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Transcripts For CSPAN Key Capitol Hill Hearings 20131119 : c
Transcripts For CSPAN Key Capitol Hill Hearings 20131119 : c
Transcripts For CSPAN Key Capitol Hill Hearings 20131119
In the
Company Health
care plan we have about 85,000 eligible associates. The rest of our associates are represented under collective bargaining agreements and their benefit plans are provided through other funds. So where we innovate and where we try new things really within the company plan, and thats where the target
Pricing Initiative
is today. So thats where ill focus our discussion for this afternoon. Mainly, we operated
Grocery Retail
centers throughout the country, but we also have distribution centers, fuel centers, manufacturing centers, fine jewelry stores. Usually get a few eyebrows that raise a message or restores but we are one of the larger jewelry chains in the country as well. To talk a little bit about what our objectives are with on health care plan, we really focus on trying to keep it simple for 350,000 people to try to understand what we are trying to accomplish with the
Health Care Benefits
that we provide to them. We really focus on objective. The first one is to improve the health of our associates and
Family Member
s. We truly believe that if we can improve the health of our associates and their
Family Member
s, not only will be able to hold down the cost for the company and costs for our associates, we also think thats a better place to be as an organization, more productive associates, happier worklife balance so were focused on health improvement. Secondly, were very focused on reducing costs. The grocery business is not one of high margin so we are very focused on where we invest our dollar. We spend about 1. 5 billion on health care for all of our associates in all of the benefit plans. So we are very focused on health and reducing costs. As we are looking at to reduce cost, we are constantly looking at not just what
Health Care Costs
, but how people access the
Health Care System
and where theyre choosing to get care. So where are they making or where are they able to make decisions about quality and cost as their accessing health care when they need it. So a couple of initiatives, im going to focus most of my discussion today on our target
Pricing Initiative
but when implemented that in 2012, we took to initiative at the same time and focused on target pricing, which is our discussion today about putting a price in place for
Certain Services
. And we focus our services on hightech imaging. So cat scans and mris and the like. We also at the same time put in a very specific centers of
Excellence Program
to focus on hip or
Knee Replacement
and find fusion surgery. So that typical initiative is really focus on quality of care and cost of care. Target pricing as my other panelists today have talked about is not so much about quality because we are assuming that the majority of the quality in a hightech
Imaging Service
is relatively the same. The difference is in the variation and cost. So our two different initiatives are addressing those costs, and then on the centers of excellence peace around the quality of care. Our target
Pricing Program
we partnered with anthem, they are our claims administrator selfinsured plan so they are very instrumental in helping us design our target pricing and are centers for
Excellence Program
. So the target
Pricing Program
only has three levels were associates and providers get involved in making a choice about where to access a hightech
Imaging Service
. So the first thing that we put in place is that any hightech
Imaging Service
has to get prior authorization or precertification. So the provider or the associate would call into
Blue Cross Blue Shield
before a service is received. And that is where it really starts. Its on the slide, you can see the aim or hightech imaging. That is usually where a physician or provider would get some education about our target
Pricing Program
. To help them understand that the plan has a certain threshold of how much we will pay for hightech
Imaging Service
s, and help the provider then understand where in the market can they go our way they can send the patient to stay at or below the target price. So that is the first level and use in some of the results thats usually where most of the services will get redirected them. The
Second Public
office
Shopper Program
and thats usually where a nurse from anthem will outrage to our associates or
Family Member
who is due to get an mri or ct scan, and help them in more educated on our target
Pricing Program
to let them know that the plan will pay up to a certain level and that there are a lot of choices in the market to help them understand what providers they can go to, if they want to be at or below the target price. Or if they choose to pay more and go someplace else, they can do that as well. So completely voluntary program that we do help educate both the provide and our associate as theyre making the choices on where to go to get their care. Then the third piece is implementing that target price. So in 2012 we started with five hightech
Imaging Service
s, and we started only in 10 anthem states. So is technically a little pilot for us, and in terms of how we implemented it. So you see you on the slide five tests in 2012. We added a sixth hightech
Imaging Service
in 2013, and also in 2013 we expanded it to all of the u. S. States across the country. So we were able to capture a lot more of our associates in that initiative. A little bit about the results that we are seeing. You can see here from the three levels of the program the clinical review operational activities, so thats the first level where most of the services are getting redirected to a provider who is at or below the target price. You will see the 2012 total year savings, and remember thats just 10 states for us, and in the
Third Quarter
2012, or 2013 year to date slightly bigger but again a cross the u. S. The middle, the
Shopper Program
, not as much savings but we wouldnt expect as much there. We hope most of the services would get redirected, and they have, prior to getting the outreach call from a nurse to an associate. Actually implement the threshold of the target
Pricing Program
we have about 30 of our population that still chooses to go over the target price, and we think that comes down to education. So if you think about a lot of people when they go to the doctor still arent comfortable questioning costs or questioning quality, questioning whether doctor sends them for service. So celebrity and about 30 of the population chooses to still go to a facility that is at or above the private market price. To give you an example of the variation in cost, in ohio, where a ct scan of the abdomen, the cost ranges from about 260, to about 2600 depending on where you go. So that education alone both to the provider entity associate our associate is critical. Right now its all telephonicbased comments are getting them to really have that conversation with her provider is difficult but we are making progress, as you can see in her numbers and getting people educated. Early and 14 we will be implement in an online tool so that people can access, cost, and quality transparency, cost
Information Online
so they can start to make even better decisions. So what we actually saw with the unit cost, when the blue rose here, the 2012 results for the 10 states where we have had target pricing in 2012, and as you can see were actually able to reduce the unit cost through target pricing by redirecting people to a cost efficient provider. And by about 12 on both ct scans and mris. Compared to all other states in 2012 where we didnt have target pricing implemented, costs actually increased for both ct scans and mris in 2012. When you break that down by the five services, hightech
Imaging Service
s that we had in 2012, you can see each of the individual services and into 10 states would target pricing in 2012. All of those went down. Summit in significant. If you look at the abdomen ct right in the middle, went down by 32 . In unit price in the states where we had target pricing. Compared to some of the increases in the other states for the same services. So i the same time we implemented target pricing for medical services, the hightech imaging, we also implemented on several
Prescription Drug
categories. So i wanted to give you a little bit of the results from the
Prescription Drug
side as well. Kroger has her own tv him, so we just kroger prescription plans to help us design a very similar target
Pricing Initiative
that we had in the medical world in the pharmacy world as well. So we took three categories of drugs in 2012 and thats the ppis and the blood glucose test strip. And 2013 we added another category. That really focuses on education at the pointofsale. When someone is in our store, the added from us and talking to a pharmacy tech or pharmacist, really being able to get that education about the choices that they have, because if you think that some the drug categories, that an act example, huge variation in cost or we are just starting to see that drug category kind of settle out with it going generic latch up with that huge variation in cost, and not a high variation ineffectiveness in that drug category. So weve seen some really
Great Results
on the pharmacy site as well. And here is just some statistics on what we saw in unit cost in the
Prescription Drug
side. See you can see some pretty significant cost reductions on all three of the drug categories in 2012. Utilization was not significantly impacted. I think initially what some people might think of is individuals might forgo a medication because of target pricing because some of that cost may end up with them if they choose a higher cost of drug. We saw a little bit of that in that in category but other than that the utilization in the ppi, the utilization was down on the bit but not significantly. We are watching that closely because what we dont want to happen is we dont want people to stop medications when you need but we want them to be better educated about the cost and the quality of the services that they are receiving. So just a brief moment on standard of excellence, and this is the service what we did is we looked at me replacement, hip replacement and spinal fusion surgeries, muscular skeletal decision for us has always been one of our highest categories in our medical plan. So we looked at how could we look at a cost and look at quality of care that people were receiving, and could we take a network and parents will be to be a little more and include travel expenses if someone was willing to go to a high quality cost efficient provider, or a particular joint replacement or spinal fusion surgery. And so we are able to do that. We have four tiers within the network, and we leveraged at
Blue Cross Blue Shield
centers for excellence or blue distinction network, and we went for the. We started with quality and added a cost component. So this is some of the results from 2012 and 2013 when we implemented that. So we had about 264 joint replacements are back using surgeries fusion surgeries in last 18 months or so. In the middle to embark you can see the impacts of the cost. Someone who chose to go to the highest quality, most cost efficient providers around the country, we saw about a 2830 reduction in cost. When you include travel, so we paid for travel and very similar to what calpers is doing. Again, about a 30 decrease in cost. And from a quality perspective, no adverse side effects. So potentially avoidable complications, there were none in the first year by someone going to a facility that may not be in their hometown where they had to travel for that hip replacement in the first year in 2012 we had about 20 facilities in the network so we people traveling around the country for this surgeries and had really great feedback and great experiences. And as you can see, great quality and low cost for our members, or for our associates. Over all, i was in our associates are very pleased with the program. One of the things we thought wed hear a special on target pricing and implemented it was a lot of pushback. You are just shifting the cost to me. Instead what were hearing is thank you. Thank you for letting me know that theres such a big difference in cost in my community but and if i know i can go someplace else and do the same quality at a less cost, thats good for them and its good for the company. And so we have seen a lot of positive results and a lot of positive feedback from our associates by doing things like target pricing and centers of excellence. So thank you for your time today. Well, thank you, theresa. Very interesting. Finally, we are going to from dr. Michael belman. Is the regional
Vice President
and medical director for programs and innovations for
Anthem Blue Cross
in california. Anthem and shivered as a part of wellpoint. Hes been trained as an internist, specialized in pulmonary medicine. Hes been with anthem since 96, and hes in a great position to discuss with us the role of insurers in reference pricing and their various partnerships with employers. And by the way, dr. Belman made a couple of changes in this life back from the version you have in your kids. Kits. You can get the latest version on the
Alliance Website
after you get out of here. Thank you, ed. I live in
West Los Angeles
where its not only important to look healthy, you have to look good as well. [laughter] so one of the striking features was that a freestanding
Surgical Center
in 90210, just around the corner from the gucci store, in fact, was a total price of 3500 for the cataract whereas the two largest
West Los Angeles
facilities one an
Academic Institution
and the other a very
Large Community
hospital the
Academic Institution
was about 6,000, the
Large Community
