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Social Media Is A Health Issue?

Social media as hazardous to your health!  Talk about a nice counterintuitive report.  I think we all worry about our kids spending too much time online and not getting enough exercise, but what about “Facebook depression”, cyberbulling, and sexting…not to mention age-inappropriate material?

In yesterday’s USA Today, there’s an article about how social media can enrich children’s lives but can also be hazardous to their mental and physical health.  It’s focused on a report by the American Academy of Pediatricians, but I think this also builds on the Kaiser report out earlier this year about the amount of time kids spend in front of electronic media – 7.5 hours PER DAY. 

because tweens and teens have a limited capacity for self-regulation and are susceptible to peer pressure, they are at some risk as they engage in and experiment with social media, according to the report. They can find themselves on sites and in situations that are not age-appropriate, and research suggests that the content of some social media sites can influence youth to engage in risky behaviors. In addition, social media provides venues for cyberbullying and sexting, among other dangers. Youth who are more at-risk offline tend to also be more at-risk online.

Interesting.  Do you agree?

You Need An Experience Architect

I’m often asked how my 6 years of architecture school plays into what I do right now.  I have a variety of things that I believe I learned in architecture that help me, but it wasn’t until the other day that it really clicked.  I was reading an interview about a CEO who had been trained as an architect.  She described architecture as building experiences.

All of sudden it hit me…that’s what I do.  I help companies look at an objective and architect the consumer experience to get to that objective.  And, it’s a lot of fun!

So, what are the parallels between healthcare communications and physical architecture?

  • There is no one answer.
  • You have to listen.
  • There is lots of data.
  • You have to use lots of materials. (print, e-mail, web, automated call versus concrete, glass, steel)
  • Each person’s experience is different.
  • Compliance matters. (building codes versus CMS)

Now, unfortunately, I can’t coin the term “experience architect”.  It’s been used by others.  For example, Tom Kelley from IDEO used it as one of his Ten Faces of Innovation.  He says an experience architect is one who:

Is that person relentlessly focused on creating remarkable individual experiences. This person facilitates positive encounters with your organization through products, services, digital interactions, spaces, or events. Whether an architect or a sushi chef, the Experience Architect maps out how to turn something ordinary into something distinctive—even delightful—every chance they get.

Fast Company talks about the Experience Architect in an article from 2005.  More commonly you’ll find articles or references to user experience architect. 

The point is that you need to think about things in this light, and I think the architectural paradigm is helpful in how you construct and embrace the creation of an experience for the consumer whether it’s around shopping, adherence, or managing diabetes.

CMS Treatment Of Generic Samples Offers False Hope

It’s interesting but irrelevant that CMS is now proposing that Part D plans can treat generic samples similar to OTC drugs.  Who cares?

Why do I say that?

  1. Generics represent more that 80% of the non-specialty drugs dispensed in many cases.
  2. The technique doesn’t work.

At Express Scripts, I ran a program for a year.  We hired pharmaceutical representatives to detail doctors.  We bought generic drugs and repackaged them.  And, we tracked GFR (generic fill rate) in the six categories for a year. 

Guess what?

In most cases, the GFR for the doctors with the samples barely exceeded the GFR for the doctors without the samples.  In one category, it was even lower.  The GFR was going up too fast in the general market.  If you add in the costs, it was a money loser. 

We even compared our GFR in certain geographies to the published statistics from another company doing generic sampling…our clients GFR without samples was going up faster than their GFR with samples. 

If you want to give away free drugs as a “gift” to make your academic detailing program more effective, have at it, but lets keep reality in mind here.  This is not going to make a difference.  All it’s going to do is drive up administrative costs for PDP plans.

Using the “Placebo Effect” in New to Therapy Situations

I was reading a book about trust which pointed out the concept of “remembered wellness“.  This concept is similar to the “placebo effect” in that it shows that patients who trust their physicians and their course of therapy are more likely to have better outcomes (e.g., HIV study).  WOW!!

I’ve talked before about the gap that exists when patients leave their physician’s office with a new diagnosis and we all know that health literacy is a big issue.

So…what are you doing to address this?  I’ve been talking a lot lately about “primary adherence” (i.e., getting people to start therapy) and about engaging patients when they first get a new prescription or a new diagnosis.  This concept of trust only makes this a more pressing issue.

Here’s your worse case scenario:

  • Patient is newly diagnosed with a chronic condition and given a new prescription.
  • They don’t have a great relationship with the physician and/or have limited understanding of the condition (due to literacy, fear, or other issues).
  • They fill the prescription once and stop taking the medication after a few days.

How can you step in here?

  • You can trigger an outreach based on diagnosis code.
  • You can assess their understanding of the condition and help them learn more by addressing their barriers.
  • You can engage them when they fill their first script.
  • You can follow-up with them after the first few days to make sure they stay on therapy.
  • You can enroll them in an adherence program.
  • You can enroll them in a condition management program.

But, the point here is that you need to be doing something that reinforces the decision to manage the therapy and help them to understand and believe in that course of treatment.  If they don’t believe and have trust, they are less likely to get to a successful outcome.

Likelihood Of Being Wealthy

I found this test in Money Magazine (Sept 2010) interesting especially when you dig into the research behind the questions and the scoring.

