November 2008 MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS® 2008 Final Report Prepared by: Center for Health Policy and Research (CHPR) in collaboration with the MassHealth Office of Acute and Ambulatory Care (OAAC) and the MassHealth Behavioral Health Program (MHBH) Project Team: Center for Health Policy and Research Terri Costanzo Paul Kirby Ann Lawthers Heather Posner David Tringali Jen Vaccaro Jianying Zhang Office of Acute and Ambulatory Care Louise Bannister Sharon Hanson Marlene Kane Susan Maguire Jennifer Maniates Mary Ann Mark Lana Miller Shaun O’Rourke MassHealth Behavioral Health Program John DeLuca Data Analysis and Performance Measurement Amina Khan Nicole Tibbetts -------------PAGE 2--------------- Table of Contents Executive Summary.................................................................3 Introduction......................................................................8 Organization of the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 Report....................10 Health Plan Profiles.............................................................12 Data Collection and Analysis Methods.............................................14 Staying Healthy .................................................................17 Childhood Immunization Status....................................................18 Well-Child Visits for Infants and Young Children.................................21 Adolescent Well-Care Visits......................................................23 Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians......................25 Living With Illness..............................................................29 Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma............................30 Antidepressant Medication Management.............................................34 Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness...............................38 Getting Better...................................................................41 Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection..............42 Use of Services..................................................................44 Mental Health Utilization (Percentage Using Services)............................45 Appendix A: MassHealth Regions and Service Areas ................................46 Appendix B: Antigen-Specific Childhood Immunization Rates........................48 Appendix C: Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life(Rates for 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 Visits)......................................51 Appendix D: Use of Appropriate Medication for People with Asthma—PCC Plan Members with Essential Coverage..................................53 Appendix E: PCC Plan Antidepressant Medication Management Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage..........55 Appendix F: PCC Plan Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage.............................................57 Appendix G: PCC Plan Mental Health Utilization Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage.....................59 Appendix H: Mental Health Utilization Rates, Age and Gender Stratifications, All Plans.......................................61 References.......................................................................67 -------------PAGE 3--------------- Executive Summary The MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS® 2008 Report presents information on the quality of care provided by the five health plans serving the MassHealth managed care population (Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan, Fallon Community Health Plan, Neighborhood Health Plan, Network Health, and the Primary Care Clinician Plan). This assessment was conducted by the MassHealth Office of Clinical Affairs (OCA), the MassHealth Office of Acute and Ambulatory Care (OAAC), the Center for Health Policy and Research (CHPR), and the MassHealth Behavioral Health Program (MHBH). The data presented represent a subset of the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) measures. HEDIS was developed by the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) and is the most widely used set of standardized performance measures to evaluate and report on the quality of care delivered by health care organizations. Through this collaborative project, OCA, OAAC, CHPR, and MHBH have evaluated a broad range of clinical and service areas that are of importance to MassHealth members, policy makers and program staff. Measures Selected for HEDIS 2008 The MassHealth measurement set for 2008 focused on three domains: “staying healthy” (i.e., childhood immunization status, well child visits for infants and young children, adolescent well-care visits, and children and adolescents’ access to primary care physicians), “living with illness” (i.e., use of appropriate medications for people with asthma, antidepressant medication management, and follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness), “getting better” (i.e., appropriate use of antibiotics for upper respiratory infection), and the utilization of mental health services. Summary of Overall Results Results from the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 project demonstrate that MassHealth plans performed well overall when compared to the 2008 rates for other Medicaid plans around the country. Throughout this report, we will give results of tests of statistical significance comparing the performance of individual MassHealth plans with that of the top 25% of all Medicaid plans reporting HEDIS data for 2008 (represented by the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile, obtained from NCQA’s Quality Compass® database.) MassHealth plans performed best, relative to this national benchmark, on measures in the “staying healthy” domain. At least four of the five MassHealth plans reported rates that were significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile for the measures assessing well-child visits in the first 15 months of life; well- child visits in the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th years of life; adolescent well-care visits; and for three of the four age groupings in the children and adolescents’ access to primary care physicians measure. MassHealth plan performance was also strong on the childhood immunization measure. All five plans met the national benchmark, with one plan exceeding it for the Combination 2 vaccine, and two plans exceeding the benchmark for Combination 3. MassHealth plans’ results were mixed for several other measures, with some plans performing above the benchmark, some below, and others with no statistically significant difference from the benchmark. The antidepressant medication management, follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness, and appropriate treatment for children with upper respiratory infection measures follow this pattern, along with one age grouping (12 to 24 months) in the children and adolescents’ access to primary care physicians measure. MassHealth plans’ performance on the use of appropriate medications for people with asthma measure was also mixed. In this case, none of the five plans exceeded the national benchmark for any of the asthma measures, while several plans were significantly below the benchmark for at least one of the age groupings in the measures. HEDIS® is a registered trademark of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). Quality Compass® is a registered trademark of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). -------------PAGE 4--------------- Executive Summary (continued) Childhood Immunization Status * For Combination 2 (4 diptheria-tetanus-pertussis, 3 injectable polio, 1 measles-mumps-rubella, 3 H influenza type B, 3 hepatitis B and 1 chicken pox vaccine by age 2), the overall MassHealth rate (i.e., the MassHealth weighted mean) was 81.2%. * One MassHealth plan (FCHP) performed significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile for Combination 2. * One plan (PCC Plan) reported Combination 2 rates that were significantly better than its HEDIS 2006 rate. (NCQA has made several changes to this measure that should be considered when comparing HEDIS 2008 and HEDIS 2006 rates. See page 17 for more information.) * The MassHealth rate for Combination 3 (all Combination 2 immunizations plus 4 pneumococcal conjugate vaccines) was 76.8%. * Two plans (NHP and FCHP) preformed statistically better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile for Combination 3. * All five plans had 2008 rates that represented a statistically significant improvement on their HEDIS 2006 rates for Combination 3. Well-Child Visits in the First Fifteen Months of Life (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 or more visits) * Eighty-one percent (81.1%) of MassHealth members who turned 15 months of age during 2007 had six or more well-child visits. * For the six or more visit rate, all five MassHealth plans performed significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. * One plan (NH) reported a rate of six or more visits that was significantly better than its HEDIS 2006 rate. Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Years of Life (at least one visit during 2007) * The MassHealth rate of members aged three through six receiving at least one well-child visit was 84.5%. * Four MassHealth plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH and BMCHP) performed significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. * For all five plans, there was no statistical difference when the 2008 rates were compared to the 2006 rates. Adolescent Well-Care Visits (at least one visit during 2007) * Sixty-one percent (61.1%) of MassHealth members aged 12-21 had at least one well-care visit. * Four MassHealth plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH and BMCHP) performed significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. * All five plans reported rates that were not significantly different than their 2006 rates. Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Practitioners (at least one visit during 2007 for the 12-24 month and 25 month-6 year age groups; at least one visit during 2006 or 2007 for the 7-11 and 12- 19 age groups) * Ninety-seven percent (97.3%) of all MassHealth members aged 12 to 24 months had a visit with a primary care practitioner. One plan (PCC Plan) had a rate that was significantly better than the 2008 benchmark rate. Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. * Ninety-four percent (93.6%) of all MassHealth members aged 25 months to 6 years of age had a visit with a primary care practitioner. Four plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH and BMCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 benchmark rate. Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. * Ninety-seven percent (97.0%) of all MassHealth members aged 7 to 11 years of age had a visit with a primary care practitioner. All five plans had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 benchmark rate. Three plans (NHP, NH, and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. * Ninety-five percent (94.7%) of all MassHealth adolescent members 12 to 19 years of age had a visit with a primary care practitioner. All five plans had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 benchmark rate. Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma * Eighty-seven percent (87.2%) of MassHealth members 5-56 years of age with persistent asthma were appropriately prescribed asthma control medication. * None of the MassHealth plans performed significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile for any of the measure’s age stratified rates (5-9 years, 10-17 years, and 18-56 years), or for the combined age group rate (18-56 years). * One plan (NHP) had a 2008 rate that was significantly better than its 2006 rate for the combined age group (5 to 56 years). -------------PAGE 5--------------- Executive Summary (continued) Antidepressant Medication Management * The MassHealth managed care rate for optimal practitioner contacts during the 84-day acute treatment phase was 29.2%. One MassHealth plan (NH) had a rate that was significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. This plan also had a 2008 rate that was significantly better than its 2007 rate. * The MassHealth managed care rate for effective acute phase treatment was 44.4%. None of the five plans scored significantly higher than either the national Medicaid 75th percentile, or their previous (2007) individual plan rates. * The MassHealth managed care rate for effective continuation phase treatment was 28.9%. None of the five MassHealth plans significantly exceeded either the national benchmark, or their own previous plan rate from 2007. Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness * The MassHealth managed care 7-day follow-up rate was 55.9%. Two plans (NHP and FCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. Four plans (PCC Plan, NH, FCHP and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were not significantly different than their 2007 rates. * The MassHealth managed care 30-day follow-up rate was 75.8%. Three plans (NHP, NH, and FCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. Four plans (PCC Plan, NH, FCHP and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were not significantly different than their 2007 rates. Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection * The overall MassHealth rate of appropriate use of antibiotics in children with upper respiratory infection was 90.6%. Three MassHealth plans (NHP, FCHP, and BMCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. All five plans had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2007 rates. -------------PAGE 6--------------- Summary of MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 Results HEDIS 2008 Measure 2008 National Medicaid 75th Percentile PCC Plan NHP NH FCHP BMCHP Childhood Immunization Combination 2 80.1% 81.5% 83.1% 78.6% 87.1%? 80.8% Combination 3 74.2% 75.2% 78.9%? 74.2% 84.0%? 77.6% Well-Child Visits for Infants and Young Children Well-Child Visits in First 15 Months of Life (6+ visits) 65.5% 87.1%? 81.7%? 79.3%? 76.1%? 77.6%? Well-Child Visits in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Years of Life 74.0% 83.0%? 82.1%? 83.0%? 74.9% 88.3%? Adolescent Well-Care Visits Adolescent Well-Care Visits 51.4% 60.8%? 58.2%? 58.5%? 53.8% 65.5%? Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians Age 12 to 24 Months 97.4% 98.1%? 97.5% 95.6%? 96.5% 97.8% Age 25 Months to 6 Years 89.6% 95.6%? 92.9%? 91.3%? 91.3% 93.7%? Age 7 to 11 Years 91.6% 98.0%? 96.6%? 95.3%? 96.3%? 96.8%? Age 12 to 19 Years 90.1% 96.3%? 94.3%? 92.8%? 94.4%? 93.6%? Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma Age 5 to 9 Years 94.5% 94.5% 94.4% 92.8% n/a 95.9% Age 10 to 17 Years 91.4% 88.6%? 93.0% 90.7% n/a 92.8% Age 18 to 56 Years 88.7% 81.1%? 86.0% 86.3% 77.6%? 86.2%? Combined Ages (5 to 56 Years) 90.7% 84.5%? 90.8% 89.4% 80.2%? 90.5% Key: PCC Plan—Primary Care Clinician Plan FCHP—Fallon Community Health Plan NHP—Neighborhood Health Plan BMCHP—Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan NH—Network Health ? Indicates a rate that is significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. ? Indicates a rate that is significantly worse than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. -------------PAGE 7--------------- Summary of MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 Results (continued) HEDIS 2008 Measure 2008 National Medicaid 75th Percentile PCC Plan NHP NH FCHP BMCHP Antidepressant Medication Management Optimal Practitioner Contacts 28.9% 27.3% 31.1% 40.3%? 25.3% 26.4% Effective Acute Phase 48.3% 48.7% 45.1% 46.9% 49.4% 34.9%? Effective Continuation Phase 31.3% 33.1% 28.1% 32.7% 35.4% 19.7%? Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness 7 Day 57.4% 55.0%? 62.4%? 57.9% 70.2%? 53.9%? 30 Day 75.0% 74.4% 80.2%? 79.3%? 91.2%? 76.4% Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection Appropriate Treatment for URI 90.4% 86.3%? 94.8%? 90.7% 96.3%? 93.8%? Key: PCC Plan—Primary Care Clinician Plan FCHP—Fallon Community Health Plan NHP—Neighborhood Health Plan BMCHP—Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan NH—Network Health ? Indicates a rate that is significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. ? Indicates a rate that is significantly worse than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile. -------------PAGE 8--------------- -------------PAGE 9--------------- Introduction Purpose of the Report This report presents the results of the MassHealth Managed Care Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) 2008 project. This report was designed to be used by MassHealth program managers and by managed care organization (MCO) managers to identify plan performance with that of other MassHealth managed care plans and with national benchmarks, identify opportunities for improvement, and set quality improvement goals. Project Background The Center for Health Policy and Research (CHPR) collaborated with the MassHealth Office of Acute and Ambulatory Care (OAAC), the MassHealth Behavioral Health Program (MHBH), and the MassHealth Office of Clinical Affairs (OCA) to conduct an annual assessment of the performance of all MassHealth MCOs and the Primary Care Clinician Plan (PCC Plan), the primary care case management program administered by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS). CHPR, OAAC, MHBH and OCA conduct this annual assessment by using a subset of HEDIS measures. Developed by the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA), HEDIS is the most widely used set of standardized performance measures for reporting on the quality of care delivered by health care organizations. HEDIS includes clinical measures of care, as well as measures of access to care and utilization of services. The measures selected for the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 project assess the performance of the five MassHealth plans that provided health care services to MassHealth managed care members during the 2007 calendar year. The five MassHealth plans included in this report are the Primary Care Clinician Plan (PCC Plan), Neighborhood Health Plan (NHP), Network Health (NH), Fallon Community Health Plan (FCHP), and Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan (BMCHP). Descriptive information about each health plan can be found in the Health Plan Profiles section, beginning on page 12. MassHealth HEDIS 2008 Measures MassHealth selected ten measures for the HEDIS 2008 project. The ten measures included in this report assess health care quality in three key areas: effectiveness of care, access and availability of care, and use of services. The effectiveness of care measures included in this report provide information about preventive services and the management of chronic illness. The specific topics evaluated in this report are childhood immunization; appropriate treatment for children with upper respiratory infection; the use of appropriate medications for people with asthma; antidepressant medication management; and follow up after hospitalization for mental illness. The access and availability of care measures included in this report provide information about the ability of members to get the basic and important services they need. The specific topics evaluated include well-child visits in the first fifteen months of life; well-child visits in the third, fourth, fifth and sixth years of life; adolescent well-care visits; and children and adolescents’ access to primary care practitioners. The use of services data included in this report are stratified by age and gender, but are not adjusted for any other member characteristics such as comorbidity. Use of services measures provide information about what services health plan members utilize. Health care utilization is affected by member characteristics such as age, sex, comorbidities, and socioeconomic status, all of which could vary across plans. The specific service evaluated in this report is Mental Health Utilization. Note: MassHealth assesses member satisfaction through the biennial administration of a consumer survey. Member experiences in 2008 will be assessed through a survey administered by the Massachusetts Health Quality Partners (MHQP). Survey data is currently being collected, and MHQP will issue a report (jointly with CHPR) in 2009. -------------PAGE 10--------------- Organization of the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 Report This report presents the results of the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 project in four sections. Three of the sections are based on the consumer reporting domains used in NCQA’s Health Plan Report Cards (Staying Healthy, Living with Illness, and Getting Better). These three domains include a variety of HEDIS measures dealing with effectiveness of care, and with access to/availability of care. The fourth section (Use of Services) includes data on the utilization of mental health services. REPORT SECTION DEFINITION MEASURES SELECTED BY MASSHEALTH FOR HEDIS 2008 REPORTING Staying Healthy These measures provide information about how well a plan provides services that maintain good health and prevent illness. Childhood Immunization Status Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life Well-Child Visits in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Years of Life Adolescent Well-Care Visits Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Practitioners Living with Illness These measures provide information about how well a plan helps people manage chronic illness. Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma Antidepressant Medication Management Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness Getting Better This measure provides information about how well a plan helps people recover from illness. Appropriate Treatment for Children with URI Use of Services These measures provide information about what services health plan members utilize. Mental Health Utilization This report also includes several appendices that provide more detailed results: * Appendix A includes a list of the MassHealth regions and the service areas the regions cover. * Appendix B includes Childhood Immunization rates for individual immunizations (e.g., MMR, DTaP, hepatitis B, etc.). * Appendix C includes the 0 visit, 1 visit, 2 visit, 3 visit, 4 visit and 5 visit rates for the Well-Child Visit in the First 15 Months of Life measure. * Appendix D presents data for the Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma measure for PCC Plan members with Essential coverage. * Appendix E presents data for the Antidepressant Medication Management measure for PCC Plan members with Basic, Essential and Non-Basic/Non-Essential coverage. * Appendix F presents data for the Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness measure for PCC Plan members with Basic, Essential and Non-Basic/Non-Essential coverage. * Appendix G includes age stratified rates for the Mental Health Utilization measure (percentage of members using services, inpatient discharges, and average length of stay) measures for PCC Plan members with Basic, Essential, or Non-Basic/Non-Essential coverage. * Appendix H presents age and gender stratified rates for the Mental Health Utilization measures (percentage of members using services). -------------PAGE 11--------------- Organization of the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 Report -------------PAGE 12--------------- Health Plan Profiles MassHealth managed care plans provided care to 657,644 Massachusetts residents as of December 31, 2007. The MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 report includes data from the five MassHealth plans serving members enrolled in Managed Care. This report does not reflect care provided to MassHealth members receiving their health care services outside of the five managed care plans. The following profiles provide some basic information about each plan and its members. The data chart on the next page provides a statistical summary of the demographic characteristics of each plan’s population. Appendix A lists the service areas that are located within each MassHealth geographic region listed below. (NOTE: The term “MCOs” is used throughout the report to indicate the four capitated managed care plans serving MassHealth members — Neighborhood Health Plan, Network Health, Fallon Community Health Plan, and Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan.) Primary Care Clinician Plan (PCC Plan) * Primary care case management program administered by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS). * Statewide managed care option for MassHealth members eligible for managed care. * 279,602 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Provider network includes group practices, community health centers, hospital outpatient departments, hospital-licensed health centers, and individual practitioners. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out with the Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (MBHP). * HEDIS data for select measures were collected separately for PCC Plan members with Essential coverage. MassHealth Essential covers individuals ages 19-64 who are long-term unemployed and ineligible for MassHealth Basic (certain individuals with non-citizen status are also eligible). The PCC Plan is the only MassHealth plan serving members with Essential coverage. Approximately 18% of the PCC Plan’s membership has MassHealth Essential coverage. Neighborhood Health Plan (NHP) * Non-profit managed care organization that primarily serves Medicaid members, along with commercial and Commonwealth Care populations. * 117,104 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Service areas throughout the state (Western, Central, Northern and Southern Massachusetts as well as Greater Boston). * Provider network includes mostly community health centers in addition to Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, group practices, and hospital-based clinics. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out contract with Beacon Health Strategies. Network Health (NH) *Provider-sponsored health plan owned and operated by Cambridge Health Alliance that serves the Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. *89,018 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. *Primary service areas in Western, Northern and Central Massachusetts, and Greater Boston. * Provider network includes community health centers, group practices, hospital outpatient departments, and individual practitioners. * Behavioral health services are provided by Network Health providers. Fallon Community Health Plan (FCHP) * Non-profit managed care organization that serves commercial, Medicare, Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. * 10,824 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Service area is in Central Massachusetts. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out contract with Beacon Health Services. * Provider network for MassHealth members is exclusively through Fallon Clinic sites. Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan (BMCHP) * Provider-sponsored health plan, owned and operated by Boston Medical Center, the largest public safety-net hospital in Boston, that serves the Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. * 161,096 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Primary service areas in Western and Southern Massachusetts and Greater Boston. * Provider network includes community health centers, hospital outpatient departments, and group and individual practices. * Behavioral health services are provided by Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan providers. Differences in Populations Served by MassHealth Plans HEDIS measures are not designed for case-mix adjustment. Rates presented here do not take into account the physical and mental health status (including disability status) of the members included in the measures. The data on the next page describe each plan’s population in terms of age, gender, and disability status. It is important for readers to consider the differences in the characteristics of each plan’s population when reviewing and comparing the HEDIS 2008 performance of the five plans. -------------PAGE 12--------------- Health Plan Profiles: Demographic Characteristics of the Plan Populations MassHealth managed care plans provided care to 657,644 Massachusetts residents as of December 31, 2007. The MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 report includes data from the five MassHealth plans serving members enrolled in Managed Care. This report does not reflect care provided to MassHealth members receiving their health care services outside of the five managed care plans. The following profiles provide some basic information about each plan and its members. The data chart on the next page provides a statistical summary of the demographic characteristics of each plan’s population. Appendix A lists the service areas that are located within each MassHealth geographic region listed below. (NOTE: The term “MCOs” is used throughout the report to indicate the four capitated managed care plans serving MassHealth members —Neighborhood Health Plan, Network Health, Fallon Community Health Plan, and Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan.) Primary Care Clinician Plan (PCC Plan) * Primary care case management program administered by the Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS). * Statewide managed care option for MassHealth members eligible for managed care. * 279,602 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Provider network includes group practices, community health centers, hospital outpatient departments, hospital-licensed health centers, and individual practitioners. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out with the Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (MBHP). * HEDIS data for select measures were collected separately for PCC Plan members with Essential coverage. MassHealth Essential covers individuals ages 19-64 who are long-term unemployed and ineligible for MassHealth Basic (certain individuals with non-citizen status are also eligible). The PCC Plan is the only MassHealth plan serving members with Essential coverage. Approximately 18% of the PCC Plan’s membership has MassHealth Essential coverage. Neighborhood Health Plan (NHP) * Non-profit managed care organization that primarily serves Medicaid members, along with commercial and Commonwealth Care populations. * 117,104 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Service areas throughout the state (Western, Central, Northern and Southern Massachusetts as well as Greater Boston). * Provider network includes mostly community health centers in addition to Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, group practices, and hospital-based clinics. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out contract with Beacon Health Strategies. Network Health (NH) * Provider-sponsored health plan owned and operated by Cambridge Health Alliance that serves the Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. * 89,018 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Primary service areas in Western, Northern and Central Massachusetts, and Greater Boston. * Provider network includes community health centers, group practices, hospital outpatient departments, and individual practitioners. * Behavioral health services are provided by Network Health providers. Fallon Community Health Plan (FCHP) * Non-profit managed care organization that serves commercial, Medicare, Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. * 10,824 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Service area is in Central Massachusetts. * Behavioral health services are managed through a carve-out contract with Beacon Health Services. * Provider network for MassHealth members is exclusively through Fallon Clinic sites. Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan (BMCHP) * Provider-sponsored health plan, owned and operated by Boston Medical Center, the largest public safety-net hospital in Boston, that serves the Medicaid and Commonwealth Care populations. * 161,096 MassHealth members as of December 31, 2007. * Primary service areas in Western and Southern Massachusetts and Greater Boston. * Provider network includes community health centers, hospital outpatient departments, and group and individual practices. * Behavioral health services are provided by Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan providers. Differences in Populations Served by MassHealth Plans HEDIS measures are not designed for case-mix adjustment. Rates presented here do not take into account the physical and mental health status (including disability status) of the members included in the measures. The data on the next page describe each plan’s population in terms of age, gender, and disability status. It is important for readers to consider the differences in the characteristics of each plan’s population when reviewing and comparing the HEDIS 2008 performance of the five plans. -------------PAGE 13--------------- Health Plan Profiles: Demographic Characteristics of the Plan Populations MassHealth PlanTotal MassHealth Managed Care Members as of 12/31/07 Female Disabled Mean Age 0-11 yrs 12-17 yrs 18-39 yrs 40-64 yrs 65+ yrs** Primary Care Clinician Plan Without Essential population* 229,666 56.7% 30.9% 25.8 29.0% 15.9% 26.6% 28.5% 0.0% Essential population only 49,936 32.9% 0.0% 38.8 0.0% 0.0% 51.9% 48.1% 0.0% Neighborhood Health Plan 117,104 59.7% 4.3% 17.4 44.3% 18.3% 26.0% 11.4% 0.0% Network Health 89,018 57.5% 7.7% 17.0 47.0% 16.1% 25.1% 11.8% 0.0% Fallon Community Health Plan 10,824 58.8% 9.5% 20.1 37.7% 16.6% 30.5% 15.2% 0.0% Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan 161,096 58.5% 10.4% 17.4 45.8% 16.9% 25.3% 11.9% 0.0% Total for MassHealth Managed Care Program 657,644 56.0% 15.3% 21.9 36.2% 15.4% 28.0% 20.4% 0.0% Source: MMIS * HEDIS results based on this PCC Plan population are compared to MCO results throughout the main body of the report. ** MassHealth managed care plans generally serve members under the age of 65. In previous years, a small number of MassHealth managed care members were 65 years of age or older as of December 31st of the measurement year, and had not yet had their coverage terminated. For HEDIS 2008, no such members were identified through enrollment data, which was used to generate these health plan profiles. However, as a rule, any MassHealth members 65 years and older would be included in the eligible