hospital was 11,000. For me as a individual who paid a 20 coinsurance, the benefit was direct to me in the sense that the coinsurance on the 3500 saved me 2 3,000 out of pocket and it also saved them money in the sense that they paid the 3500 and not the expanded fee. So im telling you this because my experience, although it was relevant for me, doesnt make much of a dent in these two highpriced institutions, and it didnt save that much money for anthem. But now what were seeing unfolding and what youve heard today from kroger and from calpers is the realization or the actualization of these differences that make a big impact in terms of the price that everybody pays because, in fact, once these expenditures from these employers starts trending down and in some cases it is trending down that makes a difference to the premiums that they charge the following year. And thats the premiums that you pay. So this is a direct impact for all of us. So i just wanted to emphasize that because it, obviously, has relevance. Im also using my ipad because as good as the cataract surgery was, there is no way that i can read that screen over there. [laughter] so the point that i wanted to make at the beginning is that the costs outside of premiums, copays and deductibles are typically unknown to the average consumer and i might say, also, to the average physician. And thats why this is an education for physicians, and i commend kroger, in fact, on making sure that the physicians know about that. Because physicians are totally oblivious to what the charges are. They know what they receive, but they do not know what facilities receive, what drugs cost, etc. And, in fact, a recent article in the new england journal of medicine highlighted this dilemma and actually called the coinsurance and deductibles an avoidable side effect of treatment or harmful effect. In other words, people undergo treatments and or receive medications and then have the unpleasantness of finding that the charges that result or the outofpocket expenses are so extreme as to make it extremely difficult to actually pay for these. So this becomes very relevant in this setting. So we also know that in california the hip and
Knee Replacement
s vary between 20,000 to 110,000 across the network. So you saw a similar diagram to this where we talked i think when we had the talk for the, from from cpr. And, essentially, this shows the range of pricing in california of the 110 or so institutions that provide hip and knee surgery. So it was noted that when you choose a value of 30,000, that you encompass a significant number of institutions within the network. It also included a wide geographic distribution, so if there was travel involved, it was a reasonable amount of travel and p didnt require long distances. And this was really, i think, the basis for the number. The other point that i think was important is that we did look at at am i going the right way . Im going to wrong way. There we go. We did hook at the quality, and im going to come to that in a moment, but essentially, the valuebased purchasing design establishes the payment for elective procedures. It limits the obligation of the payer and guarantees members the ability to choose a facility that will provide
Company Health<\/a> care plan we have about 85,000 eligible associates. The rest of our associates are represented under collective bargaining agreements and their benefit plans are provided through other funds. So where we innovate and where we try new things really within the company plan, and thats where the target
Pricing Initiative<\/a> is today. So thats where ill focus our discussion for this afternoon. Mainly, we operated
Grocery Retail<\/a> centers throughout the country, but we also have distribution centers, fuel centers, manufacturing centers, fine jewelry stores. Usually get a few eyebrows that raise a message or restores but we are one of the larger jewelry chains in the country as well. To talk a little bit about what our objectives are with on health care plan, we really focus on trying to keep it simple for 350,000 people to try to understand what we are trying to accomplish with the
Health Care Benefits<\/a> that we provide to them. We really focus on objective. The first one is to improve the health of our associates and
Family Member<\/a>s. We truly believe that if we can improve the health of our associates and their
Family Member<\/a>s, not only will be able to hold down the cost for the company and costs for our associates, we also think thats a better place to be as an organization, more productive associates, happier worklife balance so were focused on health improvement. Secondly, were very focused on reducing costs. The grocery business is not one of high margin so we are very focused on where we invest our dollar. We spend about 1. 5 billion on health care for all of our associates in all of the benefit plans. So we are very focused on health and reducing costs. As we are looking at to reduce cost, we are constantly looking at not just what
Health Care Costs<\/a>, but how people access the
Health Care System<\/a> and where theyre choosing to get care. So where are they making or where are they able to make decisions about quality and cost as their accessing health care when they need it. So a couple of initiatives, im going to focus most of my discussion today on our target
Pricing Initiative<\/a> but when implemented that in 2012, we took to initiative at the same time and focused on target pricing, which is our discussion today about putting a price in place for
Certain Services<\/a>. And we focus our services on hightech imaging. So cat scans and mris and the like. We also at the same time put in a very specific centers of
Excellence Program<\/a> to focus on hip or
Knee Replacement<\/a> and find fusion surgery. So that typical initiative is really focus on quality of care and cost of care. Target pricing as my other panelists today have talked about is not so much about quality because we are assuming that the majority of the quality in a hightech
Imaging Service<\/a> is relatively the same. The difference is in the variation and cost. So our two different initiatives are addressing those costs, and then on the centers of excellence peace around the quality of care. Our target
Pricing Program<\/a> we partnered with anthem, they are our claims administrator selfinsured plan so they are very instrumental in helping us design our target pricing and are centers for
Excellence Program<\/a>. So the target
Pricing Program<\/a> only has three levels were associates and providers get involved in making a choice about where to access a hightech
Imaging Service<\/a>. So the first thing that we put in place is that any hightech
Imaging Service<\/a> has to get prior authorization or precertification. So the provider or the associate would call into
Blue Cross Blue Shield<\/a> before a service is received. And that is where it really starts. Its on the slide, you can see the aim or hightech imaging. That is usually where a physician or provider would get some education about our target
Pricing Program<\/a>. To help them understand that the plan has a certain threshold of how much we will pay for hightech
Imaging Service<\/a>s, and help the provider then understand where in the market can they go our way they can send the patient to stay at or below the target price. So that is the first level and use in some of the results thats usually where most of the services will get redirected them. The
Second Public<\/a> office
Shopper Program<\/a> and thats usually where a nurse from anthem will outrage to our associates or
Family Member<\/a> who is due to get an mri or ct scan, and help them in more educated on our target
Pricing Program<\/a> to let them know that the plan will pay up to a certain level and that there are a lot of choices in the market to help them understand what providers they can go to, if they want to be at or below the target price. Or if they choose to pay more and go someplace else, they can do that as well. So completely voluntary program that we do help educate both the provide and our associate as theyre making the choices on where to go to get their care. Then the third piece is implementing that target price. So in 2012 we started with five hightech
Imaging Service<\/a>s, and we started only in 10 anthem states. So is technically a little pilot for us, and in terms of how we implemented it. So you see you on the slide five tests in 2012. We added a sixth hightech
Imaging Service<\/a> in 2013, and also in 2013 we expanded it to all of the u. S. States across the country. So we were able to capture a lot more of our associates in that initiative. A little bit about the results that we are seeing. You can see here from the three levels of the program the clinical review operational activities, so thats the first level where most of the services are getting redirected to a provider who is at or below the target price. You will see the 2012 total year savings, and remember thats just 10 states for us, and in the
Third Quarter<\/a> 2012, or 2013 year to date slightly bigger but again a cross the u. S. The middle, the
Shopper Program<\/a>, not as much savings but we wouldnt expect as much there. We hope most of the services would get redirected, and they have, prior to getting the outreach call from a nurse to an associate. Actually implement the threshold of the target
Pricing Program<\/a> we have about 30 of our population that still chooses to go over the target price, and we think that comes down to education. So if you think about a lot of people when they go to the doctor still arent comfortable questioning costs or questioning quality, questioning whether doctor sends them for service. So celebrity and about 30 of the population chooses to still go to a facility that is at or above the private market price. To give you an example of the variation in cost, in ohio, where a ct scan of the abdomen, the cost ranges from about 260, to about 2600 depending on where you go. So that education alone both to the provider entity associate our associate is critical. Right now its all telephonicbased comments are getting them to really have that conversation with her provider is difficult but we are making progress, as you can see in her numbers and getting people educated. Early and 14 we will be implement in an online tool so that people can access, cost, and quality transparency, cost
Information Online<\/a> so they can start to make even better decisions. So what we actually saw with the unit cost, when the blue rose here, the 2012 results for the 10 states where we have had target pricing in 2012, and as you can see were actually able to reduce the unit cost through target pricing by redirecting people to a cost efficient provider. And by about 12 on both ct scans and mris. Compared to all other states in 2012 where we didnt have target pricing implemented, costs actually increased for both ct scans and mris in 2012. When you break that down by the five services, hightech
Imaging Service<\/a>s that we had in 2012, you can see each of the individual services and into 10 states would target pricing in 2012. All of those went down. Summit in significant. If you look at the abdomen ct right in the middle, went down by 32 . In unit price in the states where we had target pricing. Compared to some of the increases in the other states for the same services. So i the same time we implemented target pricing for medical services, the hightech imaging, we also implemented on several
Prescription Drug<\/a> categories. So i wanted to give you a little bit of the results from the
Prescription Drug<\/a> side as well. Kroger has her own tv him, so we just kroger prescription plans to help us design a very similar target
Pricing Initiative<\/a> that we had in the medical world in the pharmacy world as well. So we took three categories of drugs in 2012 and thats the ppis and the blood glucose test strip. And 2013 we added another category. That really focuses on education at the pointofsale. When someone is in our store, the added from us and talking to a pharmacy tech or pharmacist, really being able to get that education about the choices that they have, because if you think that some the drug categories, that an act example, huge variation in cost or we are just starting to see that drug category kind of settle out with it going generic latch up with that huge variation in cost, and not a high variation ineffectiveness in that drug category. So weve seen some really
Great Results<\/a> on the pharmacy site as well. And here is just some statistics on what we saw in unit cost in the
Prescription Drug<\/a> side. See you can see some pretty significant cost reductions on all three of the drug categories in 2012. Utilization was not significantly impacted. I think initially what some people might think of is individuals might forgo a medication because of target pricing because some of that cost may end up with them if they choose a higher cost of drug. We saw a little bit of that in that in category but other than that the utilization in the ppi, the utilization was down on the bit but not significantly. We are watching that closely because what we dont want to happen is we dont want people to stop medications when you need but we want them to be better educated about the cost and the quality of the services that they are receiving. So just a brief moment on standard of excellence, and this is the service what we did is we looked at me replacement, hip replacement and spinal fusion surgeries, muscular skeletal decision for us has always been one of our highest categories in our medical plan. So we looked at how could we look at a cost and look at quality of care that people were receiving, and could we take a network and parents will be to be a little more and include travel expenses if someone was willing to go to a high quality cost efficient provider, or a particular joint replacement or spinal fusion surgery. And so we are able to do that. We have four tiers within the network, and we leveraged at