  1. Optimists do better financially than pessimists although extreme optimists don’t save as much money as moderate ones.
  2. A child born into the wealthiest 20% of families has a 55% chance of staying in that quartile.  A child born in the poorest fifth only has a 9% chance of reaching the top and one born in the middle a 13% chance.
  3. If you’re raised in a home your parents owned, your more likely to stay in school and buy your own place.
  4. If you have chronic conditions (diabetes, arthritis, Crohns), these are associated with less wealth.
  5. People with IQs over 130 (top 2%) early $6K-$18.5K more per year…but that doesn’t correlate with better savings.
  6. A college grad will earn $450K more in their lifetime than someone with only a high school education.  Getting a graduate degree adds another $120K.
  7. A 6-foot tall man earns $5,525 more per year than someone that’s 5′-5″.  “Hotties” (their word) are twice as likely to make an above average income as their homelier peers and slim people have a higher net worth than heavy ones.
  8. The more brothers and sisters you have the poorer you tend to be.
  9. Boomers who got and stayed married accumulated 93% more wealth than their unmarried counterparts.
  10. Kids drain wealth.
  11. Being too agreeable leads to lower earnings.
  12. Affluent people exercise more.
  13. Families that own businesses are more affluent.
  14. Although adreneline junkies earn more than their cautious counterparts they are also more likely to make poor investing decisions.
  15. 84% of millionaires shop for bargains.

So, this may be neither hear nor there, but I’m fascinated by tests like this as they are data that can be used to predict and segment people from a communication perspective.  Understanding their behavior within sub-segments is critical in understanding why they act or don’t act.

JD Power Customer Service Leaders – Pharmacy

Understanding how top performers achieve excellence is the first step to becoming a Customer Service Champion. The rest is up to you.

This is the statement by Gary Tucker, SVP, J.D. Power & Associates at the beginning of their publication Achieving Excellence in Customer Service from February 2011. 

If you’ve never read their reports, you should understand that they look at five areas – people, presentation, price, product, and process.  Interestingly, they use several examples from pharmacy to make their points about these five categories:

  • Proactive communications
  • Private space for consultation
  • Clear information about how to save money
  • Auto-refill

Another interesting thing they look at is whether the gap between high performing and low performing company has increased or decreased over time.  In the product industries, the gap has decreased due in many ways to quality improvements.  In the service industries, the gap has increased…WHY?

First, advances in technology have created new expectations among customers, resulting in new challenges for services. For instance, customers expect multi-channel service delivery and expect to choose whether to interact with their service provider in person, via the phone or e-mail, through online chat, or via Web-based self-service, among others. More challenging is that they expect the same level of service across communication channels. With ever-improving technology, it has been difficult for companies to keep all systems up to date and to remain equally effective in each.

They are preaching to the choir here.  This is exactly what I tell clients all the time. 

One of their examples that I’ve used for years is around the power of communications.  They show satisfaction with auto insurance based on whether your premium stayed the same or increased.  For those that it increased, they look at whether you were pro-actively informed and whether you had the option to discuss it.  What group do you think had the highest satisfaction?

  • Decreased premium
  • Increased premium, pro-active notification, and chance to discuss
  • No change
  • Increased premium, pro-active notification
  • Increased premium, no notification

Worried about satisfaction or churn?  Have lots of changes to plan design?  Here’s why you communicate.

In this report, they call out 40 companies as exceptional out of the 800 that were ranked.  7 of those 40 were pharmacies:

  • Good Neighbor
  • Health Mart
  • Kaiser Permanente
  • Publix
  • Veteran’s Administration Mail Order
  • Wegmans
  • Winn-Dixie

How To Select What Pharmacies Are In Your Network?

This seems to be the “meta-question” that everyone is talking around. 

  • Should every pharmacy be in the network?
  • Should mail be allowed?  Should I do mandatory mail?
  • How do I design a limited network?  Is it ok?
  • What about any willing provider?  [should that just be about cost]

Let’s start with the basics…You want a network that meets access standards, has high quality, improves outcomes, keeps members happy, and offers you the best price.

So, how do you build your network to decide who is in or out (ideally)?

  1. Select the minimum number of local pharmacies required to meet access standards for acute medications (this is your baseline)
  2. Look at your best price to add more pharmacies into the network – who will meet your price for generics, brands, 90-day, specialty
  3. Evaluate your tradeoffs – will you get a lower price if you exclude certain pharmacies?  will that impact access?  will that impact care?  will that impact satisfaction?  can you manage the disruption?
  4. Look at difference in satisfaction between pharmacies – should you take a lower priced pharmacy if the satisfaction is less?
  5. Look at difference in outcomes between pharmacies – should you take a pharmacy that has a lower generic fill rate (on an adjusted population) or a lower adherence rate (on an adjusted population) at the same price? 

Network design should look like formulary design.  You have to look at the value versus the cost.  You might include a higher priced pharmacy in the network if it gives you access, better outcomes, or lower net cost (i.e., better GFR).  You might exclude a lower priced pharmacy if it can’t prove any of this or if consumers who go there are dissatisfied. 

At some point, I would think we’ll see more metrics beyond price be used to measure pharmacies – discounts, GFR, safety (quality), medication possession ratio, satisfaction.  That would make this a lot easier with some standards. 

