Cost-Effective Care Coordination for People With Dementia at Home

Author:

Willink Amber1ORCID,Davis Karen1,Johnston Deirdre M2,Black Betty2,Reuland Melissa2,Stockwell Ian3,Amjad Halima4,Lyketsos Constantine G2,Samus Quincy M2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland

2. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

3. The Hilltop Institute, University of Maryland Baltimore Country, Baltimore, Maryland

4. Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives People with dementia (PWD) represent some of the highest-need and highest-cost individuals living in the community. Maximizing Independence (MIND) at Home is a potentially cost-effective and scalable home-based dementia care coordination program that uses trained, nonclinical community workers as the primary contact between the PWD and their care partner, supported by a multidisciplinary clinical team with expertise in dementia care. Research Design and Methods Cost of care management services based on actual time spent by care management personnel over first 12 months of MIND at Home intervention was calculated for 342 MIND at Home recipients from Baltimore, Maryland and surrounding areas participating in a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) funded Health Care Innovation Award demonstration project. Difference-in-differences analysis of claims-based Medicaid spending of 120 dually-eligible MIND at Home participants with their propensity score matched comparison group (n = 360). Results The average cost per enrollee per month was $110, or $1,320 per annum. Medicaid expenditures of dually-eligible participants grew 1.12 percentage points per quarter more slowly than that of the matched comparison group. Most savings came from slower growth in inpatient and long-term nursing home use. Net of the cost of the 5-year MIND at Home intervention, 5-year Medicaid savings are estimated at $7,052 per beneficiary, a 1.12-fold return on investment. Discussion and Implications Managed care plans with the flexibility to engage community health workers could benefit from a low-cost, high-touch intervention to meet the needs of enrollees with dementia. Limitations for using and reimbursing community health workers exist in Medicare fee-for-service, which CMS should address to maximize benefit for PWD.

Funder

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Energy

Reference25 articles.

1. Health services utilization in older adults with dementia receiving care coordination: The MIND at home trial;Amjad;Health Services Research,2018

2. Redesigning systems of care for older adults with Alzheimer’s disease;Callahan;Health Affairs,2014

3. Integrated care organizations: Medicare financing for care at home;Davis;The American Journal of Managed Care,2016

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