Blue Cross Blue Shield<\/a> centers for excellence or blue distinction network, and we went for the. We started with quality and added a cost component. So this is some of the results from 2012 and 2013 when we implemented that. So we had about 264 joint replacements are back using surgeries fusion surgeries in last 18 months or so. In the middle to embark you can see the impacts of the cost. Someone who chose to go to the highest quality, most cost efficient providers around the country, we saw about a 2830 reduction in cost. When you include travel, so we paid for travel and very similar to what calpers is doing. Again, about a 30 decrease in cost. And from a quality perspective, no adverse side effects. So potentially avoidable complications, there were none in the first year by someone going to a facility that may not be in their hometown where they had to travel for that hip replacement in the first year in 2012 we had about 20 facilities in the network so we people traveling around the country for this surgeries and had really great feedback and great experiences. And as you can see, great quality and low cost for our members, or for our associates. Over all, i was in our associates are very pleased with the program. One of the things we thought wed hear a special on target pricing and implemented it was a lot of pushback. You are just shifting the cost to me. Instead what were hearing is thank you. Thank you for letting me know that theres such a big difference in cost in my community but and if i know i can go someplace else and do the same quality at a less cost, thats good for them and its good for the company. And so we have seen a lot of positive results and a lot of positive feedback from our associates by doing things like target pricing and centers of excellence. So thank you for your time today. Well, thank you, theresa. Very interesting. Finally, we are going to from dr. Michael belman. Is the regional
Vice President<\/a> and medical director for programs and innovations for
Anthem Blue Cross<\/a> in california. Anthem and shivered as a part of wellpoint. Hes been trained as an internist, specialized in pulmonary medicine. Hes been with anthem since 96, and hes in a great position to discuss with us the role of insurers in reference pricing and their various partnerships with employers. And by the way, dr. Belman made a couple of changes in this life back from the version you have in your kids. Kits. You can get the latest version on the
Alliance Website<\/a> after you get out of here. Thank you, ed. I live in
West Los Angeles<\/a> where its not only important to look healthy, you have to look good as well. [laughter] so one of the striking features was that a freestanding
Surgical Center<\/a> in 90210, just around the corner from the gucci store, in fact, was a total price of 3500 for the cataract whereas the two largest
West Los Angeles<\/a> facilities one an
Academic Institution<\/a> and the other a very
Large Community<\/a> hospital the
Academic Institution<\/a> was about 6,000, the
Large Community<\/a> hospital was 11,000. For me as a individual who paid a 20 coinsurance, the benefit was direct to me in the sense that the coinsurance on the 3500 saved me 2 3,000 out of pocket and it also saved them money in the sense that they paid the 3500 and not the expanded fee. So im telling you this because my experience, although it was relevant for me, doesnt make much of a dent in these two highpriced institutions, and it didnt save that much money for anthem. But now what were seeing unfolding and what youve heard today from kroger and from calpers is the realization or the actualization of these differences that make a big impact in terms of the price that everybody pays because, in fact, once these expenditures from these employers starts trending down and in some cases it is trending down that makes a difference to the premiums that they charge the following year. And thats the premiums that you pay. So this is a direct impact for all of us. So i just wanted to emphasize that because it, obviously, has relevance. Im also using my ipad because as good as the cataract surgery was, there is no way that i can read that screen over there. [laughter] so the point that i wanted to make at the beginning is that the costs outside of premiums, copays and deductibles are typically unknown to the average consumer and i might say, also, to the average physician. And thats why this is an education for physicians, and i commend kroger, in fact, on making sure that the physicians know about that. Because physicians are totally oblivious to what the charges are. They know what they receive, but they do not know what facilities receive, what drugs cost, etc. And, in fact, a recent article in the new england journal of medicine highlighted this dilemma and actually called the coinsurance and deductibles an avoidable side effect of treatment or harmful effect. In other words, people undergo treatments and or receive medications and then have the unpleasantness of finding that the charges that result or the outofpocket expenses are so extreme as to make it extremely difficult to actually pay for these. So this becomes very relevant in this setting. So we also know that in california the hip and
Knee Replacement<\/a>s vary between 20,000 to 110,000 across the network. So you saw a similar diagram to this where we talked i think when we had the talk for the, from from cpr. And, essentially, this shows the range of pricing in california of the 110 or so institutions that provide hip and knee surgery. So it was noted that when you choose a value of 30,000, that you encompass a significant number of institutions within the network. It also included a wide geographic distribution, so if there was travel involved, it was a reasonable amount of travel and p didnt require long distances. And this was really, i think, the basis for the number. The other point that i think was important is that we did look at at am i going the right way . Im going to wrong way. There we go. We did hook at the quality, and im going to come to that in a moment, but essentially, the valuebased purchasing design establishes the payment for elective procedures. It limits the obligation of the payer and guarantees members the ability to choose a facility that will provide
Services Within<\/a> an appropriate cost range. One interesting term that has been used is it acts as a reverse dedoesnt bl. Instead of the enrollee paying a defined limit and then taking over which is the standard deductible that many of you are familiar with, in this case it turns that on its head, and the plan pays up to to the limit after which if the enrollee chooses an institution above the threshold, the enrollee is liable for the increment. The participating hospitals were based on the procedure volume, as you heard. They met the standard regulatory standards, so they were all accredited at high levels by the appropriate external agencies. And we also have an anthem
Quality Program<\/a> for hospitals. And a number of metrics are measured across a broad range of procedures and tests and treatments that the hospital provides and outcomes that they report publicly, and its combined into a score. All of these hospitals were participants in the anthem program. So the overall impact was the shift of members to designated hospitals and shift away from nondesignated hospitals. And i think you would, it would be appropriate to reemphasize that point, that although there was a shift to the designated hospitals, the big, the big change was the shift away. And the decrease in total costs and this, i think, was a critical point how the market reacted to this was the decrease in cost in the nondesignated hospitals, some of which prior, immediately prior to the advent of the program lowered their price in order to be part of the network. The other point that is made in the article by
Jamie Robinson<\/a> in
Health Affairs<\/a> is that the upward cost trend from 2008 to 2010 which ran from 28,600 to 34,700 was reversed in 2011 with the advent of this program. So the really was a very striking example of bending the cost curve down which i believe is the washington phrase for, or the goal that has been set for the
Affordable Care<\/a> act. On the quality side, we use the hospital claims to look for general complications and jenin nexts, things that general infections, things that are not necessarily related to the surgery itself, but if there were results from, say, heart problems, kidney problems, lung problems as a result of the surgery or there were infections like pneumonia or kidney infections, so on after the surgery and, in fact, in the designated hospitals these rates actually dropped slightly. Significantly, but they dropped. There was no difference in complications related to the surgical sight itself in terms of the process three cease, the hips or the knees, theres no difference, and no other site complications like local infections or bleeding and the like. We also followed the claims for 180 days after the surgery, and its important to note that there was no difference in the readmissions either for joint issues or for other complications in the two populations that went to the two different institutions. And also bearing in mind again, and i should have maybe emphasized this, were also comparing it to noncalpers ppo anthem members whose claims we also had. So as you saw in some of the slides that were shown earlier, there was this
Comparison Group<\/a> of anthem ppo members in the same geography as was the, as were the calpers pens. Members. We have a number of other clients that have as a result of the successful experience we had with calpers and with kroger have also joined the referencebased benefit movement, and so ive listed some of these. Its not as important as much as the fact that there is now, i would say, a shift, and a number of large employers are embracing this program as a way to disrupt the continued increase in
Health Care Costs<\/a> very largely driven, in fact, by institutional pricing. So this has been a very encouraging development. In addition, we also have expanded it to include what kroger has included and what others have used in the past to include for outpatient procedures which are for cataracts, arthroscopy and endoscopy. So this is definitely something which has really blown the lid off, i think, the veil of secrecy over pricing together with a number of other events that have happened in the past and some recent publications including the very notorious one in
Time Magazine<\/a> earlier in the year which i think was also a major, major impact. As was cms, actually, release of charge masters which occurred recently as well. Should also just mention, because i noted in the wall street journal which was left outside my hotel room this morning, an article from intermountain, the
Intermountain Health<\/a> system run by a very, very
Prominent Health<\/a> researcher, brent james, on the current initiatives within the
Salt Lake City<\/a> region which i would imagine is most of utah to develop not what they call a charge master, but, in fact, a cost master. Where theyre actually developing costs of procedures based on real data and not
Wishful Thinking<\/a> and numbers plucked from thin air which has been the basis of most charge masters up til now. And i think this is the start of a new movement where
Cost Accounting<\/a> will, i think, enter the
Health Care Arena<\/a> and make it much more long call and much more sane logical and much more sane. So that, i thought, was an encouraging development. So in summary then, our with referencebased pricing expands the barrier of medical prices, it raises the question of why variation in procedure is justified. There are a large number of organizations that are out there collecting quality, but there is still much work to be done in this regard. It provides a useful mean of helping purchasers, members make choices that help reduce costs both for the company, for the individual. And its definitely a valuable tool in the overall approach to bend the cost curve down. Thank you. Terrific. Thanks very much, michael. We are at the point where you can have input here. There are green cards that you can fill out a question to ask one or more of the panelists, and there are microphones that you can use to vocalize your questions, and i would invite our panelists as well, if you have comments about anything youve heard or if you wanted to ask one of your panelists another question to jump right in, and lets mix it up. In the meantime, the first mixerupper, would you please identify yourself and keep the question as brief as you can. I will do both. Im bill rogers. Confident in the statement that theres no such thing as a stupid question, my first question is do all of these
Reference Price<\/a>s include the professional or physicians payment, and then my second question is how do you all decide what to do in subsequent years with your
Reference Price<\/a> . Two good questions. Well, the answer to the first one is, yes. It was the total claims, institutional and professional, that were included in the calculation. And andrea, you talked about bundled payment being a part of this calculation. Right. So i think, um, i think in the calpers example that thats one not all reference
Pricing Program<\/a>s include both. So thats something you need to distinguish. But if you, as this evolves and as reference pricing gets paired with a bundle payment, then, yes, youll see them be bundled together and paired together. So if i could just make one additional comment which, when you look at physician reimbursement across the state and im referring now to anthems reimbursement there is variation geographically minor, and in some cases if there is special expertise. But the degree of variation or the standard deviation of the reimbursement is a fraction of what it is for facilities. And and how about adjustments . Those of you who are involved in this business, how do you go from year to year . Can you ratchet down further, or do you have to take advantage take into account whats going on in the market . Well, from krogers perspective, we looked at it of the five services that we target priced in 12, we did look at the cost data for 2013. We decided to leave the target price where it is, and its roughly around 800 for one of those hightech
