevalent.
Market
access/payer
strategy
31%
Managed
markets
28%
National
accounts
7%
Marketing /
Brand
3%
HEOR
28%
Other
3%
Manufacturer
Roles
n=29
Payer Roles
n=17
Of the payers surveyed, nearly a quarter were pharmacy directors; of the
manufacturers surveyed, HEOR, managed markets, and market access strategy
were evenly represented.
33. FAMILIARITY
Question: How familiar are you with the topic of outcomes-based contracting?
Three quarters of the screened respondents had a moderate or higher familiarity
with the topic of outcomes-based contracting.
Not at all familiar,
8%
Slightly familiar,
16%
Moderately familiar,
40%
Very familiar, 27%
Extremely familiar,
8%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
n=73
34. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Question: Has your organization implemented an outcomes-based contract in the past five years?
All of the payers who participated had been involved in outcomes-based
contracting in the past five year, while most in the manufacturer sample had not.
21%
100%
79%
Manufacturer response
Payer response
n=42
YES
n=17
n=29
YES NO
35. PLAYERS
Question: Who has been more active in promoting the outcomes-based contracting movement?
The majority of respondents, both payer and manufacturer, believe
that payers are in the driver’s seat.
38%
24%
62%
77%
Manufacturer response
Payer response
n=46
Manufacturers Payers
n=17
n=29
36. DISEASE AREAS
Question: Outcomes-based contracting arrangements are most promising in what disease area?
No singular disease area was mentioned as significantly more important,
however, oncology led slightly as an area of interest.
Bone/muscle/joint
3%
Weight management
3%
Pain
6%
Immunology/inflammation
(i.e. RA, psoriasis,
Crohn's)
9%
Infectious
disease
12%Neuroscience
15%
CV
15%
Oncology
19%
Metabolic
disorders
18%
n=33
37. TYPES OF CONTRACTS
Question: Which type of contract has the most/least potential for success?
Both manufacturers and payers agree that clinical performance (or “pay-for-
performance”) contracts have the most potential for success; while a capitated
utilization model has the least potential for success.
13%
7%
19%
14%
31% 50%
19%
25%
19%
4%
PAYER MANUFACTURER
19% 14%
19%
7%
3%
31%
17%
31%
59%
PAYER MANUFACTURER
MOST LEAST
n=46
n=17 n=29 n=17 n=29
38. MANUFACTURER RISK
Question: What level of financial risk do you expect manufacturers
to take on in order to proceed with an outcomes-based contract?
Not surprisingly, payers said that a manufacturer should assume
a moderate level of financial risk.
3
12
1
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
Extreme risk High risk Moderate Risk Some risk No risk
n=17
39. EXCLUSIVITY
Question: How likely is it that your organization would have future interest
in an “exclusivity” outcomes-based contract?
Payers leaned towards a the possibility of a future
filled with exclusivity arrangements.
1
4
7
5
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Not at all likely Slightly likely Moderately likely Very likely Completely likely
n=17
40. IMPLEMENTATION BARRIERS
Question: Please rate each of the following implementation barriers.
Although the corporate inertia exists to make outcomes-based contracting
happen, technical difficulties present as the most challenging barrier to
implementation.
Resistance to
Financial Risk
Least
Challenging
Most
Challenging
Corporate
Structure
Technical
Difficulty
Lack of Corporate
Inertia
Lack of Perceived
Value
41. IMPLEMENTATION BARRIERS
Question: What single barrier is most challenging to successful implementation of an
outcomes-based contract?
The sheer difficulty with the technical aspects of contract implementation ranks
as the most challenging barrier to outcomes-based contact implementation.
Resistance to
financial risk
17%
Corporate
structure
14%
Technical difficulty
45%
Lack of
corporate
inertia
10%
Lack of
perceived
value
10%
Other
4%
n=29
42. IMPLEMENTATION
Question: What is the likelihood you will implement an outcomes-based contract
over the following time periods?
Payers more strongly than manufacturers that they would implement outcomes-
based contracts in the near future.
Six Months
One Year
Two Years
Three Years
Very
Unlikely
Very
Likely
43. KEY LEARNINGS
Our research with payers and manufacturers on outcomes-based contracting yielded seven key learnings.