This would make it easier to have discussions about access in NY (for example) as PCMA is doing.  It would make it easier to have discussions about the Department of Defense (for example) as NACDS and NCPA are doing. 

The DoD is a good example here…Since the military (government) buys drugs better than anyone, I can’t imagine how much better some of these metrics would have to be to justify paying the additional costs at retail for fulfillment.  The base pharmacies and the mail order pharmacy all get their drugs from the government contracts.  At mail, the supply is managed separately so that they are replenished under those contracts.  I bet the cost is $10+ on average more for a drug at retail (non-replenishment) than it is elsewhere.  How do you justify that?  In my mind, retail should figure out how to replenish and segregate their inventory to stay in the network rather than fighting the shift away to mail.

Who’s Your HOL For Improving Engagement

Following up on my post earlier today, I went to an article in PharmaVOICE from January 2011  called Engaging the Empowered Patient by Carolyn Gretton.  It has lots of interesting statistics and quotes.  Here’s a few:

These consumers have done at least one of the following based on finding information online:

  • Challenged their doctor’s treatment or diagnosis
  • Asked their doctor to change their treatment
  • Discussed information found online at a doctor’s appointment
  • Used the Internet instead of going to the doctor
  • Made a healthcare decision because of online information

I’ll have to drill into the report because I’d love to know how many have done the first two things, what the physician response was, and (ideally) if it impacted their outcome in any way.

40% of online consumers engage with social media on health sites either by reading or posting content, though frequency of engagement varies widely.  (based on a survey from Epsilon and eRewards)

That last part is where the issue is (IMHO).  Consumers do use lots of these tools BUT sustaining their interest and engagement over time is difficult.

The Epsilon report – A Prescription For Customer Engagement: An Inside Look at Social Media and the Pharmaceutical Industry – pointed out that consumers use healthcare social media for:

  • Support
  • Sense of intimacy with others with a similar experience
  • Foundational information about their condition and symptoms
  • Information about drugs and supplements
  • Health news

Many of the individuals who are highly engaged in social media feel better equipped to manage their health.  (Mark Miller, SVP, Epsilon)

I was really surprised that the Epsilon study said that consumers viewed product sites to be as important as healthcare provider interactions.  I could argue both sides here.  Obviously, the product site is going to have some bias.  On the other hand, given the complexity of treatments and therapies these days, it has to be close to impossible for the provider to stay up on all the latest information. 

Not surprisingly, the author of the article talks about people having mixed feelings about the product managers participating in a social media site.  BUT, I think everyone would agree that with proper disclosure and the right person, this can work very well. 

The article introduces a new term (for me) here – HOLS or Health Opinion Leaders.  It talks about them becoming active parts of the pharma brand team.  That sounds like an interesting role. 

It was also interesting that they talked a lot about gaming as an engagement mechanism.  It’s not something I’ve spent as much time with, but it keeps coming up (even more than incentives).  They talk about several examples:

They also bring up an older game as a cautionary tale – Viva Cruiser – which riled critics for trivializing ED. 

At the end of the day, it’s the same old challenge – how to get the consumer to act and stay engaged?

Seven Million Remote Caregivers (and rising)

In September 2010, Money magazine had an article about the challenges of caring for a parent remotely.  For those that do it, the challenge is an obvious one and the toll can be significant.  For the rest of us, here’s a few things to understand what they’re going through.

  • Long distance caregivers spend an average of $8,700 a year providing support (nearly 2x what those closer spend…largely due to travel costs).
  • 49% cut back on leisure activities.
  • 47% spend less on vacations.
  • 38% have reduced or stopped saving for their future.
  • 48% have used sick or vacation hours to care for their loved one.
  • 37% have had to either cut back on work hours or quit their job.
  • 17% had to take on an additional job or work more hours.

This can be a lot to ask especially for those still caring for young kids at the same time.  The article gives a few suggestions:

  • Frequent phone check-ins.
  • Skype or some other online video chat.
  • Local contacts who can help you keep an eye on them.
  • Meet their physicians and get a HIPAA consent form signed.
  • Look into what help they need – food delivery, transportation, cleaning, paying bills.
  • They suggest www.lotsahelpinghands.com for coordination.
  • They also suggest PointerWare and InTouchLink for simplifying computer interfaces for the elderly.
  • They also suggest contacting the local Agency on Aging.

CalPERS and Medco

Those of you that follow the industry are certainly aware of this news story.  It was definitely a surprise this past week when CalPERS announced that they were dropping Medco as their PBM based on allegations of improper behavior.

For an industry where transparency has replaced years of opaqueness, this will be an issue.  Whether Medco is guilty or not-guilty, industry foes will use this to taint the perception of the PBMs.  I am sure some people cheered when this came out thinking “finally we may have found something” while the rest of us shook our heads in disbelief.

PBMs and Star Ratings

Finally, I’m hearing more talk about PBMs and their role in Star Ratings for Medicare. It seemed like this was a subtlety at the end of last year when I raised it as a 2011 priority.

Drug Benefit News had a story about it in their March 4, 2011 edition with examples from HealthTrans and PerformRx.