Imaging Service<\/a>s. But we found we didnt really need to adjust it at in this point. But our plan is to look at it every year because what we dont want to happen is our target price stays the same, but the cost of services continues to go up. So we need to adjust that, and we will as we need to as we move forward. But our hope is that it brings down the cost and that we have more and more people staying at or below that target price wherever we can. Okay. Yes, maam. Hi. Sandra [inaudible] from senator heinrichs office. I believe it was mentioned that education was the variable that was distinguishing between those who were opting for reference or targetbased procedure or facility and those that werent. And im wondering if theres any evidence of that or evidence of any other variables that would distinguish between folks who do and dont and also providers who opt for that and dont. Thank you. Well, ill talk about it from krogers perspective. We have anthem after every individual that does have an mri or thats going through our target price program. Theyre actually surveying them and asking them a series of questions, did you know about the program before you had the service, do you understand how it works. And what were finding is that theres a vast majority of people that didnt undersnd it. So i think there is a
Big Education<\/a> component, getting people to understand, one, what their benefits are because its complicated, you know . They understand deductible and coinsurance, and anything past that they dont. Its complicated. So having that initial education up front, we do a lot to the communicate to our associates on their benefit plans and give them access to a lot of resources. But its going to take some time, i think, to really get people to understand that they do have choices to make and that there is a lot of variation for
Certain Services<\/a> in the
Health Care System<\/a>. So were going to continue to educate and continue to give them access to resources. I also mentioned i think that right now we dont have an online tool where people can go to get information about cost and quality of providers in their community, and we will be implementing
Something Like<\/a> that in the
First Quarter<\/a> of 2014 so that a they can access information before they go to their providers and before they have to get a particular service. So were hoping that will help further educate people. Okay. David . Pretty similar to calpers situation as well in terms of we anthem does a
Patient Experience<\/a> followup study in looking at members knowledge of the program and all of the followup questions and their awareness. So similar to kroger, were rolling out in mid 2014 a much more webbased and mobile tool to provide cost and quality information as well. Okay. Well, youve unleashed a tremendous volume of questions on green cards, and were going to plow right in. A lot of them are very basic and i think will help fill in some of the blanks in the peoples knowledge. How do insurers handle complications in procedures that extend the costs above the
Reference Price<\/a> . And are consumers forced to accept that burden . Right. So the
Reference Price<\/a> is for routine procedure, so if the procedure becomes nonroutine, it would not fall under the referencebased
Pricing Program<\/a>. And i think you see that when i was showing some of the variation in the chart. Some of those dots are outside of the 0,000 or above 30,000 or above that, and those are falling into the nonroutine procedures which are not excluded from the way the claims data is set up. Before dont forget what you were going to say, but i did want to follow up because theres another question in the be pile that asks about how you work that medical exception. Does it happen before or after . How big is the acquisition between the two the division between the two categories, that sort of thing . My understanding is that it works through, its before, and it would also occur after, say the colonoscopy gets in, and they need to do some other procedure. Right. Its a question of communication between our case manager and the calpers staff so that the aberrations or the exceptions are picked up and then can be dealt with. Okay. Andrea . I was just going to say that so when it falls into the exception and outside of the
Reference Price<\/a>, the normal cost sharing would apply. So just to round out the story that if youre outside of the
Reference Price<\/a>, meaning youre an exception to the rule that would qualify you, then your normal cost sharing and your benefit applies. And could i actually, one of the questions that came in before ties into that, that line of observation, and that is, um, youre talking about major procedures with potentially thousands of dollars even in the copays. How do these potentially large outofpocket expenses square with the outofpocket limits that are supposed to go into effect in the
Affordable Care<\/a> act next year . Which i think are
Something Like<\/a> 6400 a person per year . Or has no one my impression is that at present this particular program where there are options to go to a referencebased a facility that is designated within the
Reference Price<\/a> range is not the same as the standard openended out of pocket when you go to any number of institutions. So there is the choice that the member has here to make, to stay within the range of the expenses. Thats my understanding of the current perception. And i rephrase that, that means if the patient chooses a nonparticipating program that doesnt meet the price point, whatever that excess is does not count toward the whatever hundred dollar outofpocket limit in the aca . Is that a fair reading of what you just said . Thats my understanding. Okay. Thats my understanding as well. I think we have some, i think theres some resolved interpretations because one of the things as representing purchasers, purchasers work with many health plans around the country, and not all health plans are equipped or able to or want to implement these kinds of programs. So i think there are different interpretations around that particular issue. Which, you know, is maybe health plan dependent. It could be other variables about why someone wont implement it unlike wellpoint that has decided that its viable. Question, another question about prices. How do you monitor whether the prices rise for the non
Reference Price<\/a> procedures . That is to say, is there some sort of cost shift going on . Well, im sorry. Go right ahead. I will jump right in. When cprs been advocating for reference pricing or at least encouraging our purchasers to use it a as a strategy, the criticism is, well, thats as i said before, its a really blunt instrument to use in the marketplace, and you just whack at it, and now youve disrupted the market. But the, the reality is that, you know, employers do have to kind of stand up and say, you know, were not going to tolerate the variation anymore. And, you know, i think when you, when you send that message into the marketplace, theyre going to respond with a shift this volume. And when theres a shift in volume, then you see a change this behave. In behavior. And sort of a variation of that same question has to do with the impact on physician incomes. Has there been pushback from physicians on this aspect because the total amount is higher is lower than it would have been otherwise or volume isnt flowing to the hospitals where they have privileges . Have you heard anything like that . I cant from no . I think anecdotally, the orthopedic surgeons have all been pretty positive in terms of coming fort in terms of participation forth in terms of participation programs. As was mentioned earlier, the variation in costs have little to do with the professional fees that we see. So theres a little less, you know, pushback from that. Okay. Just the one point i would make, i think its logical to assume theres going to be disruptions, and thats clearly part of the goal of these innovations is to reduce the cost trend. And a number of stakeholders will get impacted through various interventions. This one happens to possibly impact physicians to some extent and facilities, but there are others that impact individuals plans and so on. So i think were all in this together that were searching for ways to come to, you know, reasonable adjustments to the fact that the trend has to come down. But it does raise the issue both with bundle pricing and with referencebased men b fits that benefits that in this case we assume that the physicianings decision to operate is correct physicians decisioning to operate is correct and the procedure gets done. So, well, maybe you didnt even have to do it. Its all very well to have referencebased prices, but you can make it up on the volume. And so everybody, and so the physicians would certainly come out equal in that setting. So its encouraging to see that some of the
Quality Metrics<\/a> that are being developed and there are registries now being developed around the country, theres one in california, the california joint replacement registry which will, which is collecting data on preoperative and postoperative enrollee function, pain, etc. So that these indices can be incorporated into the decisionmaking process. So when the surgery is decided upon b, its based on some rational information. And theres tracking of provider performance in each of these metrics. And, of course, kroger program has a reauthorization we do. And i think the disruption is exactly why were doing what were doing. We want people to understand that there is a variation in cost that isnt necessary. And so the more that we have providers calling anthem questioning why the slower the volume going a different direction is great. Thats exactly what we want to happen. Andrea . Yeah. I was just going to follow up on a point that dr. Belman made cans, you know, will there is a risk of the payments being made up for on other services. But i think if you speak with a hospital cfo, they will say, well, i know what my margins have to be, i know that if im going to take a hit over here, a haircut over here, im going to have to increase something somewhere else whether its on rice or utilization or volume. And i think there is the risk of that happening. I dont know that we have any evidence of it, of that sort of shell game actually happening. I think the insurers once they have a little more experience with reference pricing and as they see how charges if they have their payment tied to charges and those change, then they will, you know, well have a little more evidence of whether there is that kind of
Cost Shifting<\/a> within a facilitys procedures. But i think the, its while it can happen, it should not limit the first step which is to implement the reference pricing on front end. Yes. David . Yeah. We get the same question as well for the hips and knees, kind of looping back around. As you saw in our muchs, we didnt actually see an increase in volume over the time, and then on the other three procedures that were looking at, i think weve seen a little bit of increase in colonoscopy, but that necessarily isnt a bad thing. Thats, for screening like that, its probably a good thing. Be okay. Yes, maam. My name is lisa summers, im with [inaudible] health care institute, and my question is for andrea or anyone else on the panel, but particularly given cprs work on pa a alternativety care payment reform, certainly ob care is not entirely elective. Once youre pregnant, you have to deliver, but women certainly have months to shop for prenatal care and delivery services, and we know theres huge variation in cost and quality. And its a very
High Frequency<\/a> occurrence with four million births a year. So im interested in whether or not any of you are looking at reference pricing for
Maternity Care<\/a>, and if you have thoughts about whether or not the lessons weve learned from the global payment in ma a alternativety care which is somewhat like bundled care informs this discussion at all. So ill start by saying that so far i think while we work with some very progressive employers, they sort of selfselect to be that way by being part of catalyst for payment reform, i dont know that
Maternity Care<\/a> will be,
Maternity Care<\/a> services will be at thats probably farther down the road in terms of reference pricing. I think
Maternity Care<\/a> is much better suited for bundled payment or a blended payment methodology because you have so many parts of, you know, you do have time to look around and shop, but you also have many providers within that system. And then once youre in the facility delivering, there are other variables that can come into play. So im not sure that well see reference
Maternity Care<\/a> be a
Reference Price<\/a> bl, if thats a word, benefit. It may be, but i havent seen it yet. I think its more appropriate for different kinds of payment reform like bundled or blended payment. The one comment i would make is that, youre right, that there is wide variation. We havent looked at bundled or referencebased pricing, but because of the wide variation in, for example be, csection rates amongst hospitals which in california range from 22 to 50 and the appearance or the fact that there is now a decreasing but up until now a fair number of women who were induced, where labor was induced prior to the 37th week or just shortly after the 37th week, between 37 and 39 weeks which is now recognized as a non actually, a counterindication. If there were no other complications, a term should be 39 plus. And the rate of these nonmedically indicated, premature deliveries has gone down dramatically, but that particular target plus the csection rate, be the those are reduced, can reduce costs enormously because a large number of those infants end up in the intensive care unit where costs are astronomical. So one of the early successes weve had is, in fact, with reducing csections and with reducing premature induction of labor where its not indicated. So that can have a big impact on total costs and outofpocket costs. And this is im sorry. This is actually an area where the private sector can learn from medicaid, because we have several state medicaids, and we just did a, we just released a case study on south carolinas birth outcome initiatives where its not a reference pricing ram, but it is a nonpayment policy for early elective inductions. And so the, you know, the commercial private sector could learn a lot to reduce those csection rates and the early elective inductions which are a major cost driver. Yes, go right ahead. Hi. My name is [inaudible] from the