populations for the HEDIS 2008 measures whenever the specifications for the measure included the 65 and older population, the members’ coverage was not yet terminated, and the members met all eligible population criteria such as the continuous enrollment and enrollment anchor date requirements. Statistically Significant Differences Among the Plans Female Members: All four MCOs had a significantly higher proportion of female members than PCC Plan (p<.0001). NHP had a significantly higher proportion of female members than BMCHP and NH, while BMCHP had a higher proportion than NH (all p<.0001). Disabled Members: PCC Plan had a significantly higher proportion of disabled members than any of the four MCOs (p<.0001). All differences among the MCOs are significant, with p<.0001, except for the difference between BMCHP and FCHP. Mean Age of Members: All four MCOs had a population whose mean age was significantly lower than that of PCC Plan (p<.0001). FCHP’s population had a mean age that was significantly higher than that of BMCHP, NHP, and NH (p<.0001). -------------PAGE 14--------------- Data Collection and Analysis Methods Data Collection and Submission In November 2007, the MassHealth Office of Acute and Ambulatory Care (OAAC) provided plans with a list of measures to be collected for HEDIS 2008. The list of measures was developed by key stakeholders within MassHealth, including stakeholders within OAAC, the Office of Clinical Affairs (OCA), and the MassHealth Behavioral Health Program (MHBH). In general, each plan was responsible for collecting the measures according to the HEDIS 2008 Technical Specifications and for reporting the results using NCQA’s Interactive Data Submission System (IDSS). Each plan submitted its results to both NCQA and CHPR. MassHealth does not require plans to undergo an NCQA HEDIS Compliance Audit™. NCQA HEDIS Compliance Audits are independent reviews conducted by organizations or individuals licensed or certified by NCQA. The purpose of the audit is to validate a plan’s HEDIS results by verifying the integrity of the plan’s data collection and calculation processes. All plans undergoing NCQA Accreditation must have their HEDIS data audited. FCHP and NHP have achieved NCQA accreditation for their MassHealth plans, while BMCHP and NH are working toward it. NCQA reports only audited data in the Quality Compass, a database of regional and national Medicaid, Medicare and Commercial performance benchmarks. Eligible Population For each HEDIS measure, NCQA specifies the eligible population by defining the age, continuous enrollment, enrollment gap, and diagnosis or event criteria that a member must meet to be eligible for a measure. Age: The age requirements for Medicaid HEDIS measures vary by measure. The MassHealth managed care programs serves members under the age of 65. Occasionally, members 65 and older may appear in the denominator of a MassHealth plan’s HEDIS rate. This may occur for several valid reasons, including instances where a member turns 65 during the measurement year and did not yet have their coverage terminated as of the measure’s anchor date. MassHealth plans are responsible for a member’s care until his or her coverage is terminated. Therefore, MassHealth members 65 years and older were included in the eligible populations for the HEDIS 2008 measures whenever the specifications for the measure included the 65 and older population, the members’ coverage had not yet been terminated and the members met all eligible criteria such as continuous enrollment and enrollment anchor date requirements. Continuous enrollment: The continuous enrollment criteria varies for each measure and specifies the minimum amount of time that a member must be enrolled in a MassHealth plan before becoming eligible for that plan’s HEDIS measure. Continuous enrollment ensures that a plan has had adequate time to deliver services to the member before being held accountable for providing those services. Enrollment gap: The specifications for most measures allow members to have a gap in enrollment during the continuous enrollment period and still be eligible for the measure. The allowable gap is specified for each measure but is generally defined for the Medicaid population as one gap of up to 45 days. Diagnosis/event criteria: Some measures require a member to have a specific diagnosis or health care event to be included in the denominator. Diagnoses are defined by specific administrative codes (e.g., ICD-9, CPT). Other health care events may include prescriptions, hospitalizations, or outpatient visits. The measure descriptions included in this report do not include every requirement for the eligible populations (e.g., enrollment gaps). For complete specifications for each measure included in this report, please see HEDIS 2008 Volume 2: Technical Specifications. MassHealth Coverage Types Included in HEDIS 2008 MassHealth has several Medicaid coverage types whose members are eligible to enroll in any of the five MassHealth plans including Basic, Standard, CommonHealth, and Family Assistance. One coverage type, MassHealth Essential, may only enroll in the PCC Plan. MassHealth Essential covers individuals ages 19-64 who are long-term unemployed and ineligible for MassHealth Basic (certain individuals with non-citizen status are also eligible). Approximately 18 percent of the PCC Plan’s membership has MassHealth Essential coverage. During the planning for the MassHealth Managed Care HEDIS 2008 project, it was decided that the PCC Plan would submit two sets of HEDIS 2008 data — one submission for the PCC Plan population without members with Essential coverage -------------PAGE 15--------------- Data Collection and Analysis Methods (continued) and one submission for members with Essential coverage. The data for the PCC Plan population without members with Essential coverage is used in all tables and charts in the main body of the report. Separate rates for PCC Plan members with Essential coverage are included in the appendices for several adult measures (D,E, F, and G). Administrative vs. Hybrid Data Collection HEDIS measures are collected through one of two data collection methods—the administrative method or the hybrid method. The administrative method requires plans to identify the denominator and numerator using claims or encounter data, or data from other administrative databases. Plans calculate the administrative measures using programs developed by plan staff or Certified HEDIS SoftwareSM purchased from a vendor. For measures collected through the administrative method, the denominator includes all members who satisfy all criteria specified in the measure including any age or continuous enrollment requirements (these members are known as the “eligible population”). The plan’s HEDIS rate is based on all members in the denominator who are found through administrative data to have received the service reported in the numerator (e.g., visit, treatment, etc.). The hybrid method requires plans to identify the numerator through both administrative and medical record data. Plans may collect medical record data using plan staff and a plan-developed data collection tool. Plans may also contract with a vendor for the tool, staffing, or both. For measures collected using the hybrid method, the denominator consists of a systematic sample of members drawn from the measure’s eligible population. This systematic sample generally consists of a minimum required sample size of 411 members plus an over sample determined by the plan to account for valid exclusions and contraindications. The measure’s rate is based on members in the sample (411) who are found through either administrative or medical record data to have received the service reported in the numerator. Plans may report data with denominators smaller than 411 for two reasons: 1) the plan had a small eligible population or 2) the plan reduced its sample size based on its current year’s administrative rate or the previous year’s audited rate, according to NCQA’s specifications. Data Analysis Throughout this report, HEDIS 2008 results from each plan are compared to several benchmarks and comparison rates, including the 2008 national Medicaid mean and the 2008 Massachusetts Commercial mean. In addition, MassHealth medians and weighted means were calculated from 2008 data. 2008 National Medicaid 75th Percentile For this report, the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile serves as the primary benchmark to which plan performance is compared (including statistical significance). CHPR obtained the 2008 national Medicaid data through NCQA’s Quality Compass. NCQA releases Quality Compass in July of each year with the rates for Commercial and Medicare plans. NCQA provides the national Medicaid data in a supplement that is released in the fall. Other Comparison Rates Included in this Report The other comparison rates included in the data tables of this report are the 2008 national Medicaid mean, 2008 national Medicaid 90th percentile, 2008 Massachusetts Commercial mean, 2008 MassHealth weighted mean, and 2008 MassHealth median. The 2008 national Medicaid mean is the average performance of all Medicaid plans that submitted HEDIS 2008 data. The 2008 national Medicaid 90th percentile represents a level of performance that was exceeded by only the top 10% of all Medicaid plans that submitted HEDIS 2008 data. The 2008 national Medicaid 90th percentile was included as a future goal for MassHealth plans. The 2008 Massachusetts Commercial mean is the average performance of all Massachusetts Commercial plans that submitted HEDIS 2008 data. Although the populations served by Massachusetts Commercial plans differ from the population served by MassHealth, the Massachusetts Commercial mean may be an appropriate future goal for measures where MassHealth plans are nearing or exceeding the national Medicaid 90th percentile. The 2008 MassHealth weighted mean is a weighted average of the rates of the five MassHealth plans. The weighted average was calculated by multiplying the performance rate for each plan by the number of members who met the eligibility criteria for the measure. The values were then summed across plans and divided by the total eligible population for all the plans. The largest MassHealth plan (PCC Plan) serves -------------PAGE 16--------------- Data Collection and Analysis Methods (continued) 42.5% of all MassHealth members, and the smallest (FCHP) serves only 1.6%. Because of the differences in the size of the populations served by the plans, the MassHealth weighted mean was not used for tests of statistical significance. The 2008 MassHealth median is also provided and is the middle value of the set of values represented by the individual plan rates. Caveats for the Interpretation of Results All data analyses have limitations and those presented here are no exception. Medical Record Procurement A plan’s ability (or that of its contracted vendor) to locate and obtain medical records as well as the quality of medical record documentation can affect performance on hybrid measures. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation was found were considered non-compliant with the measure. This applied to records that could not be located and obtained as well as for medical records that contained incomplete documentation (e.g., indication of a test but no date or result). Lack of Case-Mix Adjustment The specifications for collecting HEDIS measures do not allow case-mix adjustment or risk-adjustment for existing co-morbidities, disability (physical or mental), or severity of disease. Therefore, it is difficult to determine whether differences among plan rates were due to differences in the quality of care or use of services, or differences in the health of the populations served by the plans. Demographic Differences in Plan membership In addition to disability status, the populations served by each plan may have differed in other demographic characteristics such as age, gender, and geographic residence. As shown in the plan profile chart on page 12, the PCC Plan has a higher proportion of members who are male or disabled, as well as an older mean member age. Other differences among the plans are noted on page 12. The impact of these differences on MassHealth HEDIS 2008 rates is unknown. Overlapping Provider Networks Many providers caring for MassHealth members have contracts with multiple plans. Overlapping provider networks may affect the ability of any one plan to influence provider behavior. Variation in Data Collection Procedures Each plan collects and reports its own HEDIS data. Although there are standard specifications for collecting HEDIS measures, MassHealth does not audit the plans’ data collection methods. Factors that may influence the collection of HEDIS data by plan include: * Use of software to calculate the administrative measures, * Use of a tool and/or abstractors from an external medical record review vendor, * Completeness of administrative data due to claims lags, * Amount of time in the field collecting medical record data, * The overall sample size for medical record review (plans with small eligible populations could have samples smaller than 411 members), * Staffing changes among the plan’s HEDIS team, * Voluntary review by an NCQA-Certified HEDIS auditor, * Choice of administrative or hybrid data collection method for measures that allow either method. Limitation of Certain HEDIS Measures One measure collected in 2008, Mental Health Utilization, provides information on the services MassHealth members utilized and not on the content or quality of the care the members received. MassHealth HEDIS mental health utilization data are not case-mix or risk adjusted. Differences in plan utilization rates cannot be interpreted as a measure of quality (i.e., it cannot be determined whether a plan with a higher discharge rate or longer average length of stay is providing either good or bad quality of care). Therefore, readers are cautioned against using utilization data to make judgments about the quality of the care delivered by a plan or its providers. In addition, MassHealth HEDIS mental health utilization data differ from utilization data calculated through other methods used by MassHealth. Readers are cautioned against making direct comparisons between HEDIS mental health utilization data and mental health utilization data obtained from other sources. -------------PAGE 17--------------- Staying Healthy -------------PAGE 18--------------- Childhood Immunization Status The HEDIS Childhood Immunization Status measure assesses how well health plans ensure that their child members less than two years of age are immunized, following the Recommended Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedule issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).1 The schedule recommends the number of doses, minimum ages to administer doses, and the minimum amount of time between doses for nine vaccines that should be administered before the age of two. Seven of those vaccines were assessed through the HEDIS 2008 measure. (The measure does not include the influenza vaccine, a seasonal vaccine recommended for children ages 6-23 months, or the Hepatitis A vaccine, a two dose vaccine that was universally recommended in 2006 for children before the age of two.) Since the child must have at least five health care visits to receive the entire immunization series recommended by the guidelines, this measure can also serve as an indicator of overall access to the health care system.2 Combination 2 The percentage of children 2 years of age who had four DTaP/DTP (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis), three IPV (injectable polio), one MMR (measles-mumps-rubella), three HiB (H influenza type B), three hepatitis B, and one VZV (chicken pox) by their second birthday. Nat’lMcaid 75th Pctile 80.1% Nat’l Mcaid Mean 72.2% MA Comm Mean 78.7% MassHealth Weighted Mean 81.2% PCCP 81.5% NHP 83.1% NH 78.6% PCHP 87.1% BMCHP 80.8% Combination 3 The percentage of children 2 years of age who received all of the vaccinations for the Combination 2 rate, plus four pneumococcal conjugate vaccinations (PCV) by their second birthday. Nat’lMcaid 75th Pctile 74.2% Nat’l Mcaid Mean 65.4% MA Comm Mean 76.0% MassHealth Weighted Mean 76.8% PCCP 75.2% NHP 78.9% NH 74.2% PCHP 84.0% BMCHP 76.6% Understanding the results NCQA has made several changes to this measure that should be considered when comparing HEDIS 2008 performance to prior rates. These changes include withdrawing the “documented history of illness” and “seropositive test result” as numerator evidence for DTaP, IPV, HiB and pneumococcal conjugate and requiring four acellular pertussis vaccines for the DTaP antigen. A number of procedural and diagnostic codes to identify childhood immunizations were removed, and one diagnostic code that identified exclusions was edited (a fifth digit was added). Eighty-one percent (81.2%) of MassHealth members received Combination 2 immunizations by their second birthday. Plan specific rates ranged from 78.6% to 87.1%. One MassHealth plan (FCHP) had a rate that was significantly better than the benchmark rate of 80.1%, which represents the national Medicaid 75th percentile. One plan (PCC Plan) had a 2008 rate that was significantly better than its 2006 rate. MassHealth plan rates for the Combination 3 immunizations ranged from 74.2% to 84.0%. Seventy-seven percent (76.8%) of MassHealth members received Combination 3 immunizations by their second birthday. Two plans (NHP and FCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate (74.2%). All five plans had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. (2006 was the first year that HEDIS measured Combination 3.) -------------PAGE 19--------------- Childhood Immunization Status Combo 2 Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’lMcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(H) ? ? ? ? NHP(H) ? ? ? ? NH(H) ? ? ? ? FCHP(H) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(H) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 84.7% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 72.7% MassHealth Weighted Mean 81.2% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 80.1% MA Commercial Mean: 78.7% MassHealth Median 81.5% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008 Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 335 4,091 411 81.5% 77.6% 85.4% NHP (H) 299 3,500 360 83.1% 79.0% 87.1% NH (H) 323 2,847 411 78.6% 74.5% 82.7% FCHP (H) 223 256 256 87.1% 82.8% 91.4% BMCHP (H) 332 5,289 411 80.8% 76.8% 84.7% 2006 Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 287 4,026 411 69.8% 65.3% 74.4% NHP (H) 358 2,749 411 87.1% 83.7% 90.5% NH (H) 320 2,200 411 77.9% 73.7% 82.0% FCHP (H) 166 191 191 86.9% 81.9% 92.0% BMCHP (H) 346 4,650 411 84.2% 80.5% 87.8% Combo 3 Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’lMcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(H) ? ? ? ? NHP(H) ? ? ? ? NH(H) ? ? ? ? FCHP(H) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(H) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 78.1% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 65.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean 76.8% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 74.2.1% MA Commercial Mean: 76.0% MassHealth Median 77.6% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008 Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 309 4,091 411 75.2% 70.9% 79.5% NHP (H) 284 3,500 360 78.9% 74.5% 83.2% NH (H) 305 2,847 411 74.2% 69.9% 78.6% FCHP (H) 215 256 256 84.0% 79.3% 88.7% BMCHP (H) 319 5,289 411 77.6% 73.5% 81.8% 2006 Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 211 4,026 411 51.3% 46.4% 56.3% NHP (H) 280 2,749 411 68.1% 63.5% 72.8% NH (H) 253 2,200 411 61.6% 56.7% 66.4% FCHP (H) 138 191 191 72.3% 65.6% 78.9% BMCHP (H) 273 4,650 411 66.4% 61.7% 71.1% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 20--------------- Childhood Immunization Status Understanding the Results (continued) Although the HEDIS childhood immunization measure is an important indicator of the quality of preventive care delivered by a health plan, the measure does have some weaknesses. For example, HEDIS does not assess the timeliness of immunization with regard to the recommended age intervals for vaccination. In fact, some research suggests that many children who are compliant with the HEDIS Childhood Immunization Status measure do not receive immunizations on-time.3 Another major criticism is that, in order to be included in the eligible population of the measure, members must be continuously enrolled in a plan for twelve months. Members who are excluded because they do not meet the continuous enrollment criteria were not captured by this measure and may have been at risk for low immunization rates and missed immunizations.4 Therefore, this measure may not be a good indicator of the quality of care delivered to MassHealth members who are at the greatest risk of poor immunization coverage. HEDIS childhood immunization rates are usually lower than state and national childhood immunization rates reported through other data sources such as the National Immunization Survey (NIS) and National Health Information Survey (NHIS).5 The difference in rates is believed to be due in part to different continuous enrollment criteria and different requirements for the number and timing of doses. (For example, when HEDIS criteria are applied to NIS data, immunization coverage rates fall by approximately 20%).6 Although Massachusetts has some of the highest immunization coverage rates in the United States,7 opportunity for improvement still exists. The immunizations required by the Combination 2 rate are consistent with those defined by Healthy People 2010. The Healthy People 2010 childhood immunization goal of 90% may represent a target for continued improvement on this measure. It is important to note, however, that increased attention to areas measured by HEDIS at the expense of other non-measured preventive services, such as those addressed in other Healthy People 2010 goals, could have the unintended effect of reducing the overall quality of preventive care (i.e., if non-measured services are neglected).8 Nonetheless, since childhood and adolescent immunization are two of the most cost-effective practices of all areas assessed through HEDIS,9 increased attention to improving immunization rates could yield benefits to both plans and the members they serve. -------------PAGE 21--------------- Well-Child Visits for Infants and Young Children The HEDIS Well-Child Visits measure assesses whether infants and young children receive the number of well- child visits recommended by current clinical guidelines. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends a schedule of at least eight well-child visits between birth and the first 15 months of life.10 The AAP also recommends a schedule of annual well-child visits during the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th years of life. These well- child visits offer the opportunity for evaluation of growth and development, the administration of vaccinations, the assessment of behavioral issues, and delivery of anticipatory guidance on such issues as injury prevention, violence prevention, sleep position and nutrition. The HEDIS well-child visit measures assess only the frequency of well-child visits. They provide no information on the content or quality of care received during those visits. However, compliance with the preventative care guidelines, including the recommended number of visits, can improve health outcomes; for example, Medicaid-enrolled children under the age of 2 who receive well-child visits according to the frequency prescribed by the AAP have fewer avoidable hospitalizations.11 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life (6+ visits) The percentage of members who turned 15 months old during 2007 and who had six or more well-child visits with a primary care practitioner during the first 15 months of life. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 65.5% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 53.0% MA Comm Mean 87.5% MassHeath Weighted Mean 81.1% PCCP 87.1% NHP 81.7% NH 79.3% FCHP 76.1% BMCHP 77.6% Well-Child Visits in the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Years of Life The percentage of members who were three, four, five or six years old during 2007 who received one or more well-child visits with a primary care practitioner during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 74.0% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 65.1% MA Comm Mean 86.9% MassHeath Weighted Mean 84.5% PCCP 83.0% NHP 82.1% NH 83.0% FCHP 74.9% BMCHP 88.3% Understanding the Results The HEDIS rate for MassHealth members who turned 15 months during the measurement year and had six or more well-child visits was 81.1%. Plan-specific rates ranged from 76.1% to 87.1%. All five MassHealth plans had rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate (65.5%). One plan (NH) had a 2008 rate that was significantly better than its 2006 rate. Eighty-five percent (84.5%) of MassHealth members who were three, four, five, or six years of age had a well- child visit during 2007. Plan-specific rates ranged from 74.9% to 88.3%. Four plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH, and BMCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate. All five plans had 2008 rates that were not significantly different than their 2006 rates. While the MassHealth plans generally exceed national Medicaid benchmarks on both well-visit measures, none exceed the Massachusetts commercial plan mean for either measure. In addition, only NH scored significantly higher than its own previous score (for the first 15 months of life measure). Plans should seek to improve upon their scores where possible. -------------PAGE 22--------------- Well-Child Visits for Infants and Young Children Statistical Summary—Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life (6+ visits) Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’lMcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(H) ? ? ? ? NHP(H) ? ? ? ? NH(H) ? ? ? ? FCHP(H) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(H) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 73.7% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 53.0% MassHealth Weighted Mean 81.1% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 65.5.1% MA Commercial Mean: 87.5% MassHealth Median 79.3% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 209 3,251 240 87.1% 82.6% 91.5% NHP (H) 228 3,003 279 81.7% 77.0% 86.4% NH (H) 326 2,587 411 79.3% 75.3% 83.4% FCHP (H) 159 212 209 76.1% 70.1% 82.1% BMCHP (H) 319 4,497 411 77.6% 73.5% 81.8% 2006   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 236 2,838 260 90.8% 87.1% 94.5% NHP (H) 235 2,285 296 79.4% 74.6% 84.2% NH (H) 284 1,512 411 69.1% 64.5% 73.7% FCHP (H) 130 184 184 70.7% 63.8% 77.5% BMCHP (H) 343 3,630 411 83.5% 79.7% 87.2% Statistical Summary—Well-Child Visits in the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th Years of Life Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(H) ? ? ? ? NH(H) ? ? ? ? FCHP(H) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(H) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 78.9% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 65.1% MassHealth Weighted Mean 84.5% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 74.1% MA Commercial Mean: 86.9% MassHealth Median 83.0% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 12,685 15,279 15,279 83.0% 82.4% 83.6% NHP (H) 197 11,745 240 82.1% 77.0% 87.1% NH (H) 239 9,305 288 83.0% 78.5% 87.5% FCHP (H) 209 837 279 74.9% 69.6% 80.2% BMCHP (H) 363 18,830 411 88.3% 85.1% 91.5% 2006   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 200 15,209 229 87.3% 82.8% 91.9% NHP (H) 217 10,536 260 83.5% 78.8% 88.2% NH (H) 282 7,188 348 81.0% 76.8% 85.3% FCHP (A) 605 764 764 79.2% 76.2% 82.1% BMCHP (H) 334 15,272 411 81.3% 77.4% 85.2% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 23--------------- Adolescent Well-Care Visits The Adolescent Well-Care Visits measure assesses whether adolescents had at least one well-care visit with a primary care provider or OB/GYN during 2007, as recommended by clinical guidelines set forth by the American Medical Association (AMA), American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and Bright Futures.12 Annual visits during adolescence allow providers to conduct physical examinations for growth, assess behavior, and deliver anticipatory guidance on issues related to violence, injury prevention and nutrition, as well as to screen for sexual activity, smoking and depression. Adolescents are more likely than younger children to have no well- care visits at all, and this gap is more pronounced for adolescents in publicly-funded managed care.13 Adolescent Well-Care Visits The percentage of members who were 12-21 years of age during 2007 and who had at least one comprehensive well-care visit with a primary care practitioner or OB/GYN during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 51.4% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 41.9% MA Comm Mean 65.8% MassHealth weighted Mean 61.1% PCCP 60.8% NHP 58.2% NH 58.5% FCHP 53.8% BMCHP 65.5% Understanding the Results Sixty-one percent (61.1%) of MassHealth adolescent members who were 12 to 21 years of age had at least one well-care visit with a primary care practitioner or OB/GYN during 2007. Plan specific rates ranged from 53.8% to 65.5%. Four plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH and BMCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate (51.4%), and two plans (PCCP and BMCHP) scored significantly higher than the National Medicaid 90th percentile. However, none of the plans had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. One caveat related to both this measure and the well-child measure is that the measures are calculated using administrative and/or medical record data, rather than through the use of surveys. Well-care rates generated from parent surveys and adolescent reported surveys yield higher rates of visits compared to the HEDIS well- care measures.14 In fact, the national rate of children meeting the AAP guidelines for the number of well-care visits is as high as 77% when calculated from parent surveys.15 However, whether administrative and medical record data actually under-report well-care visit rates or survey data over-report the occurrence of well-child visits is unknown. In addition, the miscoding of well-child visits for infants and young children and well-care visits for adolescents affects the result of this measure. Research comparing Medicaid administrative data with well-child medical records has documented substantial misclassification of well-child visits as sick visits.16 -------------PAGE 24--------------- Adolescent Well-Care Visits Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(H) ? ? ? ? NH(H) ? ? ? ? FCHP(H) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(H) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 56.7% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 41.9% MassHealth Weighted Mean 61.1% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 51.4% MA Commercial Mean:65.8% MassHealth Median 58.5% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 24,394 40,093 40,093 60.8% 60.4% 61.3% NHP (H) 219 20,066 376 58.2% 53.1% 63.4% NH (H) 237 13,281 405 58.5% 53.6% 63.4% FCHP (A) 219 1,549 407 53.8% 48.8% 58.8% BMCHP (H) 269 27,174 411 65.5% 60.7% 70.2% 2006   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 237 35,842 388 61.1% 56.1% 66.1% NHP (H) 265 17,118 405 65.4% 60.7% 70.2% NH (H) 247 9,624 411 60.1% 55.2% 65.0% FCHP (A) 697 1,311 1,311 53.2% 50.4% 55.9% BMCHP (H) 284 21,147 411 69.1% 64.5% 73.7% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 25--------------- Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians The age-stratified rates for the Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Practitioners measure reflect general access to care by indicating whether children had a preventative or ambulatory care visit with a primary care provider during 2007 (for children ages 12 to 24 months and 25 months to 6 years) or during 2006 and 2007 (for children ages 7 to 11 years and 12 to 19 years). Any type of visit with a primary care practitioner counts towards this measure. This measure does not assess whether children have the appropriate number of visits recommended by clinical guidelines (e.g., children ages 12 to 24 months should have 3-4 well-child visits during the measure’s timeframe), and does not assess the quality or content of the well-care visits counted by the measure. Age 12 to 24 Months The percentage of members 12 to 24 months of age who had a visit with a primary care practitioner during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 97.4% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 93.5% MA Comm Mean 97.1% MassHealth weighted Mean 97.3% PCCP 98.1% NHP 97.5% NH 95.6% FCHP 96.5% BMCHP 97.8% Age 25 Months to 6 Years The percentage of members 25 months to 6 years of age who had a visit with a primary care practitioner during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 89.6% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 84.3% MA Comm Mean 95.1% MassHealth weighted Mean 93.6% PCCP 95.6% NHP 92.9% NH 91.3% FCHP 91.3% BMCHP 93.7% Understanding the Results Ninety-seven percent (97.3%) of MassHealth members aged 12 to 24 months had a preventative or ambulatory care visit with a primary care provider in 2007. Plan-specific rates ranged from 95.6% to 98.1%. One MassHealth plan (PCC Plan) had a rate that was significantly better than the benchmark rate, while one plan’s rate (NH) was significantly lower. Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rate, while one (PCC Plan) was significantly lower. Ninety-four percent (93.6%) of MassHealth members aged 25 months to 6 years had a preventative or ambulatory care visit with a primary care provider in 2007. Plan specific rates ranged from 91.3% to 95.6%. Four MassHealth plans (PCC Plan, NHP, NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate. Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rate. The PCC Plan’s rate was significantly lower than in its rate for 2006. In the most recent measurement cycles, some MassHealth plan rates for this access to care measure were nearing 100%, indicating little additional room for improvement. (A goal of 100% utilization is appropriate for this measure since children in this age group should be receiving annual well-care visits.) Opportunity for improvement may exist for any plan that performed below the benchmark or that had a 2008 rate that was significantly lower than its 2006 rate (possibly indicating reduced access). -------------PAGE 26--------------- Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians Statistical Summary— Age 12 to 24 Months Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 98.4% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 93.5% MassHealth Weighted Mean 97.3% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 97.4% MA Commercial Mean: 97.1% MassHealth Median 97.5% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 4,549 4,638 98.1% 97.7% 98.5% NHP (A) 4,071 4,174 97.5% 97.0% 98.0% NH (A) 3,732 3,903 95.6% 95.0% 96.3% FCHP (A) 249 258 96.5% 94.1% 98.9% BMCHP (A) 6,022 6,157 97.8% 97.4% 98.2% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 3,967 3,981 99.6% 99.5% 99.8% NHP (A) 3,322 3,400 97.7% 97.2% 98.2% NH (A) 2,518 2,802 89.9% 88.7% 91.0% FCHP (A) 239 244 98.0% 96.0% 99.9% BMCHP (A) 5,013 5,223 96.0% 95.4% 96.5% Statistical Summary— Age 25 Months to 6 Years Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 92.0% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 84.3% MassHealth Weighted Mean 93.6% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 89.6% MA Commercial Mean: 95.1% MassHealth Median 92.9% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 18,188 19,032 95.6% 95.3% 95.9% NHP (A) 13,779 14,838 92.9% 92.4% 93.3% NH (A) 10,857 11,894 91.3% 90.8% 91.8% FCHP (A) 965 1057 91.3% 89.5% 93.0% BMCHP (A) 22,113 23,600 93.7% 93.4% 94.0% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 17,746 17,972 98.7% 98.6% 98.9% NHP (A) 12,263 13,163 93.2% 92.7% 93.6% NH (A) 8,238 9,389 87.7% 87.1% 88.4% FCHP (A) 882 939 93.9% 92.3% 95.5% BMCHP (A) 17,869 19,607 91.1% 90.7% 91.5% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 27--------------- Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians Age 7 to 11 Years The percentage of members 7 to 11 years of age who had at least one visit with a primary care practitioner in 2006 or 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 91.6% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 85.9% MA Comm Mean 97.0% MassHealth weighted Mean 97.0% PCCP 98.0% NHP 96.6% NH 95.3% FCHP 96.3% BMCHP 96.8% Age 12 to 19 Years The percentage of members 12 to 19 years of age who had at least one visit with a primary care practitioner in 2006 or 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 90.1% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 82.7% MA Comm Mean 94.9% MassHealth weighted Mean 94.7% PCCP 96.3% NHP 94.3% NH 92.8% FCHP 94.4% BMCHP 93.6% Understanding the Results Ninety-seven percent (97.0%) of MassHealth members aged 7 to 11 had a visit with a primary care practitioner during 2006 or 2007. Plan specific rates ranged from 95.3 to 98.0. All five MassHealth plans had 2008 rates that were significantly better than the benchmark rate (91.6%). Three plans (NHP, NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. Access to primary care practitioners for MassHealth members aged 12 to 19 was also high (94.7%). MassHealth plans rates ranged from 92.8% to 96.3%. Again, all five MassHealth plans had 2008 rates that were significantly better than both the benchmark rate (90.1%), and the National Medicaid 90th percentile (91.9%). Two plans (NH and BMCHP) had 2008 rates that were significantly better than their 2006 rates. Plans with rates that are nearing 100% should focus on continued maintenance of the high rates. A goal of 100% access is appropriate for this measure since children in this age group should have visits with their primary care providers on an annual basis. -------------PAGE 28--------------- Children and Adolescents’ Access to Primary Care Physicians Statistical Summary— Age 12 to 24 Months Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 94.1% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 85.9% MassHealth Weighted Mean 97.0% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 91.6% MA Commercial Mean: 97.0% MassHealth Median 96.6% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 14,944 15,250 98.0% 97.8% 98.2% NHP (A) 9,198 9,519 96.6% 96.3% 97.0% NH (A) 5,823 6,113 95.3% 94.7% 95.8% FCHP (A) 628 652 96.3% 94.8% 97.8% BMCHP (A) 13,789 14,241 96.8% 96.5% 97.1% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 14,834 15,161 97.8% 97.6% 98.1% NHP (A) 7,552 7,897 95.6% 95.2% 96.1% NH (A) 3,857 4,161 92.7% 91.9% 93.5% FCHP (A) 617 632 97.6% 96.4% 98.9% BMCHP (A) 10,085 10,796 93.4% 92.9% 93.9% Statistical Summary— Age 12 to 19 Years Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 91.9% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 82.7% MassHealth Weighted Mean 94.7% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 90.1% MA Commercial Mean: 97.0% MassHealth Median 96.6% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 25,616 26,610 96.3% 96.0% 96.5% NHP (A) 12,927 13,715 94.3% 93.9% 94.6% NH (A) 7,542 8,127 92.8% 92.2% 93.4% FCHP (A) 929 984 94.4% 92.9% 95.9% BMCHP (A) 17,665 18,877 93.6% 93.2% 93.9% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 24,520 25,546 96.0% 95.7% 96.2% NHP (A) 10,774 11,491 93.8% 93.3% 94.2% NH (A) 4,928 5,418 91.0% 90.2% 91.7% FCHP (A) 847 882 96.0% 94.7% 97.4% BMCHP (A) 12,625 13,937 90.6% 90.1% 91.1% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 29--------------- Living With Illness -------------PAGE 30--------------- Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma This measure assesses whether members with persistent asthma were appropriately prescribed medications deemed as preferred therapy for long-term asthma control. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute’s (NHLBI) Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma, updated in 2007, recommend daily long- term control therapy for patients experiencing persistent asthma symptoms.17 Medications that decrease airway inflammation, such as inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), are considered to be the most effective for controlling asthma.18,19 These medications reduce the severity of symptoms20 and prevent exacerbations21 that can increase the risk of emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalizations, and death from asthma.22 Studies of Medicaid populations have reported underutilization of asthma control medications23,34,25 and lower prescription rates compared to privately insured patients.26 Age 5 to 9 Years The percentage of members 5 to 9 years of age who were identified as having persistent asthma and who were appropriately prescribed medication during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 94.5% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 89.3% MA Comm Mean 98.2% MassHealth weighted Mean 94.4% PCCP 94.5% NHP 94.4% NH 92.8% FCHP BMCHP 95.0% Age 10 to 17 Years The percentage of members 10 to 17 years of age who were identified as having persistent asthma and who were appropriately prescribed medication during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 91.4% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 86.9% MA Comm Mean 94.8% MassHealth weighted Mean 90.8% PCCP 88.6% NHP 93.0% NH 90.7% FCHP BMCHP 92.8% Age 18 to 56 Years The percentage of members 18 to 56 years of age who were identified as having persistent asthma and who were appropriately prescribed medication during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 88.7% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 84.4% MA Comm Mean 89.5% MassHealth weighted Mean 82.9% PCCP 81.1% NHP 86.0% NH 86.3% FCHP 77.6% BMCHP 86.2% Note: FCHP’s denominators for the 5-9 and 10-17 year rates were less than 30. Per HEDIS specifications, any measure for which a plan has fewer than 30 members in the denominator is not reported as a rate. See page 34 for FCHP’s numerator and denominator. -------------PAGE 31--------------- Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma Combined Ages (5 to 56 Years) The percentage of members 5 to 56 years of age who were identified as having persistent asthma and who were appropriately prescribed medication during 2007. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 90.7% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 86.9% MA Comm Mean 91.6% MassHealth weighted Mean 87.2% PCCP 84.5% NHP 90.8% NH 89.4% FCHP 80.2% BMCHP 90.5% Understanding the Results Eighty-seven percent (87.2%) of members 5-56 years of age with persistent asthma were appropriately prescribed asthma control medication. Rates for three plans (NHP, NH and BMCHP) showed no significant difference compared to the benchmark rate (90.7%), while the rates for two (PCCP and FCHP) were significantly lower. One plan, NHP, significantly improved its rate, as compared to the previous reporting period. MassHealth plan rates calculated for children (age 5-9 years) with persistent asthma did not differ significantly from the benchmark rate (94.5%). However, the rate reported by one plan (PCCP) for adolescents (age 10-17 years), and rates for adults (age 18-56 years) reported by three plans (PCCP, FCHP and BMCHP), were significantly lower than the benchmarks (91.4% and 88.7%, respectively). Healthy People 2010 set a number of objectives related to asthma that are directly (e.g., increased rates of appropriate asthma care) and indirectly (e.g., reductions in deaths, hospitalizations, ED visits, activity restrictions. and missed school/work) associated with improved performance on the asthma HEDIS measure.27 Appropriate asthma care emphasizes patient education and treatment with medication regimens that reduce excessive use of short-acting beta agonists for symptom relief. Use of the asthma medications assessed through the HEDIS measure (e.g., inhaled corticosteroids) can reduce the need for short-acting beta agonists and is associated with reduced risk of subsequent ED visits and hospitalizations among patients with persistent asthma.28 -------------PAGE 32--------------- Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma Statistical Summary—Age 5 to 9 Years Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) n/a n/a n/a n/a BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 96.1% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 89.3% MassHealth Weighted Mean 94.4% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 94.5% MA Commercial Mean: 98.2% MassHealth Median 94.4% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 988 1,046 94.5% 93.0% 95.9% NHP (A) 485 514 94.4% 92.3% 96.4% NH (A) 389 419 92.8% 90.3% 95.4% FCHP (A) 23 27 n/a* n/a* n/a* BMCHP (A) 883 929 95.0% 93.6% 96.5% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 918 977 94.0% 92.4% 95.5% NHP (A) 373 401 93.0% 90.4% 95.6% NH (A) 222 247 89.9% 85.9% 93.8% FCHP (A) 10 14 n/a* n/a* n/a* BMCHP (A) 582 613 94.9% 93.1% 96.8% Statistical Summary—Age 10 to 17 Years Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) n/a n/a n/a n/a BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 93.3% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 86.9% MassHealth Weighted Mean 90.8% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 91.4% MA Commercial Mean: 94.8% MassHealth Median 91.8% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 1,231 1,389 88.6% 86.9% 90.3% NHP (A) 506 544 93.0% 90.8% 95.2% NH (A) 362 399 90.7% 87.8% 93.7% FCHP (A) 22 27 n/a* n/a* n/a* BMCHP (A) 870 937 92.8% 91.1% 94.6% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 1,151 1,296 88.8% 87.1% 90.6% NHP (A) 446 493 90.5% 87.8% 93.2% NH (A) 222 247 89.9% 85.9% 93.8% FCHP (A) 18 23 n/a* n/a* n/a* BMCHP (A) 518 570 90.9% 88.4% 93.3% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 33--------------- Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma Statistical Summary—Age 18 to 56 Years Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 90.7% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 84.