In general, there are opportunities to help impact Star Ratings by:

  • Blending pharmacy and medical data
  • Helping monitor patients on long-term medications
  • Increase cholesterol screening
  • Increase use of flu shots
  • Controlling blood pressure
  • Addressing physician communication gaps
  • Improving Customer service
  • Prior authorization process
  • Churn
  • Time on hold
  • Appeal process
  • Accuracy of information provided by customer service
  • Managing complaints
  • Helping with access issues
  • Timely information about the drug plan
  • Monitoring use of drugs with a high risk
  • Making sure diabetics us hypertension drugs

Since pharmacy is the most used benefit, it can have a very direct impact on the overall satisfaction. It can drive calls. It can be complicated. It can affect perception. And, it can lead to churn.

PBMs need to be working to proactively engage consumers. They need to use data to personalize the experience. They need to use clinical data to identify gaps in care. They need to drive adherence.

I personally hope that the Star “concept” becomes a more normal set of metrics outside of Medicare for measuring success and ultimately leads to a performance-based contracting framework.

A Few Allergy Facts

Fortune magazine (7/26/10) had some great allergy data that I thought I would capture here:

  • 37M allergy sufferers in the US in 2010 (vs. 19M in 1995)
  • $5.4B in spending on allergy drugs in 2009
  • 6M workdays missed in 2010 due to allergies
  • 16M allergy visits to the physician in 2010
  • $17.5B in medical expenditures in 2010 (~$473 per allergy sufferer per year)

I also heard on the radio this morning in St. Louis that now that we passed a no smoking ban we’ve dropped from the worse allergy city to #6.

Peptides, Wnts, and Volume Rendering

It’s always interesting to see information on future developments that are underway (all from Spirit magazine):

  1. Using a peptide to help you lose weight.  Based on research at Indiana University with mice this might be possible. 
  2. Using “Wnts” to heal broken bones faster.  Based on work at Stanford University where the stem cells in the bone tissue are stimulated.
  3. Using volume rendering (ala 3-D movies) to provide images of people innards to help with surgery and diagnosis.
  4. Using probiotics in smoothies to administer vaccines.  Based on research being done at Northwestern University. 

Interesting.

The Rider, the Elephant, and the Path

If you haven’t read the books by Chip and Dan Health (Switch and Made to Stick), you should.  I was reading a story they had in the Experience Life magazine by Lifetime Fitness the other day.  I pulled out a few things here to share:

“For anything to change, someone has to start acting differently.”

Such a simple phrase, but it’s the key of most marketing programs.  I was talking to a friend the other day, and he asked why do people bother sending marketing pieces.  In today’s world, people know all their options so if they want to change they will.  For some people, that might be true (at least on a finite list of things that matter). 

In this article, the Health brothers talk about Jonathan Haidt’s book The Happiness Hypothesis where he argues that our emotional side is an elephant and the rational side is its rider.  We have to find the balance between the two. 

It’s interesting that they talk about the rider as wearing out easily pointing out that exerting self-control and focusing on the next thing to do can leave you worn out.  You need to create a path that makes it easier to be successful.  This is relevant around adherence.  This is relevant for addressing obesity. 

All of these articles and books on behavioral economics have fascinating studies in them.  In one story they talk about a group of maids which were split into two groups.  One group was told that all the work they did cleaning was great exercise.  The other group went upon their job as normal.  Four weeks later, the group that thought they were exercising had lost an average of 1.8 pounds compared to the other group.

Or they talk about the book Mindless Eating which shows that “people eat more when you give them a bigger container.  Period.”

They then introduce 3 surprises which can be helpful in framing messages:

  1. What looks like resistance is often lack of clarity.  Don’t say eat healthier.  Say eat more dark leafy greens.
  2. What looks like laziness is often exhaustion.  Change is hard…acknowledge it.
  3. What looks like a people problem is often a situational problem.  Make sure to think about their environment and support system. 

Why Aren’t There More Collaborative Practice Agreements?

Collaborative practice agreements (aka collaborative drug therapy management) are legal documents between a specific pharmacist and physician to allow the pharmacist to have more direction in the care of the patient relative to their medications. Given the challenge of the physician to keep up with all the mediations and their lack of access to plan design information and full drug history, I’m surprised that these documents haven’t become more popular.

My guess is that the logistics of a one-to-one legal document around standards of care is complex to scale (see how to set up). But, I always think about how easy this could be for addressing formulary management. The physician could agree to which drugs they considered therapeutically equivalent. They could then tell the pharmacist to choose the drug which was lowest cost for the patient.

Physicians Want A Long-Term Patient Relationship

In a recent survey by Consumer Reports, 76% of physicians say that a longer-term relationship with their patients would be very helpful.

Is that feasible in today’s environment with consumers more likely to move cities and states?

Assuming it is, this would seem to make EMRs more important especially as they could act as a CRM system for the physician. The average physician probably supports about 2,000 active patients (“physician panel“). It would be difficult for them to remember and personalize their experiences without some mechanism for capturing notes about the patient. Certainly this can and has been done on paper for years, but technology would make this much more efficient.

“A primary-care doctor should be your partner in overall health, not just someone you go to for minor problems or a referral to specialty care,” said Kevin Grumbach, M.D., professor and chair of the department of family and community medicine at the University of California at San Francisco.

The article says that there is research that supports the fact that patients who stick with one physician over time have less healthcare issues and lower healthcare costs. I would assume that it therefore holds that patients who like their physician begin to trust their physician and therefore stay with their physician longer.