National Academy<\/a> of social insurance. And i have two short questions. So in addition to
Consumer Education<\/a>, are there a new set of challenges for implementing reference pricing for orthopedic and other health
Care Services<\/a> versus implementing it for trucks and pharmaceuticals . And then drugs and pharmaceuticals. And be then really quickly, my second question, are there examples either at home or abroad where reference pricing has not worked in bringing down the cost of care or in bringing down the quality . I think referencebased pricing, target pricing is still so new that its hard to say, um, you know, where it hasnt worked right. Were all kind of in that version one type of initiative where were just trying certain things. Were trying
Different Things<\/a> between calpers and what krogers doing and what other employers are doing. So i think its early to tell where its not working. I think in krogers results weve seen positive results both on the quality cost side and from feedback from our associates. So we havent seen any one of the things either on the pharmacy side or the medical side where its not working yet, but were certainly watching things like it here on the pharmacy side because, like i said before, we dont want people to forgo medication when they need it because of cost. So we need to look at that very closely and make sure thats not happening. But right now we havent seen anything negative or something thats not working yet. In our research, we havent found either at home or abroad. I think at home it is too new. Abroad where reference pricing on druggings has been, um, quite common, i havent read anything that would indicate that there was a decrease or that it didnt decrease costs and it also decreased quality which we want to improve quality. On the
Consumer Education<\/a> piece, i dont know if anyone on the panel can answer that question. I dont know that there is there are different challenges for implementing different types of reference
Pricing Program<\/a>s, so its obviously, when youre implementing a reference
Pricing Program<\/a> for hip and
Knee Replacement<\/a> which is far more complex than just a lab test or imaging, you know, there are lots of variables in there. The
Consumer Education<\/a> piece has to be tailored to the type of service, or if youre doing multiple services, it has to be tailored to it. I dont know, you know, i think a lot of it would its around medical literacy and being able to articulate something in an easytounderstand way whether it is a lab or a knee or hip replacement, but its highly dependent on the type of service. I think the other thing is its easier to know or ask about the cost of a
Prescription Drug<\/a> than it is to know about the cost of a medical service. So when youre going to the counter at a pharmacy, you can ask about different costs for
Different Levels<\/a> or categories of drugs, the generic versus a brand name, etc. And its not so easy on the medical side. You have to do a lot of digging and a lot of research to even know where to go to get cost information on the medical side. So its a little easier on the pharmacy side today, but were hoping on medical side it gets to be just as easy so that people can make better choices. A couple of times in the last few minutes weve talked about elect i versus non elective versus nonelective health expenditures, and we have a specific question asking if we have some sense of what share of
Health Care Spending<\/a> is elective as opposed to trying to negotiate while youre in the ambulance on the way to the emergency room. I dont know the proportions of spending. I have no idea. Could find out. Could find it, but and since chronic care counts for such a large percentage of spending particularly in medicare, does that count as elective or not . One would think that if youre taking a preventive drug or going through some sort of service to keep you from worsening in your diabetes, that that would not necessarily be elective. Well could you apply that, apply reference pricing to those kinds of things as well . So in the kroger program on the pharmacy side, its any script in those four categories of drugs. On the medical side with the hightech imaging, we dont do target pricing for children. Although were finding that whats happening with our associates and their
Family Member<\/a>s who are over the age of 18, theyre starting to ask questions when their children need an
Imaging Service<\/a>. So thats good. And were also not doing it on emergent services. So dont really call it elective, right in youre getting an mri or a ct scan and its not a an emergency, target pricings going to apply. David, do you have something to add on that . Several people are interested in the application of your travel reimbursement policy. You might call it domestic domestic tour itch. Tourism, medical tourism, yes. So let me just read them off because there are a bunch of aspects of it. If somebody had to travel to a distant hospital, are travel expenses paid before travel in the event the patient cant afford it . What kinds of expenses are covered such as lost wages for extra time off, child care, postprocedure followup visits, expenses for a traveling companion, i think we may have heard a little bit about that. Thats all on one question card. Do you pay for followup care for patient and family after a procedure at a preferred provider whos located far away from the patients home . And finally, are reimbursement for travel expenses is good, but what about for conditions where travel is difficult and painful or people who dont have a companion to travel with them . What is, what are the conditions under which youre requiring people to pay for travel impacting their mobility and ability to get to the high quality care . Lots of interest. Would you like to expand on your descriptions of the travel policy . Sure. So in the kroger program in our centers of
Excellence Program<\/a>, if someone chooses to travel to use one of our we call them tier one facilities and they dont have one this their community in their community, we have a group of professionals at anthem that thats what they do. They help to coordinate the flights, the hotels, the meals, the companion traveling with them. All of that is taken care of so that its not coming out of the pocket of the associate. So its billed as a claim through our billing process that we have with anthem. So all of that is taken care of for them. If someone cant travel, then we have accommodations for that as well. So theyre not penalized for having a comorbid condition that prevents them from traveling or some other type of barrier. So it isnt intend bed to be such a stiff penalty just because they cant travel. So we try that first, and if theyre willing to do that and if they can physically do that, if not, then we also accommodate them to try and get them to another centers of excellence be, a tier ii provider to take care of that for them. So we really try and coordinate all of that. I would say one of the challenges that we experienced early on went we implemented the centers of
Excellence Program<\/a> was the postoperative care. So moving someone back from a centers of excellence facility that might not have been in their community and getting them back into their local provider for that care. And so its taken a lot of coordinationing between an hem finish coordination between anthem and the nurses that help us do this at anthem, the surgeon and the local provider community. I think we finally got it all figured out, but that was really where the challenge was. Its not getting them to the high quality facility, getting the
Great Services<\/a> there. The challenge for us is really getting them back into the local provider community. But its working, and it seems to be something, i think, that barrier has been worked out for us. David . Follow up with the same, anthem has a
Concierge Service<\/a> which provides all the travel arrangements. The also, again, the same. If theyre not allowed, if they have a chronic condition that doesnt allow them, they would get a medical exception which wouldnt force them to use the facility. So they could use something in the community if it was too far. And in california, luckily, we have enough facilities, that only happens at a very small number of facilities in
Northern California<\/a> where we have this kind of issue. And, actually, this question goes in the other direction. If examples provided today in the examples provided today, we see large insurers pushing for competition in procedures for which there are a lot of providers in an area. Do you have any thoughts on how this model might work in an area with just one or two providers and a small
Insurer Network<\/a> . Were at is that what you find yourself addressing when you have somebody in eureka . Right. So, i mean, thats the challenge, right, of having enough regionallylocated, geographicallydispersed referencebased pricing facilities and then having to have that travel and the canyon package companion package. And so in terms of the impact of that in terms of on the market, well, if theres only one facility and theyre either meeting or not meeting, so its, you know, its a little difficult to look at the variation in a region like that. Yeah. I was just going to comment that if you have only one or two providers who can perform a procedure in a geographic area, you if there is variation, which most of the time if its its really only one or two providers or very few that are clustering around each other, so you dont see the same variation. Therefore, you, you know, this type of pricing doesnt necessarily have the same impact for those providers, and it wont have the same kind of and if you think about it, then you could end up if some kind of antitrust issues where if you have two providers and theyre agreeing to either set or be close to one another on price, i mean, we get into a whole other area of complicated issues when youre really only talking about where you dont have competition and you only have one or two providers so you can perform a service. So its not likely that these will occur there. Okay. We have only a few minutes left, and im going to ask you to spend those minutes not only listening to the qs and as but also filling out the blue evaluation form if you would. And we have another californiacentric question here. How about youve got a market in california that is heavily penetrated by hmos, and the questioner wonders how the referencebased prices for anthems ppo compare to the prices in california hmos. The prices that they pay. Well, the hmo in california in general is significant, although its actually decreasing gradually over the past few years, and the ppo is increasing overall. But theres still a very large number of hmo members. In most cases as far as anthem goes, the hospital pricing is a contract between anthem and the hospital. So the professional component is where the capitation occurs on the hmo side with the exception of about 15 of our network which is in a full risk or more of a global capitation setting. So the answer, in short, is that the hmo is not currently part of this initiative. And the prices paid at those institutions are the prices that the standard anthem price. And, actually, this is a related question, at least poor country lawyer thinks its related. It might not be. Why cant reference pricing be part of the carrier networking contracting negotiations, that discounting up to the
Reference Price<\/a> versus usual and customary . Is that a reasonable question if this context . In this context . Well, first of all, im a physician ad hoc, so [laughter] i dont want to venture into that. But be i think youre asking is it, should it be part of the normal contractual negotiation or rather than the negotiated price it is a agreed upon between both parties s that the essence . I guess thats right. That as you establish right. A network thats willing to meet that price, can you leverage that into going to those who are outside that range and negotiate that as art of your new contract . As part of your new contract . Well, im probably not going to venture too far into that other than just to reemphasize the fact that there was that pressure on the nonconforming institutions with the calpers initiative to actually bring the prices down. Which actually happened without it being a direct goal. So it may well be that it could be effective. I was [inaudible] from a payers perspective, its where we want it to go, right . So we want to be able to bring the cost down of all of those services in a particular category, so hopefully, target pricing or referencebased pricing is eventually going to lead us there. Its just one of the initiatives trying to get costs more aligned in a community. I think its really important to understand that, i mean, reference pricing is ultimately a benefit strategy. Its not a payment strategy. So while you are capping the payment, you could still pay for it on bundled payment or fee for service or another method. So reference pricing is a benefit design. So while, you know, calpers i dont want to speak for david here, but calpers implemented reference pricing without having to renegotiate contracts, and anthem didnt renegotiate contracts during that period. They looked at the data, and they set the benefit design price of 30,000, and then hospitals moved cordingly. And then surely, i would imagine, in subsequent contracting cycles with those facilities that were either outside or at or below, that becomes part of the conversation. But you dont have to implement reference pricing through a