Payers are largely responsible for the push towards outcomes-based
contracting
Oncology, metabolic, cardiovascular, and CNS are four key disease areas of
interest to payers
Clinical performance agreements are believed to have the highest likelihood of
implementation success
Technical difficulties are largely responsible for implementation delays and
failures
Manufacturers expected to take on some level of financial risk in an outcomes-
based contract
Payers are open to the idea of formulary preference as part of an outcomes-
based contract arrangement
Outcomes-based contracting should become more common in the next few
years
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
45. CASE STUDY #1
sitagliptin/metforminMERCK CIGNA
Disease Area: Diabetes Implemented: 2009
AGREEMENT COMPONENTS GOALS/OUTCOMES
• CIGNA assesses the blood sugar levels (A1c lab
values) for patients on any oral antidiabetic
medications
• If the A1c values, in aggregate, improve by the end
of the agreement period, the discounts will decrease
by a pre-agreed amount
• CIGNA uses claims data to determine if patients are
taking the Merck drugs as prescribed
• Better placement on CIGNA’s formulary
• Lower copayment versus that for other branded
drugs
• In 2010, CIGNA announced positive outcomes from
the diabetes support program:
• Patients’ blood sugar levels were reduced by more
than 5%,
• Individuals who participated were more likely to
control their blood sugar than those who did not
participate in the program
• 87% of patients who took the Merck drugs took their
medications correctly
SOURCE:
http://www.ispor.org/meetings/montreal0614/presentations/IP9-AllSpeakers.pdf
Type: Clinical Performance
The MERCK-Cigna deal is one of the few to have publicly released results of the program.
46. CASE STUDY #2
Interferon beta-1aEMD SERONO CIGNA
Disease Area: MS Implemented: 2011
AGREEMENT COMPONENTS GOALS/OUTCOMES
• CIGNA tracks the percentage of hospitalizations
and ER visits avoided by people using EMD Serono
drug
• CIGNA uses medical claims in order to determine
whether a relapse was the cause for hospitalization
and/or ER visits
• CIGNA uses 2010 as a baseline, looking at data
from medical, pharmacy and lab claims, and
measuring members’ medication-possession ratio
(MPR)
• EMD Serono provides rebates based on adherence
outcomes and relapse-free patients
• Because MS eventually leads to a state of disability,
CIGNA helps to delay disease progression and
quick accumulation of irreversible neurological
damage by improving adherence
• Using experiences in MS, CIGNA extended its
monitoring strategies to other conditions through
the THERACARE program
SOURCE:
https://aishealth.com/archive/nspn0411-01
Type: Clinical Performance
The EMD Serono-Cigna deal is the only publicly acknowledged US OBC in MS.
47. CASE STUDY #3
evolocumabAMGEN HARVARD PILGRIM
Disease Area: CV Implemented: 2015
AGREEMENT COMPONENTS GOALS/OUTCOMES
• Amgen gained formulary preference as part of the
deal
• Harvard Pilgrim can also receive additional rebates
if utilization is above a pre-determined amount
• Amgen will be at risk financially if health plan
members’ cholesterol levels aren’t lowered enough
• The pay-for-performance element is in addition to
the discount
• Compare patient low-density lipoprotein cholesterol
levels to clinical trial outcomes
SOURCE:
http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20151109/NEWS/151109899
Type: Clinical Performance
Amgen implemented a highly innovative risk-based contract model focused on a population-health outcome.
49. Large % of patients on specialty drugs do not respond but stay on therapy
APPROPRIATE CARE MODEL
An appropriate care model identifies non-responders based on therapeutic response.
The single greatest opportunity to reduce aggregate claim dollars in specialty
is to identify patients that do not respond and take them off the drug.
SOURCES:
1eMAX Health claims analysis
2Adalimumab Full Prescribing Information
3Hughes et al., Lancet Neurol 2008; 7: 136–44
Inappropriate
Use
PROBLEM
OBJECTIVES
• Reduce treatment days with no response
• Integrate outcomes and authorizations
• Establish funding partnership for patient monitoring
46% of CIDP patients did not respond to
IVIG after 24 weeks, yet 75% of patients
are on treatment for more than 48
weeks1,3
Adalimumab showed only a 53%
response rate after 6 months2
Reimbursement decisions based
on actual response
Point of care drug assessment
mobile app
Utilization preference in
exchange for price
adjustment to offset
monitoring cost
Standardized Assessment Discounts/Rebates Response-linked Authorizations
SOLUTION
50. PROGRAM FLOW
The appropriate care model supplements current drug authorization process.