Physicians said that respect was the second thing that could help patients get better care. Does that mean that disrespect causes you to get worse care or simply that you’re less likely to engage the physician in a dialogue and understand their recommendation?

There were lots of surprises to me in the data:

  • 33% of patients track their changes and activity between visits. I’m guessing those are the chronically ill patients with complex diseases not the average patient.
  • 80% of MDs thought that patients would be better off with a family member or friend joining them for the visit…but only 28% of patients have someone with them.
  • Only 8% of MDs thought that online research was very helpful with the majority of them thinking it provided little to no value.
  • 9% of patients had e-mailed their physician in the past year.
  • ¼ of patients indicated some level of discomfort with their physician’s willingness to prescribe medications.

What’s Your Fitness Personality?

If you don’t read Experience Life magazine from Lifetime Fitness, I would recommend getting it or following them on Twitter. They put out some very interesting articles on expercise and food.

One that I found interesting was about Fitness Personalities. By using the Myers-Briggs test as a framework, Suzanne Brue developed 8 different categories (I’m a white). Given the difficulty of making exercise a lifetime habit for many of us, this could be a helpful framework for understanding what works, what doesn’t work, and with some rationale for why.

Here’s the quick summary:

  • Blues are safety-conscious, and good at creating their own space and concentrating in a gym.
  • Golds are traditional, conservative, and like to share their exercise experiences and results with others.
  • Greens are nature lovers who enjoy outdoor activities.
  • Reds like to live in the moment and compete in team sports.
  • Whites prefer to plan, hate to be rushed and are visionary types who enjoy calm spaces.
  • Saffrons like to express themselves as individuals and are attracted to spontaneous, engaging activities.
  • Purples are routine-oriented and enjoy repetition.
  • Silvers like exercise to be disguised as fun.

You Have Cancer…Blah Blah Blah

After you get diagnosed with a serious disease like cancer or even a chronic condition like diabetes, do you remember anything the physician says?  Someone once told me that patients remember something like 12% of what the physician says after that (I couldn’t find the source).  Another person shared with me that their physician told them to go home and call them later to talk about all their questions. 

This is the extreme example, but a situation that repeats itself day after day.  Patients learn that they have a disease.  In some cases, they’ve been searching for an answer to their symptoms for a while, and there is a sense of relief followed by anxiety.  In other cases, they had a minor problem which leads to identification of a much more serious issue. 

I talk about this because in some cases we start this patient on a course of therapy that they don’t understand or a drug which has side-effects they didn’t expect.  Health literacy is a big enough issue, but not understanding the receptiveness of the patient based on environmental issues such as shock is a big deal. 

We (as a healthcare system) have to continue to help close this gap to educate consumers and leverage the broader care team including physician, pharmacist, and caregivers to help patients understand their condition and the next steps they need to take.  Trisha Torrey does a good job of laying out a series of steps for you to take beginning with acknowledging your fear.

Book Review: Drive by Daniel Pink

I just finished the book Drive by Daniel Pink. It’s a great book. I’d recommend it from both a personal and professional perspective because it challenges so much of what we normally think. But, it’s both logical and based on tons of research.

He lays out three reasons why people act:

  1. Food, water, or sexual gratification (Motivation 1.0)
  2. Rewards and punishment (Motivation 2.0)
  3. Intrinsic reward (Motivation 3.0)

The concept of intrinsic reward was new to people. The concept of having this drive challenges all which we believe around incentives. And, his examples reinforce this point. People performed worse on certain tasks when a clear reward was identified.

“When money is used as an external reward for some activity, the subjects lose intrinsic interest for the activity.” Edward Deci

He uses open source collaboration as a great example of this. His example is whether you would have expected Encarta , an encyclopedia by Microsoft, or Wikipedia to succeed. Why wouldn’t a big company with unlimited resources beat out a collection of volunteers?

Business today is based on the whole concept of Motivation 2.0 (i.e., carrots and sticks). He talks about the historical presumption that absent some reward or punishment that people are inert.

“Enjoyment-based intrinsic motivation, namely how creative a person feels when working on the project, is the strongest and most pervasive driver” Lakhani and Wolf

He goes on to explain the difference between algorithmic and heuristic problems. Algorithmic problems can be solved based on a single path while heuristic problems have different options. [It’s like when I went to business school and architecture school.]  He quotes a McKinsey study which says that 70% of job growth in the US is around heuristic work. Therefore, applying a traditional model of motivation to creative work creates a major issue. It turns creative work which we feel passionate about into a disutility (something we won’t do without payment).

Now of course, creative “work” isn’t “play” if the basics aren’t addressed – i.e., fair pay. This has application in lots of areas including how we get kids to learn. Paying kids for specific activities pushes them to focus on completing those but not necessarily learning how to apply the knowledge. I think it’s a key issue which should be getting debated in when, if, or how to use incentives in health care. This is why you may see a short-term improvement that falls off over time.

This will be very relevant as P4P becomes more important. If rewards narrow the focus of solutions and limit creativity, will that be good in that it focuses people on specific processes? Or will it be a problem because in complex cases or cases where there are alternatives, the creativity of solutions and consideration of options will be limited?

But, he’s careful to make sure you don’t think that rewards are always bad. They have to be used appropriately and for the right tasks.