Contract Negotiation<\/a> although once its occurred, it probably does become a part of it. Or i think theres a question. [inaudible] you want to get to a microphone . Right behind grow. Right behind you. Right now im a tafthartley fund, but anybody who has a relationship with a good carrier like an anthem, they say well give you a guaranteed discount of 60 . But its based on the usual and customary. And what im suggesting is we would have a lot more manpower if our carriers werent just negotiating on my behalf or krogers behalf, but on their of business and telling some of these facilities we will take a 60 discount but be up to a
Reference Price<\/a> as opposed to the usual and customary which is more supply driven. And so its a really kind of out of the box way to think, but its something i think everybody in the room could benefit from if they have, you know, stronger negotiations while we still have a chance before
Network Negotiations<\/a> go away because everyone in the countrys going to have insurance, and a hospital wont take a discount anymore. Thats a very improved formulation of your question from if from mine. And does it elicit some further response from any of our panelists . Well, again, the point i would make is that i, that in this whole area of pricing has been changed as a result of the, lets say the shroud has been lifted. And so the previous discussions that occurred on discounts or the desired target price were discussions around the argument about percentages off. Now discussion is different, and those highpriced institutions from my own personal experience in california are aware of the pact that their prices are now out this and can be seen by the public. And so it is a different discussion. To the extent that youre the end point youve described, i cant speak to that. Im not expert at that. But i believe the nature of the discussion has changed because of the fact that when the target prices are put out by these institutions, they are they could be recognized as way out of range of averages and reasonableness. So i think its a positive. Im not sure exactly where you want to get to yet. Okay. All right. And by the way, one of the best illustrations of the impact on the upon the participating hospitals is this the on the nonparticipating hospitals is in the chart. Jamie robinson, and we have our friends to thank for these very readable onepagers summarizing
Jamie Robinson<\/a>s article. Theres a lovely chart on that second page that shows you the impact on the pricing of these services in the hospitals that were not participating in the calpers experiment. Yes, bob. Bob grist with the association of community health. With all the discretion that the payers have in setting reference pricing that youve disclosed in this panel and with the tendency of employers to cost shift onto employees usually in the form of greater deductibles or copayments, what are the protections for consumers from reference pricing which sets a standard price and expects the consumer to pay anything over that
Reference Price<\/a> . It seems like a very dangerous precedent even if its in the interests of the payer in the short run. You havent given any indication that this is a way of actually reducing total
Health Care Costs<\/a>. We dont know whether the hospital is going to follow this procedure with regard to other payers or whether theyre going to shift those costs onto other procedures. And im not sure how comfortable we should feel about this particular shortterm strategy to help payers reduce certain costs. The panel itself is telling one story, and we dont have on the
Panel Providers<\/a> or consumers who have been discriminated against because their unique needs did not fill the, you know, you sort of assume that quality remains the same. But, in fact, that may not be the case if most
Health Care Situations<\/a> in most
Health Care Situations<\/a>. Well, for us, i think, its about being an informed patient. And its completely sol p tear voluntary for our associates and their
Family Member<\/a>s to choose where they get care. We dont tell them they have to go anywhere. The choice theirs. And they have an opportunity to be informed before they obtain a ct scan or an mri or get a particular prescription and to make a coys as to whether or not a choice as to whether or not they want to stay under the target price or if they prefer not to. So the choice completely theirs. Its about, for us, its about information and about helping them be informed consumers of health care and to make a choice from that perspective. So they know whether or not theyre going to be paying more if they choose to do so. Go ahead. Michael. Yeah. No, thats a very good question, and i would say to the issues of patient protection, there is the protection that if the enrollee or the member stays within the defined referencebased network, then their share is fixed as to whatever benefit structure they have with their employer. The only time they would be subject to additional cost is if they went outside the network. So i dont think its necessarily bad in that sense. The quality issue is relevant, and i agree that when youre talking about quality in general, there are a large number of metrics out this, and there are a few hundred that have been developed by very prestigious organizations. But be when it comes to but when it comes to specific quality issues within these very detailed procedures such as hip and joint replacement and so on, a lot of
Quality Metrics<\/a> that need to or a lot of quality information that hopefully will come out of registries. What we have at the moment is not completely adequate. So in terms of the overall success, i would just say that there are a number of initiatives that have been put out there, and there are various organizations that describe various initiatives for bending the cost curve down. Very many of them have failed. And this is one of the few that at the moment has had some success. And its had success as well documented not just by calpers and not just by anthem, but by an
Impartial Third Party<\/a> here with the
Health Economists<\/a> at uc berkeley. So i think there is some validity to this study the. Im pretty sure. These are very good researchers. And i think it is a success story. Now, whether or not it can be replicated a across the country, that remains to be seen. But in this has been a successful initiative, and i think its i mean, im biased, of course, but i think it has done something to push the knowledge and the practice of
Health Care Delivery<\/a> along. Go ahead, david. Okay. Calpers is exreamly sensitive to this extremely sensitive to this question given who we represent and, in fact, the
Jamie Robinson<\/a> article includes an analysis of the out of pocket to the payers. I didnt include it because it gets a little complicated talking about coinsurance, copayments, deductibles, but we did see the out of pocket went down to our members over time with the implementation of the program. And in general, if you think about so
Something Like<\/a> so in that case with the hips and knees the deductible plays a big role in terms of how the out of pocket hits you. Something with the more, the colonoscopies, the cataracts, you know, the coinsurance still plays a role there, and, you know, the lower costs are going to benefit you. So that is going to be included as well as when we do our followup
Economic Analysis<\/a> of those three other procedures were doing on reference pricing. In terms of total costs, that was also included looking at the out of pocket plus the net pay, so that went down dramatically as well. As i said, for the hips and knees. And that may have been due to the deductible being reached in a number of cases. And then i think your last part was a little bit about, talking about the bubble. If you push down on the balloon here, it comes up over here. I think thats just for calpers something well have to look at in the future and be aware of and be concerned about. And i just wanted to comment that i think there is awareness on behalf of the payers and the purchasers that this is somewhat of a shortterm fix. But it is one of the few shortterm fixes that actually is seeing positive results. And so in the absence of being able to look at the total and being able to bend the total cost curve down, i think the strategies are having to be, they have to be a little bit more piecemeal. So its not that were not conscious of the impact that it could have, its just that sometimes things have to occur incrementally. And as dr. Belman said, some of the incremental things havent worked so far, and this is actually starting to work. And then well have to see what lessons can we learn from this to look at the more total population costs and the total costs and not having that
Cost Shifting<\/a> occur in the balloon impact. But part of this is disruption and inthough sative disruption innovative disruption that could help with shortterm costs which we are all struggling with and then learn from that to see what are the longterm lessons and strategies we can put in place. All right. My, that is a fittingly big picture end to this discussion, final comment anyway, if not the end. This has been quite edifying for your moderator anyway. Ive learned an awful lot about the way this mechanism works and might work for others in a similar situation. And id ask you to while youre filling out the evaluation forms that youve not had a chance to do yet note that we are indebted to our friends at wellpoint for helping us think through this session and put it together and for your
Great Questions<\/a> which covered a number of aspects of this that werent all that clear. And finally, ask if you would join me in thanking our panel to help us understand this concept. [applause] [inaudible conversations] the
Washington Post<\/a> reported that the goal is to have a pursuit of users to be able to sign up for
Health Care Plans<\/a> online. Is it acceptable if one in five are not able to get insurance on line . Thank you for the question. The way to look at that figure 10 who go on the system, roughly two will not get through. Baskets you can put those two out of 10 in. Those who experienced technical difficulties is one. That would be error messages or delayed response times. We arere metrics that using to measure improvements that have been made improvements in reduction of error message and site stability. Someone may not be comfortable doing this online, may not be familiar with the kind of information they need with regards to their financial the process onnd their own and decide to use one of the other methods that are available to get information and enroll. Finally, there are those who have personal or family situations that are complex enough that the site is not the best place to go to and role. Youre better served by using a a live live person person through the call center or one of the walkin centers that exist around the country. It is important to look at when you talk about aiming to have the website functioning effectively for the majority of people, there is a universe of people who will go on the site but leave it without getting through it for several reasons. Only one of them is categorized as being as having to do with technical issues. The goal is to get people and allowe system them to enroll in a plan and purchase quality,
Affordable Health<\/a> insurance if they desire. Beenis why we have pursuing other avenues. We knew these populations exist. Is this acceptable to the president . People on 80 of 20 of people in not able to, they probably wouldnt stay in business very long. Youre looking at that statistics implicitly. Inat that statistic simplicity. Will be a portion of people who will go on it and they may decide to use a different method of enrollment, not because theres a problem with the website, but there situation is comp luxe enough they may have children who there seeking to get covered who live in different states. Members of your family could be eligible for medicaid and others may not be. Individuals filing separately where some are able to purchase and others arent. Those kinds of complex the universe of the population with those kinds of issues are going to be better served by using a navigator. There are folks who are trained to help walk individuals through this process and who can help them if they have a complex situation. There are others this will always be the case even though so
Many Americans<\/a> are computers andth use computers and online sites regularly, there will be some who will choose not to do so online. That has always been the case. If you look at the metrics, we are focused on when it comes to the functionality of the website, speed and response times. Response time, as we have explained, is how fast the system response to user requests. Ofrs were waiting an average eight seconds four pages across the site to load. This past week, that average remained under one second. Another one is error rates. A measure of the frequency of system timeouts or failure that prevent the user from advancing usersult in errors in receiving error messages. We have reduced that from 6 to 1 . That is not where we need to be, but it is significant progress. Site stability is constantly being addressed. As more consumers use the site, the site remains stable and does not crash. Thornberryp mac theack for mary talks about way the department of defense does business. We will give an update on the health care law. That is live at 7 00 eastern. Our
Senate Foreign<\/a>