At PA/re-auth,
point, plan requires
enrollment in
program
Partner SPP
conducts
assessment on
behalf of plan in
case management
system
Software flags non-
responders
Program administrator
coordinates with SPP
and provider to identify
alternate care plans for
non-responders
Plan authorization
department makes
ultimate coverage
decision using
outcomes data
Program administrator
manages the rebate
between the
manufacturer sponsor
and healthplan
Program
administrator reports
on program savings
to healthplan and
manufacturer
sponsor
51. CASE STUDY: APPROPRIATE CARE
IGIVDE-IDENTIFIED DE-IDENTIFIED
Disease Area: Neurology Implemented: N/A
AGREEMENT COMPONENTS GOALS/OUTCOMES
• Real-time patient outcomes data monitored via point
of care assessment tool
• Appropriate site-of-care and treatment response
were monitored
• Non-responders were transitioned to alternate site-
of-care and/or alternate treatment
• Manufacturer sponsored monitoring program in
exchange for formulary preference
• Savings PMPM: $.22
• 26% reduction in drug spend for treated patients
Type: Appropriate Care
Manufacturer implemented an appropriate care model focused on identifying non-responders
in exchange for formulary preference.
Site-of-
service
savings
72%
Discontinuation
savings
28%
90
95
100
105
110
115
Pre-program
plan spend
Post-program
plan spend
$111.9m
$99m
52. BENEFITS
The primary benefit of an appropriate care model contracting model is to improve overall health outcomes
by reducing inappropriate utilization of treatment, resulting in savings to the payer.
Improve and simplify health outcomes for chronic disorders
Simplify health outcomes monitoring for therapy
Reduce duration of treatment for non-responding patients
Provide medically-defensible coverage determination
Reduce specialty drug spend for non-responding patients
Reduce specialty drug spend by optimizing site of care
54. ROLE OF SPECIALTY PHARMACY
Specialty and infusion pharmacies play an important role in the patient care and monitoring aspects of
outcomes-based contracting programs.
• In the high-cost specialty area, health plan’s provider networks can play an
important role in outcomes-based contracting
• Outcomes data must be conveyed quickly and efficiently to be actionable
Infusion Providers
Infusion pharmacies administer the
drug creating an opportunity to assess
patient status in real-time
Relying on claims data to review drug
performance only offers retrospective
price adjustment, but not a change in
appropriate care and coverage
Physically at the point-of-care Routinely interact with patients
55. HEALTH STATUS MONITORING
Specialty pharmacy disease programs provide opportunity for health status monitoring.
Specialty pharmacy and home infusion providers develop disease programs with
routine patient touch points.
• Key patient status parameters under disease programs
are captured at the point of care and reside in
pharmacy software
• Creates a unique global picture of therapeutic
impact and treatment efficacy
• Captures and reports
clinical profile, lab data,
adverse events,
medication history,
insurance information,
and general metrics
56. CONTRACTING PROGRAMS
Specialty pharmacies already reside in payer networks, allowing seamless participation
in contracting programs.
• Payer-directed patient volume provides incentives for patient monitoring and
data reporting
• Pharmacies can efficiently monitor patient status through data collection tools
provided under a program
Data Collection Methods
Nurse enter data into
pharmacy software which
can be relayed electronically
to data aggregator for use
by payer and prescriber
Paper Surveys
Efficient tools are deployed
in the field for ongoing
monitoring if there is
minimal training and data
integration requirements
Specialty pharmacies
maintain electronic medical
records for its patients -
data elements can be
incorporated into programs
to define outcomes
Electronic Application Medical Records
57. HOME INFUSION CASE STUDY
IGIVDE-IDENTIFIED DE-IDENTIFIED
Disease Area: Neurology Implemented: N/A
COMPONENTS
• BiologicTx negotiates reimbursement rates with payers to compensate for monitoring and reporting cost
• Manufactures offer brand preference agreements in the form of a rebate with health plans to offset the cost of
monitoring
• Manufactures may also offer discounted drug purchase agreements with pharmacies for participation in the
payer program
Type: Appropriate Care
BiologicTx participates as infusion pharmacy to deliver IGIV to patients with neurological disability.