“If we watch how people’s brains respond, promising them monetary rewards and giving them cocaine, nicotine, or amphetamines look disturbingly similar.” Brian Knutson

He lays out “The Seven Deadly Flaws” of using carrots and sticks:

  1. They can extinguish intrinsic motivation.
  2. They can diminish performance.
  3. They can crush creativity.
  4. They can crowd out good behavior.
  5. They can encourage cheating, shortcuts, and unethical behavior.
  6. They can become addictive.
  7. They can foster short-term thinking.

He suggests that for tasks that don’t inspire passion nor requires deep thinking that there are three things that are important:

  1. Offer a rationale for why the task is necessary.
  2. Acknowledge that the task is boring.
  3. Allow people to complete the task their own way.

He talks about how using bonuses can work even for creative tasks when it’s not an “if-then” reward, but it’s a “surprise”. (Which is hard to repeat multiple times.)

He goes on to talk about Type A personalities. Theory X and Theory Y. Type I and Type X. It makes some key points about how we perceive people. Do we believe in the “mediocrity of the masses” or do we believe in people’s interest in succeeding? This is where Motivation 3.0 begins to come in and there is a focus on people’s desire to success or to master something.

He makes a lot of points that remind me of Malcolm Gladwell’s book Outliers.  Mastery is hard work.

“The most successful people, the evidence shows, often aren’t directly pursuing conventional notions of success. They’re working hard and persisting through difficulties because of their internal desire to control their lives, learn about their world, and accomplish something that endures.” (pg. 79)

He talks about how these frameworks can be applied at an organizational level and cites a Cornell University study of 320 small businesses. Those that offered autonomy grew at four times the rate of control-oriented firms and had one-third the turnover. He talks about ROWE (Results Oriented Work Environment) and gives examples of companies that really give their employees freedom. It’s a radical change for many people…imagine a work environment where you set your own hours.

He introduces the concept of “flow” from work by Csikszentmihalyi which was new to me. It describes this state where people are challenged but have an opportunity to stretch to get there.

He talks about mastery as a mindset and how what people believe shapes what people achieve. This belief is critical especially in addressing things like obesity (my opinion) and plays into a lot of what you see on The Biggest Loser. Losing weight (mastering being in shape) is a lot of work, and you have to believe you can do it. You also have have to have some motivation other than financial goals.

There is an interesting discussion of “entity theory” versus “incremental theory” which talks about whether you believe you have a finite intelligence or an opportunity to expand your intelligence. There is lots of talk about education in the book which I think is really important. Are we creating kids that want to “prove their smart” by getting A’s or who are really trying to learn?

“West Point grit researchers found that grittiness – rather than IQ or standardized test scores – is the most accurate predictor of college grades.”

He has a whole chapter on purpose. I think this is key to healthcare. He talks about autonomy and mastery, but without purpose, we don’t have balance. Think about someone who is obese. They want to be autonomous and master being in shape, but when you listen to them talk, it is typically a focus on being there for their family that motivates them to actually take action.

He made me wonder about linking health outcomes to lower costs (i.e., value based). If I know that my healthcare premiums go down if I manage my BMI or cholesterol or get certain tests done, am I just checking a box or am I really changing my lifestyle in a sustainable way?

Social Media Analysis – The Involved Patient

I just finished reading a whitepaper by ListenLogic Health.  They do social media analysis for pharmaceutical companies on what patients think.  There is some interesting data in there looking at what people talk about based on age.  They also show several charts about information searched for or discussed by stage.  I pulled out one chart from their whitepaper to share:

They also share some data on what patients say they want from physicians.  This is things like explaining their data better, helping them understand their options, and all basically focus on engaging them.

Can We Use Technology To Address Gaps In Resources – YES!

Dr. Joseph Kvedar writes a great piece about the psychology of persuasion and the possibility of using technology to engage consumers and drive behavior change.  This is an important topic as we look at addressing healthcare as a country.  Since behavior and consumer choice drive a significant portion of our healthcare costs, we have to think more about how to engage patients – what is the right message?  what is the right channel?  what is the right time to deliver the message?

We can deploy technology in smarter to ways to engage consumers in new ways that leverage our limited resources in better ways – i.e., get good and scalable outcomes without increasing costs.  That is what we do everyday at Silverlink Communications with our clients whether it’s around HEDIS, adherence, condition management, or many other programs. Recently, there was an article in Time Magazine that talked about some work we did with a Medicare population for Aetna.

I also think you can look at the research Stanford has published on the topic over the past decade.  You can also look at some of the data from the CVS Caremark Pharmacy Advisor program. While it certainly showed the value of having pharmacists involved, it also showed some positive results from automation.

The reality is that combining automation and live resources can be very powerful. Technology can screen and triage people to connect the at risk population with critical resources. This can allow resources to support as many as 4x as many consumers.

Words Matter: Have You Drugged Your Kid Today

I think I’m going to start a series tagged to “words matter” where I call out some of the examples that I notice. The first one is the story about a teacher getting fired for her bumper sticker on her car. (Something I never thought would happen.) Her bumper sticker said “Have You Drugged Your Kid Today”.

First off, I think people are entitled to their opinions.

Second, I think we all would agree that there are certainly times when patients are given medications rather than ask to change.