Relations Panel<\/a> will look at the response to typhoon haiyan. Adobe test to testify live on cspan three. Law enforcement officials will testify about digital currencies, such as the bit coin. We will hear about the risks and benefit of
Virtual Court<\/a> currencies virtual currencies. Every weekend since 1998, book tv has brought you the top authors. Womens identities are tied to their work in a way we may not like. It is true. When i look at someone like
Marissa Mayer<\/a> who was chosen to be the ceo of yahoo , she was then asked how much
Maternity Leave<\/a> and she said none the women exist, it is not the way i took plenty of
Maternity Leave<\/a>, but i feel like that is a growing that is a woman that there can be space for. The fact that there are some stayathome dads who are happy and do not all live in portland, oregon, that is ok, too. Throughout the fall, we are marking 15 years of book tv on cspan2. Affair we bring public offense from washington directly to you. We put you in the room at briefings and conferences and offer complete gaveltogavel coverage of the u. S. House. Cspan, created by the tv cable industry 34 years ago and funded by your local cable or satellite provider. Now, you can watch us in hd. Now congressman
Mack Thornberry<\/a> talks about trying to change the way the
Defense Department<\/a> spends money and gives security clearances. The texas republican is heading initiative for the
House Armed Services<\/a> committee for the
Pentagon Acquisition<\/a> process. The
International Cities<\/a> hosted this onehour event. Welcome, everyone. I cannot afford the billing hours that are in this room right now, we better get started. Welcome, everybody. I was in abu dhabi when i said that
Mack Thornberry<\/a> was when i heard that
Mack Thornberry<\/a> was going to give a big announcement. I got back. It was three hours ago. The most important thing for me to do is get away from the stage quickly because i will make mistakes if i try to stay here. I cant resist. I wanted to say that i was in abu dhabi this last weekend, two weeks before that, i was in tokyo at a conference. And two weeks before that, in seoul. And every place, im hearing the same thing. It is what the hell are you doing to yourselves. They want america to be a global leader. They see what were doing, and theyre genuinely anxious, worried about what were doing. They say why why is this happening . I give them an explanation about very deep turmoil we have within our government about how do we establish priorities when our budget is so out of whack. And this is going to be with us for a while. I tell them that, i say this is going to be a longer term problem. Were going to have this problem for a while. And you can feel everybody sag that we had this but i said, dont be mistaken. If were needed tomorrow, if the iranians were to do something crazy, well be there, well be there. Dont worry about that. So what we really have to look at is not today. We have this remarkable capacity, remarkable military. What are we going to have in ten years . What are we going to have in 15 years . Thats really the issue on the table. Thats really what vice chairman thornberry is doing. Hes going to look at the most important questions. We cant do what weve been doing and stay on the path with the path we are on. We dont have those resources yet the world needs us to be just as capable in 10, 15 years as we are today. How are we going to do that . Thats the challenge in front of us. Im not at all surprised that the chairman turned to mack and asked him to head this up. He is so highly regarded in this town, having been here for 19 years going on 20, having had such distinguished service, having touched the department so many ways, theres no one better suited for this challenging time than
Mack Thornberry<\/a>. Please welcome him with your applause. We look forward to his speech. [applause] thank you, john. I appreciate the chance to be csis. T im excited to be here with the serious work that goes on here. With all of the interactions with csis exports over the years, i benefitted tremendously from their guidance and ideas. And i have no doubt that the work that goes on here makes an important difference. Yall are nice to listen to me, but we could all take notes from dr. Hambry or some of the other experts here on this topic. I do have to note, however, the last time i was at csis, it was for a cyberexercise. I was asked to play the president and dr. Hambry has not invited me back since. It was deeply disturbing for him, as is understandable. Chairman mckee and i have been talking about a focused defense reform effort for sometime. He wants me to tackle acquisitional reform, organizational bloat, and the security process. Something mike rogers is equally interested in. Today, im going to focus on the first of those topics. I have to confess that the first two questions that popped into my mind when buck asked me to tackle this were one, is it possible, and, two, is it worth the effort . If that comes across as skeptical, for every three years in congress, weve passed some sort of legislation on acquisition reform. Now, maybe some of it was helpful. Maybe some of it contributed to the problem. But if you look at the whole picture, there are things that are certainly no better now and some ways theyre worse than they were 20 years ago. So let me give you a multiple choice question here. A study was done with six problems with the d. O. D. Acquisition, schedule slippage, lost growth, lack of qualified personnel, adequate cost destination, and insufficient training and management contractors. What year do you think that was done . 1962, 1982, 2002, 2012 . Yeah, i think the answer is it could have been done in any of those years. As a matter of fact, in the last 50 years, weve seen 27 major government studies and over 300 nongovernment studies on those issues. That was
Harvard Business<\/a> school study in 1962 looking at the same things. Frank kendall mentioned here a few days ago, defense acquisition has been a significant issue for us since the revolutionary war. But at the very same time, dr. Hambry is written about this, one of the key factors in our success in world leadership has been that industry is an indispensable partner with the armed forces in defending the country. He wrote, we have harnessed the power of the profit motive to
National Security<\/a>. So it is a fundamental strength. And at the same time, its a persistent problem. Most all of the studies that have looked at the problem over the last 50 years have said roughly the same thing. And as i mentioned theres been a number of legislative attempts with unsatisfactory results. The lesson i learn with that is we have to go deeper. We have to not just treat the symptoms but deal with the root causes of the problem that have made it so difficult for us to solve these problems over the last 50 years. Remember, were talking about a lot of money here. Last year the department of defense let contracts for 360 billion, thats 10 of the entire federal budget, and more than 50 of d. O. D. s obligations. And as g. A. O. Testified in our hearing a couple of weeks ago, if you compare 2008 to 2012 and look at cost estimations just in those four years, we got 7 worse on developmental costs. 13 worse on total acquisition costs. And the average delay in initial operating capability went from 22 months to 27 months. So just looking at the last four years, weve gotten worse. In all of these categories. But, of course, its not just the acquisition of weapons and equipment. The pentagon spends more on
Service Contracts<\/a> than it does on weapons. And there its harder to know if the taxpayers are getting good value. What we do know is if you look at the last five years, contract spending is down 10 . But bid protests are up 35 . Up 45 . Theres hardly a contract awarded these days that theres not a protest on. Whats the effect of these trends . Well, we waste a lot of money and effort. We have more tail and less tooth. More overhead and less fighting capability than we should have for the money we spend. Who said this and when . As long as we offer assistance where the checkers are outnumbering the doers, the doers are going to spend more paper work for the checkers. It could have been any or all of the defense manufacturing facilities i visited in the last two or five years. But thats admiral rickover quoted by packard in a letter to
George Schultz<\/a> in 1970. Were at the point where its estimated that about a third of the procurement dollars are going to overhead right now. And the rest of the story is that its not just waste. Were not as agile and responsive as we need to be in a dangerous world. So we face this festering problem of getting good value for the taxpayers in a timely way in a larger context of two essential facts. One of the facts is the world is not getting any safer or any less complex. When he retired a couple of months ago, deputy cia director morrell said he didnt remember a time in his 33 year unless the 33 years in the cia where we had so many front burner
National Security<\/a> issues. I wont go on about it. But just a brief list of cyberproliferation, terrorism, syria, russia, china, iran, north korea, keeping the alliances together, makes the point. Things are not getting any easier. I think the second essential fact is were going to face tightened
Defense Budgets<\/a> as far as the eye can see. Truth is, we dug ourselves a deep hole of debt. Now we all hope that the economy improves. We need the reform entitlement programs, which is where most of the spending is. We need to find a way to get our fiscal house in order without the across the board cuts that sequestration would impose. We need more stability in funding because the disruptioned disruptions caused by the uncertainty that we faced are undermining every attempt to improve a system and are costing us dearly. But the point i want to make is if all of that stuff is solved in the way i wanted it to, i know of no scenario that envisions a return to large
Defense Budget<\/a> increases short of some catastrophic event that none of us want to see. So even in the best case scenario, weve got to face a dangerous, complicated world with limited resources. That means we have to get more defense for the dollar. Thats the reason chairman mckeon has asked me to spearhead this effort on the three interrelated topics, focusing first on how the pentagon buys goods and services. Let me be clear, the purpose is not to cut defense or not to make it easier to cut defense. The purpose is to get more defense, more value out of the dollars we spend. One very encouraging thing is i think this is completely bipartisan and bicameral. Adam smith, the
Ranking Member<\/a> of the
House Armed Services<\/a>, as well as senator levin and senator inhoff are just as interested in this as we are on our side. Thats an essential place to start. Im also very encouraged with a lot of what
Frank Kendall<\/a> had to say here ten days ago. And i guarantee we will be more than happy to sit down and go through with him linebyline, federal regulations to thin them out and to simplify them. Of course, along the way, we cant just focus on big d. O. D. , weve also got to work with the services up and down the chain of command. Youre not going to do this without full participation of the
Industry Partners<\/a> that dr. Hambry talked about. But i think were at a point where everybody agrees this is the time we have to act. We started october 29 with a hearing look back at the last 25 years of acquisition reform efforts. Three excellent witnesses that gave us their insights. Were going to continue across government and outside of government. And, again, so far, theres been nothing but eagerness to help. I expect were going to have working groups across organizations in the coming months and obviously were going to have hearings directly on this topic. But in addition to that, this topic is going to shape all of the rest of the hearings we have. Whether its shipbuilding or airplanes or how to best meet the needs of our
Service People<\/a> who are deployed and the contract support there. These questions are going to influence all of the hearings that we have in the coming years. Now, were not looking at this as, okay, were going to take two years to study it and come out with a 2,000page bill to solve all the problems in the world. Were going to make progress along the way as we go. And also have a good humility, a bit of humility understanding that not all of the answers to this are going to come through legislation. Some of what we need to do in congress is to change our oversight, the questions we ask. And to help encourage some changes in culture in the pentagon and in the services. One suggestion already being made is yall ought to have a hearing on an
Acquisition Program<\/a> thats done well. And pat them on the back. Dont just call it the people dont just call up the people who are in trouble. Reward the people who have done a good job. And obviously, we need yalls help. Your input, to make this work. Not just about substantively what needs to happen, but what sort of process will help us reach the best results. So let me get back to my two questions is it possible . And is it worth it . I think theres a lot of understandable skepticism that goes with 50 years of frustration. Theres some people who argue that basically theres only a few things that you can try. You can centralize or decentralize, you can have greater flexibility or more rigid mandates, emphasize the government or the contractor. Theres lots of options we tried and its not going to get better than this. I dont buy that. I think it is important as we did in the first hearing to acknowledge that what he weve done so far has not worked out so well. And to try to learn the lessons that that teaches us. But i also think were not going to make things better by piling on new mandates, new oversight offices, new micromanagement. Thats not the direction we need to go. The rest of the story is that an automaker can take a car from concept to customer in less than 24 months, if a