Nurses nationally
trained on the use of
point-of-care
application to assess
patient neurological
status
Pharmacy on-boards
cases during prior
authorization process
and links the upcoming
patient encounter to a
nurse for monitoring
Infusion pharmacy
ships product along
with a hard copy of
disability survey as a
back-up to digital
application survey
Infusion nurse arrives
at the home and
conducts digital survey
on tablet or phone
through a secure URL,
to assess neurological
disability
Neurological status
data are relayed to the
program manager in
real-time and provided
to the health plan to
make coverage
decisions
59. INNOVATIVE CONTRACTING
Drug Access
Real World
Evidence
Real World Data
Patient Response
Statistics
Therapeutic Response
Progression Free
Survival
Hospital Avoidance
Lower Discontinuation
Disease Cure
Assess Effectiveness
Measure Endpoints
Share Financial
Responsibility for
Failures/Successes Total Cost of Care
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturer
Humana
60. RECIPE FOR SUCCESS
• Keep it simple
• Senior level support/buy-in
• Being a captive PBM
• Dedicated HEOR analytical support staff
• Aligned incentives within the organization
• Be willing to share in risk
61. INNOVATIVE CONTRACTING TYPES
Toxicity Therapeutic
Response
New
Approaches
Relapse Discontinuation
Indication
Based
Hospital
Admission
Total Cost
of Care
Adverse
Events
Wastage
Duration
Progression
Quality
Of Life
62. CHALLENGES
• ASP pricing
• Medicaid Best Price
• Safe Harbor/Anti-kickback statute
• Willingness of pharma to participate
• Finding and funding the money from
pharma
63. CHALLENGES
• Data limitations and privacy concerns
• Fire wall within pharma
• Limited payer participation
• Lack of access to medical claims in PDP
64. LESSONS LEARNED
• HPS has contracts in place for CFI, MAPD and
both lines of business
• Understanding the data, what we have, who owns
it, where to find it
• Need to have access to experts in data
management and HEOR
• Usually an addendum to an existing rebate
contract
• The outcome or cost associated is paid as a
rebate
65. LESSONS LEARNED
• Revenue is DIR reportable
• Persistency and adherence are part of the
contract
• Most contracts are for one year
• Data submitted quarterly, bi-annual or annually
• Build 120 days into submissions due to medical
claim lag
• Average time to execute is 6-9 months
• ROI is knowledge gained, not revenue produced
67. Learning Assessment Question #1
Out of the following disease categories,
which would benefit the most from
outcomes-based contracting?
a. Rheumatoid arthritis
b. Next-gen hepatitis C
c. Diabetes
d. Multiple sclerosis
e. Cholesterol management
f. Oncology
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320492
b. 320514
c. 320521
d. 320522
e. 320531
f. 320544
69. Learning Assessment Question #2
Of the following, what is the greatest
challenge to implementing an outcomes-
based contract?
a. Parties averse to financial risk
b. Corporate structures get in the way
c. Difficulty in gathering and analyzing
clinical data
d. Parties don’t see true value in the
arrangement
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320545
b. 320597
c. 320602
d. 320603
71. Learning Assessment Question #3
Outcomes-based contracting in the US
started in what year?
a. 2001
b. 2005
c. 2009
d. 2015
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320605
b. 320619
c. 320630
d. 320631
73. Learning Assessment Question #4
Who has been more active in promoting
movement towards an outcomes-based
contracting environment?
a. Payers
b. Manufacturers
TEXT
TO
22333
a. 320632
b. 320633
76. DISCLAIMER
All Faculty in this education session have obtained the
appropriate permission to use Copy Righted materials.
Sources for all images are provided in citations.
Notes de l'éditeur
Should we add specialty pharmacy provider?
Poll Title: Demographic Question: What title best describes your current position?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/1tpELxOVHRoAFEi
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #1: Out of the following disease categories, which would benefit the most from outcomes-based contracting?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/CCTEhfgJAIhiHV7
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #2: Of the following, what is the greatest challenge to implementing an outcomes-based contract?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/F7bEbt4z9YjAiv5
Switch choice c and d order
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #3: Outcomes-based contracting in the US started in what year?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/D0NH8jCWbAkA9yh
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #4: Who has been more active in promoting movement towards an outcomes-based contracting environment?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/upoLTkLnusTRq7o
Labels in pie seem unnecessarily long
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #1: Out of the following disease categories which would benefit the most from outcomes-based contracting?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/YXWg7pmHtQKacaR
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #2.b: Of the following, what is the greatest challenge to implementing an outcomes-based contract?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/Tlx50m0BXDjCaCp
Switch choice c and d order
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #3.b: Outcomes-based contracting in the US started in what year?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/lRSBkW8KxG7623s
Poll Title: Learning Assessment Question #4.b: Who has been more active in promoting movement towards an outcomes-based contracting environment?
https://www.polleverywhere.com/multiple_choice_polls/NDui6b2mdPLI1uh