Whether kids are over-medicated today versus the past is hard to know. We are certainly more aware of conditions these days, but I think this is a hot topic. Just look at some of the articles on the topic.

It’s not like the teacher was taking some massively controversial position. She wasn’t teaching the kids. She was simply expressing an opinion on a hotly debated topic in a quick sound bite which she put on her car in the form of a bumper sticker.

The MBA Oath

This is a little off topic, but I think it applies well within health care.  Health care is a profession where managers (like clinicians) should feel a responsibility to improve the lives of their members while making money.  With that in mind, I wanted to highlight this effort.  To learn more, go to mbaoath.org to learn about the history and efforts of this group (along with a new book).

THE MBA OATH

As a business leader I recognize my role in society.

•  My purpose is to lead people and manage resources to create value that no single individual can create alone.

•  My decisions affect the well-being of individuals inside and outside my enterprise, today and tomorrow.

Therefore, I promise that:

•  I will manage my enterprise with loyalty and care, and will not advance my personal interests at the expense of my enterprise or society.

•  I will understand and uphold, in letter and spirit, the laws and contracts governing my conduct and that of my enterprise.

•  I will refrain from corruption, unfair competition, or business practices harmful to society.

•  I will protect the human rights and dignity of all people affected by my enterprise, and I will oppose discrimination and exploitation.

•  I will protect the right of future generations to advance their standard of living and enjoy a healthy planet.

•  I will report the performance and risks of my enterprise accurately and honestly.

•  I will invest in developing myself and others, helping the management profession continue to advance and create sustainable and inclusive prosperity.

In exercising my professional duties according to these principles, I recognize that my behavior must set an example of integrity, eliciting trust and esteem from those I serve. I will remain accountable to my peers and to society for my actions and for upholding these standards.

This oath I make freely, and upon my honor.

The Cost Of Chronic Pain

The March 7th edition of Time Magazine has a whole section on chronic pain including a fascinating timeline of how pain has been managed over the years.  It’s just in recent history that pain has moved from being a side effect to being a condition to be management.

An article by Dr. Oz provides some statistics on pain:

  • The annual price tag of chronic pain is $50B.
  • Lower-back pain is one of the most common complaints affecting 70-85% of adults at some point.
  • 7M people are either partially or severely disabled because of their back pain.
  • Lower-back pain accounts for 93M lost workdays every year and consumes over $5B in costs.
  • 40M Americans suffer from arthritis pain.
  • 45M Americans suffer from chronic headaches.
  • People with chronic pain are twice as likely to suffer from depression and anxiety.

One of his key suggestions – if you’ve worked with your physician for six months and its not resolved – go see a specialist.

He also points you to the American Chronic Pain Association for communication tools in helping you verbalize your pain.

In his article and in the other articles, it talks about stretching as a way to alleviate pain.  Obviously, there are medications that can help with pain relief although some of them can be abused and addictive.  And, both Dr. Oz and the other articles mention acupuncture as a potential solution.

You can also go to the American Chronic Pain Association to learn more.

From a management space, one of the areas where chronic pain is a big area of focus is in Worker’s Compensation.  For more about this space, you can follow Joe Paduda’s blog.  You can also follow some of the Worker’s Compensation PBMs such as:

Pharmacy Benefit Data From PBMI

I had a chance to read through the new 2010-2011 Prescription Drug Benefit Cost and Plan Design Report that PBMI puts out and is sponsored by Takeda Pharmaceuticals. Here are some of my highlights:

  • Percentage of the pharmacy claims costs paid by the beneficiary
    • Retail = 25.3%
    • Mail = 20.1%
    • Specialty = 15.9%
  • Average difference between retail and mail copayments (see chart):
    • Non-preferred brands = $18.38
    • Preferred brands = $7.15
    • Generics = $3.61
  • 5.1% of employers are covering genetic tests to improve drug therapy management
    • 68.8% of them are covered under the medical benefit
  • 43.0% of employers are restricting maintenance medication dispensing to select pharmacies (retail or mail) [much higher than I expected]
  • They give examples of the percentage of respondents using the following value-based tools:
    • 31.7% – reduced copayments in select classes
    • 19.7% – incentives to motivate behavior change
  • I was surprised to see a significant drop in the percentage of clients requiring specialty medications to be dispensed at their PBM’s specialty pharmacy.
    • 2009 = 53.8%
    • 2010 = 40.0%
  • There was a similar drop from 15.7% to 11.5% of employers restricting coverage of specialty drugs under the medical plan.
  • Given all the focus on medication adherence, I was disappointed to see that only 24.2% of employers were focused on maximizing compliance in specialty. [Maybe they haven’t seen all the studies on this topic.]
  • They have some nice comments on Personalized Medicine and the critical questions to address.
  • I was also surprised that less than 1% of employers were using onsite pharmacies or pharmacists.
  • They provided the following data on average copayments for 3-tier plan designs with dollar copayments:
    • Generics at retail = $9.45
    • Generics at mail = $19.06
    • Preferred at retail = $25.93
    • Preferred at mail = $53.63
    • Non-preferred at retail = $46.43
    • Non-preferred at mail = $98.25
  • The average pharmacy discounts (based off AWP) were:
    • Retail brand = 17.5%
    • Retail generic = 46.6%
    • Retail 90-day = 19.8%
    • Mail brand = 23.3%
    • Mail generic = 53.5%
    • Specialty = 18.7%
  • The one number that seemed off to me was the Rxs PMPM which they had as 2.29 for active employees. That would mean 27.48 PMPY which seems closer to Medicare. [I typically use 12 Rxs PMPY for commercial and 30 Rxs PMPY for Medicare as a quick proxy.]
  • For the first time, they showed the percentage of employers excluding coverage of non-sedating antihistamines (e.g., OTC Claritin) and proton pump inhibitors (e.g., Prilosec OTC). Both classes have had lots of blockbuster drugs go OTC (over the counter) so it makes sense to exclude coverage.
    • NSAs = 44.7%
    • PPIs = 30.6%
  • They provide a nice summary of how employers are using UM (utilization management) tools.