Computer Company<\/a> can change its manufacturing requirements in a day, if boeing can take a commercial airliner and develop and field it in less than five years, surely to goodness, we can do better than were doing now for the men and women who risk their lives to serve our country around the globe. As with most things, i think the key factor comes down to people. One thing is were making it harder and harder for people who know what theyre doing to serve in the system. And thats a problem. We also have to hone in on the reasons that good people who are in the system act rationally but their decisions are not good for getting the best value for the taxpayers. So, it seems to me, incentives in the system are incredibly important. Weve got to ask, what does the system encourage someone to do . The simplest example is it encourages you to spend all of the money before the end of the year or youll get less of it next year. But heres another example. If you have to replace the pipe in your home, do you pick copper or plastic . If you have a system to reward you for taking the least expensive item at the beginning of the acquisition, you know what the answer will be. Are we looking at the lifetime costs of the decisions that we have to make . Isnt that what the taxpayers are going to be on the hook for . Let me give you another example that was brought to our attention. The system today would rather pay 1 billion for something and allow the contractor to have a 5 profit than pay half as much and allow the contractor to have a 20 profit. How can that be good for the taxpayers or for getting the most value for our money . So things have to change. We may well have before us a unique opportunity to change some of these builtin incentives. A set of circumstances that give us a better chance but also demand from us a better response that weve had in the past 50 years. Let me just suggest some of the reasons that give us this opportunity. The defense base was consolidated 25 years ago. Today theres six. Secondly, d. O. D. Is becoming a less influential buyer in the market generally. But also more and more companies are focusing on other customers other than d. O. D. And the harder and more expensive it is to do business with d. O. D. , the more companies the fewer the companies that will do so. Commercial technology is often in the lead on innovation and obviously we have to take advantage of that. Fourth, we have better data than we had before, we have more insight into whats happening in the system. Thats allowing us to get new opportunities to get down at a deeper level. Fifth, other countries are not sitting still. Sixth, iraq and afghanistan have proven what acquisition can mean in saving lives and, yet, we had to set up a separate acquisition system for the things we wanted the most to get around the
Current System<\/a> because it couldnt get them there fast enough. And i want to add a last factor. That is i think d. O. D. Is in transition. Partly because of tighter budgets, partly because of the wind down in afghanistan, the changes happening around the world. Things are in flux. So if you put those things together, this is the time. Not only is it possible. I would suggest its a necessity that we take advantage of it. So finally, is it worth the effort . Well, our goal is to help the pentagon be a smarter buyer of goods and services and help get top
Quality Equipment<\/a> and services contributing to our security quicker. And the difference to our security that comes from getting more defense for the dollar, and having a more agile responsive system, is just an norm us. Enormous. In his book reviewing the history of warfare since 1500, max booth writes, innovation has been speeding up. That means keeping up with the pace of pain is harder than ever. The risk is rising. Today there is no room for error. I have to say, that very point was made over and over again this past weekend out at the
Reagan Library<\/a> at the
Reagan Defense<\/a> conference. Where we heard about the pace of technological change getting faster and faster and the difficulty in catching up once you get behind. British military writer, little heart, wrote in 1944 military history is filled with the record of military improvements that have been resisted between the development of new weapons or tactics and their adoption, theres often been a time lag. Sometimes a generation. And that time lag has often decided the fate of nations. Now, im not going to tell you that i think the fate of our nation is dependent upon the success of this project. But i really do believe that a lot is at stake and that we have to do better and that we have to overcome 50 years of frustration. And that we can only do that with your help with all of us working together towards this common goal. Thank you. [ applause ] ladies and gentlemen. Thank you very much for that conversation there. Here is how we are going to proceed for the remainder of our hour, if you will. Well engage in a short and brief conversation up here. I have a couple of questions were going pick up on based on your comments this morning. Then well open the microphone to questions from the floor. Be thinking about the questions you want to ask and when the time comes, we will ask you to raise your hand and have a procedure of using the microphone and identify yourself and move forward. Let me have a couple of thoughts about your useful description of why youre doing what youre doing and what we hope to do. Theres a lot on worth the effort piece, if you will. I think you made a case strongly for why its important or critical as you say. Its a little harder, though, to talk about the possibilities, not necessarily the possibilities of undertaking the effort, but the possibilities of actually achieving results. How are you going to measure your success here, if you will . Are you going to measure it based upon what you can contribute even to next year or to the fy16 bill . Or was there a broader set of perspectives that you want to use as measures of success . We have not set a particular time frame, though were thinking roughly two years. And if we can identify things to do in next years
Defense Authorization<\/a> bill, were going snatch that up. But at the same time, were going continue the conversations, working groups, etc. , with an idea for next years bill. Again, i think its really important. You dont hear this that often from the people in congress that legislation is not going to solve all of this. So, for example, i had a conversation last week with one of the
Service Chiefs<\/a> about career progression for
Program Manager<\/a>s. And so part of it is, i think these conversations were going to have in hoping to influence the whats rewarded, whats not. The culture within the institutions. Now, whats your ultimate measure of success . You know, i hope some of the figures that i recited looked better in five years time. Yeah, i dont know if theres one that will tell us the whether or not he will answer. I think its okay if we dont solve all of the problems in the world. But we have to do better. What you described is a process in which this is not a stove pipe effort by the committee, but really not only within the
Armed Services<\/a> committee itself but reaching across the aisle and to the senate side as well. Thats a bit encouraging because just to take your example of promotions of individuals. Weve learned the hard way of no matter what the power of the acquisition dynamic is, its not enough to bring a change to the overall personal
Management System<\/a> and the promotion about this. Theres a set of rules and regulations in place they are. There. Fundamentally they dontry ward people for staying in place for too long. Its a
Management Structure<\/a> that would have stability and continuity and management looking around to see the results of their own decision. By putting it in a kplee level, perhaps youre able to bridge some of the nonacquisitionrelated pieces. Is that part of your game . Think about this. If youre in charge as a
Program Manager<\/a> for a highly complex weapons system, youre on the job for 18 months or two years, by the time you figure out what the job is, youre gone. Just to give you another example, in the subcommittee i chair, jim landrum and i make a habit with nearly every hearing with the services coming to testify before us of talking about talking about asking about cybercareers. Because its a little different than the traditional military career. If were going to get and keep the best people we need for cyberwork, then we have to adjust the career path accordingly. The same thing needs to happen here. We need to keep and get the best. They need to be rewarded. Some suggestions are that you can increase their salary right away. Even if they are on the military side, even if their ultimate promotion opportunity are more limited. I dont know, we need to talk with the personnel people about what we can do and what we can work with the services to do to have the kind of quality people. Theyve got to be trained. But, again, the question is, what does the system reward them for doing . Because that will overcome any legislation that we can pass. So if youre going to tackle the question of acquisition reform from a broader perspective, beyond just a level of acquisition itself. One thing on incentives, prospects for managers inside the system. The other aspect is what are you doing this for . Answering the for what question. Its a requirements issue, but also a whats your longterm strategy. The committees broader review of strategy and forestructure of answering the question, why do we have this military . Well, i think some of those questions will inevitably come up. But at the same time, im really conscious of not trying to do everything in a single bound. So, for example, a lot of things were talked about reforms in personnel compensation and retirement and health care and so forth. Maybe a very good discussion to have. But it is not something beyond what weve talked about with the
Program Manager<\/a> but with the general reforms, thats not something that were going to deal with. I think theres lots of very important questions about strategy and particularly the way that the world is changing that will influence certainly requirements and what we buy. But what were focused on here is the value that we get for the money we spend on whatever it is, goods or services . Let me notch that down a little bit. Secretary gates when he was postulating some of his reductions in 2009, 2010, what was arguing for what he referred to as the 70 solution or the 80 solution, you can find them using either of those words. The idea is tell us what you can get now a more affordable price and reasonable timeline that meets most of the requirements if you will. Is that something you take a look at . Yeah, that will be part of this ongoing process. Again, so at key milestones, a lot depends on the questions we asked in congress. Right. And if we talk about the 70 solution and preventing requirements creep and all of the problems that all in all can make a difference. We can make a difference with the questions we ask. That will apply across all subcommittees and the full committee. All of the meetings and the hearings we have for the coming year. Let me look at the industry piece as well. You mentioned d. O. D. Has fewer companies on which theyre more dependent now than 25, 50 years ago. This sets up the possibility that there might be a good idea that has
National Security<\/a> value. Are you going to look at how innovation is generated and bring that in for defense acquisitions . Sure we would get into specific technologies, but the basic point of how hard it is to do business with the department of defense, which is what limits the department of defense from taking advantage of some of those innovations is part of what we have to deal with. It is not just the innovative, it is the
Smaller Companies<\/a> that have the
Niche Products<\/a> who are just at the point of where they say it is hardly worth it. The chief cause of problems is solutions. See, a cases what we week and a half we talk a week and half ago we talked about regulatory requirements that rubber managers have to deal with. It is a daunting list. None of them were looked at in the comprehensive framework. Is that what you are proposing . Absolutely. It is a great point. There is a cost overrun over here. There is a new restriction or a new oversight or something and then you add those up. It is like barnacles that feed on themselves over time. Is go hope we can do through, thin those out, try to simplify and rationalize some of. He regulations that apply that makes it easier for reduce overhead costs. Get fornk how much we the money we spend if we cut that down. When some of those touches are put into place, i would find the ability to strengthen part of my own organization. Now that i sit in the think tank, i am much more gala terry and then that. Of talent andth expertise here. I am going to recognize some reporters. Identify yourself and your affiliation. Breaking defense. Com. You were one of my toughest graders. I am making notes. You mentioned the regulation several times. What i did not hear was legislation. Arguably, part of this problem was created by congress. A lot of the oversight is mandated by congress. Is a big part of the yes, absolutely. Ections of congress has contributed to the problem over the years to a substantial extent. We need to then it all out. Absolutely. Wait for the microphone. My name is everett. I was
Acquisition Executive<\/a> during the 1980s for the navy. The system can be made to run. But it has two modes, effective and disaster. Right now you can see the effective mode","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia803008.us.archive.org\/34\/items\/CSPAN_20131119_090000_Key_Capitol_Hill_Hearings\/CSPAN_20131119_090000_Key_Capitol_Hill_Hearings.thumbs\/CSPAN_20131119_090000_Key_Capitol_Hill_Hearings_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240620T12:35:10+00:00"}