The report has tons of data on different scenarios, different plan designs, rebates, and many other topics. I’d encourage you to go online and read thru it.

BTW – The respondent group of employers included 372 employers representing 5.8M lives including both active and retired. The average group size (active only) was 9,736 which is a decent size employer group. And, 12% of the respondents were part of a union bargaining agreement.

Mail Order Savings Continue To Go Down

One of the questions I often get is why don’t consumers move to mail as much as they used to.  There are several reasons why, but I think this chart from the PBMI 2010-2011 Prescription Drug Benefit Cost and Plan Design Report does a good job of summarizing one issue – less savings.  This shows how the savings of moving from retail to mail has gone down over the past 10 years. 

CatalystRx Engaging Patients With Avatars

Last week, I got to see one of the more interesting presentations I’ve seen in a while. CatalystRx presented on some of the work they are doing with a mobile application to be released later this year. The application uses an avatar (well technically an “embodied conversational agent“) to engage with the consumer. I’m not sure how well that will work with a senior population, but the technology (shown in a video demo) was very cool.

The application is based on lots of research (and designed by the people who made Happy Feet). For example, they talked about:

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      • The importance of finding the right balance between too cartoonish and too human. They referenced some Disney research about size of the eyes versus the size of the head which creates a positive memory trigger due to similarities to baby’s faces.
      • Creating a “trusted advisor” for the patient (using David Shore’s book – Trust Crisis in Healthcare).
      • The importance of the face and how it shows emotion (both human and avatar).
      • How small talk engaged the consumer and builds trust even when it’s an avatar telling first person stories.

Some of the research comes from Chris Creed and Russell Beale’s work.

Recent research has suggested that affective embodied agents that can effectively express simulated emotion have the potential to build and maintain long-term relationships with users. We present our experiences in this space and detail the wide array of design and evaluation issues we had to take into consideration when building an affective embodied agent that assists users with improving poor dietary habits. An overview of our experimental progress is also provided.

The application helps patients to:

  • Make decisions
  • Identify pharmacies
  • See prescription history
  • Get reminded about refills
  • Get information about generics and formulary compliance
  • Receive personalized interventions

Obviously, mobile solutions as a way to engage patients using a secure environment for delivering PHI is a holy grail (for those that download and stay engaged). This was an interesting and promising variation on some of the solutions out there. I look forward to learning more and seeing it once it’s fully available.

NCPA Twisting Reality Again

I continue to be frustrated by NCPA (National Community Pharmacists Association). While I agree that the pharmacist – patient relationship is important, they continue to blatantly misrepresent the facts to make their point. On Tuesday, they sent a letter to Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of HHS, stating the following:

While we strongly support your efforts to provide the states with measures to drive pharmaceutical program costs down, we respectfully disagree with the statement that mail order is a potential cost-savings program strategy. Experience has shown that mail order pharmacies almost never deliver the savings they promise and are often ultimately more expensive than community pharmacies. In 2009, retail pharmacies drove a 69% generic dispensing rate (GDR) while the three dispensing services of the largest PBMs – Medco Health Solutions, Inc.; Express Scripts, Inc.; and CVS Caremark – had GDRs under 58% for the exact same time period – leaving potential savings on the table resulting from increased brand usage.

Either they are naïve or they think HHS is. You can’t compare the GDR at retail pharmacies to the GDR at mail order pharmacies without significant adjustment for acute medications and seasonal medications that aren’t appropriate for mail order. Historically, those medications have had higher generic utilization than other conditions (e.g., antibiotics).

On the other hand, maybe they aren’t a history fan. The only independent study that I’ve seen comparing the two channels specifically on this issue was published in 2004 by Harvard in Health Affairs. It looked at claims from 5 PBMs across both channels, made the adjustments, and concluded that while retail had a slightly better GDR than mail, it had a lower generic substitution rate. It also pointed out that the majority of the different was attributed to the statin class which was over-represented in the mail order channel (and at the time was mostly brand prescriptions).

Or, maybe they haven’t looked at the chain GDR versus the independent GDR…In this presentation, you see what I would expect – chain GDR > independent GDR. Combine that with the percentage of scripts dispensed (i.e., weighted average) and the normalized GDR from the Health Affairs study probably would favor PBMs over independents.

Since PBMs make over 50% of their profits on generic at mail, it wouldn’t make sense for them to sub-optimize this area. Given the changes in drug mix over the past 7 years (i.e., more generics), I would hypothesize that if this study were done again you would see mail order matching or exceeding retail GDR especially GDR for independents.