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean 82.9% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 88.7% MA Commercial Mean: 89.5% MassHealth Median 86.0% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 3,875 4,779 81.1% 80.0% 82.2% NHP (A) 553 643 86.0% 83.2% 88.8% NH (A) 542 628 86.3% 83.5% 89.1% FCHP (A) 52 67 77.6% 66.9% 88.3% BMCHP (A) 1,306 1,515 86.2% 84.4% 88.0% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 3,711 4,703 78.9% 77.7% 80.1% NHP (A) 449 554 81.0% 77.7% 84.4% NH (A) 446 543 82.1% 78.8% 85.5% FCHP (A) 45 60 75.0% 63.2% 86.8% BMCHP (A) 1,008 1,179 85.5% 83.4% 87.5% Statistical Summary—Combined Ages (5 to 56 Years) Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 91.9% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 86.9% MassHealth Weighted Mean 87.2% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 90.7% MA Commercial Mean: 91.6% MassHealth Median 89.4% MassHealth Plan Rates 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 6,094 7,214 84.5% 83.6% 85.3% NHP (A) 1,544 1,701 90.8% 89.4% 92.2% NH (A) 1,293 1,446 89.4% 87.8% 91.0% FCHP (A) 97 121 80.2% 72.6% 87.7% BMCHP (A) 3,059 3,381 90.5% 89.5% 91.5% 2006   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 5,780 6,976 82.9% 82.0% 83.7% NHP (A) 12,68 1,448 87.6% 85.8% 89.3% NH (A) 890 1,037 85.8% 83.7% 88.0% FCHP (A) 73 97 75.3% 66.2% 84.4% BMCHP (A) 2,108 2,362 89.2% 88.0% 90.5% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 34--------------- Antidepressant Medication Management The Antidepressant Medication Management (AMM) measure assesses the level of clinical and pharmacological management of depression for newly diagnosed MassHealth members 18 years of age and older. Antidepressants and psychosocial therapy are an effective combination for treating major depression.29 However, discontinuation of prescribed antidepressants during the acute and continuous phase of treatment can increase the risk of relapse, the persistence of depressive symptoms, and new episodes of depression.30 Recent studies using the HEDIS AMM measure have reported decreases in antidepressant adherence rates over the course of treatment; by the end of the continuation phase less than half of patients remained on prescribed medication.31,32 One study found that only 19% of depressed patients met the criteria for all three of the HEDIS measure indicators (optimal practitioner contacts, effective acute phase treatment and effective continual phase treatment).33 Optimal Practitioner Contacts The percentage of members 18 years of age and older who were diagnosed with a new episode of depression and treated with antidepressant medication, and who had at least three follow-up contacts with a practitioner coded with a mental health diagnosis during the 84-day Acute Treatment Phase. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 28.9% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 22.6% MA Comm Mean 29.1% MassHealth weighted Mean 29.2% PCCP 27.3% NHP 31.1% NH 40.3% FCHP 25.3% BMCHP 26.4% Effective Acute Phase The percentage of members 18 years of age and older who were diagnosed with a new episode of depression, were treated with antidepressant medication and remained on an antidepressant drug during the entire 84-day Acute Treatment Phase. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 48.3% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 42.8% MA Comm Mean 64.5% MassHealth weighted Mean 44.4% PCCP 48.7% NHP 45.1% NH 46.9% FCHP 49.4% BMCHP 34.9% Effective Continuation Phase The percentage of members 18 years of age and older who where diagnosed with a new episode of depression and treated with antidepressant medication and who remained on an antidepressant drug for at least 180 days. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 31.3% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 27.4% MA Comm Mean 49.8% MassHealth weighted Mean 28.9% PCCP 33.1% NHP 28.1% NH 32.7% FCHP 35.4% BMCHP 19.7% -------------PAGE 35--------------- Antideressant Medication Management Statistical Summary--Optimal Practitioner Contacts Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat'l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 39.6% Nat'l Mcaid Mean: 22.6% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 29.2% Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 28.9% MA Commercial Mean: 29.1% MassHealth Median: 27.3% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 528 1937 27.3% 25.2% 29.3% NHP (A) 179 576 31.1% 27.2% 34.9% NH (A) 221 548 40.3% 36.1% 44.5% FCHP (A) 20 79 25.3% 15.1% 35.5% BMCHP (A) 296 1121 26.4% 23.8% 29.0% 2007   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 614 2,092 29.3% 27.4% 31.3% NHP (A) 199 564 35.3% 31.3% 39.3% NH (A) 140 459 30.5% 26.2% 34.8% FCHP (A) 22 81 27.2% 16.9% 37.5% BMCHP (A) 343 998 34.4% 31.4% 37.4% Statistical Summary—Effective Acute Phase Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat'l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 49.9% Nat'l Mcaid Mean: 42.8% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 44.4% Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 48.3% MA Commercial Mean: 64.5% MassHealth Median: 46.9% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 944 1937 48.7% 46.5% 51.0% NHP (A) 260 576 45.1% 41.0% 49.3% NH (A) 257 548 46.9% 42.6% 51.2% FCHP (A) 39 79 49.4% 37.7% 61.0% BMCHP (A) 391 1121 34.9% 32.0% 37.7% 2007   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 1,102 2,092 52.7% 50.5% 54.8% NHP (A) 259 564 45.9% 41.7% 50.1% NH (A) 253 459 55.1% 50.5% 59.8% FCHP (A) 40 81 49.4% 37.9% 60.9% BMCHP (A) 353 998 35.4% 32.4% 38.4% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 36--------------- Antidepressant Medication Management Statistical Summary—Effective Continuation Phase Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2007 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat'l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 33.7% Nat'l Mcaid Mean: 27.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 28.9% Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 31.3% MA Commercial Mean: 49.8% MassHealth Median: 32.7% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 641 1937 33.1% 31.0% 35.2% NHP (A) 162 576 28.1% 24.4% 31.9% NH (A) 179 548 32.7% 28.6% 36.7% FCHP (A) 28 79 35.4% 24.3% 46.6% BMCHP (A) 221 1121 19.7% 17.3% 22.1% 2007   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 798 2,092 38.1% 36.0% 40.3% NHP (A) 151 564 26.8% 23.0% 30.5% NH (A) 200 459 43.6% 38.9% 48.2% FCHP (A) 30 81 37.0% 25.9% 48.2% BMCHP (A) 200 998 20.0% 17.5% 22.6% Understanding the Results Twenty-nine percent (29.2%) of MassHealth members who were diagnosed with a new episode of major depression and were treated with antidepressant medication had at least three follow-up contacts with a practitioner during the 84-day Acute Treatment Phase. Rates for individual plans ranged from 25.3% to 40.3%. One plan (BMCHP) reported a significantly lower rate compared to its 2007 rate, while another (NH) reported a significantly higher rate. One plan (NH) had an optimal practitioner contact rate significantly above the benchmark rate (28.9%), while the difference in rates for the other four plans was not statistically significant. Forty-four percent (44.4%) of members diagnosed with a new episode of major depression and treated with antidepressant medication remained on an antidepressant drug during the entire 84-day Acute Treatment Phase. Individual plan rates reported for HEDIS 2008 ranged from 34.9% to 49.4%. None of these values was statistically significantly different from 2007. There were no statistically significant differences between the plan rates of effective acute phase treatment compared to the benchmark (48.3%) except for one plan (BMCHP), which had a rate significantly lower than the benchmark. Twenty-nine percent (28.9%) of members with a new episode of major depression who were treated with antidepressant medication remained on an antidepressant drug for at least 180 days. Individual plan rates of effective continuous phase treatment reported for 2008 ranged from 19.7% to 35.4%. Rates for two plans (PCCP and NH) decreased significantly from 2007, while the rates for the remaining three plans did not show a statistically significant change from the previous year. The rate for one plan (BMCHP) was significantly below the benchmark (31.3%). Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 37--------------- Antidepressant Medication Management Understanding the Results (continued) Non-adherence with antidepressant regimens during the first 30 days of treatment is more likely among patients with certain sociodemographic characteristics: younger age, fewer than 12 years of education, and lower income status.34,35,36,37 Other factors associated with higher rates of non-adherence include: comorbid substance abuse or cardiovascular/metabolic conditions,38 lower severity of perceived mental health symptoms39,40 and antidepressant side-effects such as weight gain, anxiety,41 and sexual dysfunction.42 Access to mental health specialty care along with antidepressants is strongly associated with higher rates of acute and continuous phase adherence.43 Patients are significantly more likely to continue taking their medication past 30 days if they receive care from a psychiatrist versus another specialist or general practitioner.44,45 Treatment with newer medications (e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)/serotonin- norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs)) at higher than target doses is also associated with increased rates of longer term adherence compared to other antidepressants.46,47 A recent study found that psychiatrists are more likely than general medical providers to prescribe SSRIs at levels that approximate the maximum recommended dose.48 Increasing patient access to psychiatric care directly or through collaborative care models may improve rates of adherence to antidepressants. A psychiatric telemedicine program for primary care clinics that lack on-site psychiatrists has been shown to improve adherence rates in rural communities with limited access to specialized mental health services.49 Improving provider-patient communication about treatment with antidepressants can also have a positive influence on rates of adherence. Three key provider messages shown to have significantly increased the odds of adherence involve talking to patients about the length of time they should expect to take the medication, what to do if they have questions, and the importance of continuing to take the medication even if they are feeling better.50 -------------PAGE 38--------------- Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness This measure assesses the rate of follow-up care seven and 30 days after hospitalization for the treatment of mental illness. Timely follow-up services for patients discharged from psychiatric hospitalization can reduce the risk of readmission.51 Research on the factors that influence compliance with follow-up care has shown that longer intervals between the date of discharge and first outpatient visit increase the likelihood of missed appointments.52 One study reported patients were more likely to attend initial follow-up appointments scheduled within two weeks of their discharge from the hospital.53 7 Day The percentage of members 6 years of age and older who were discharged after treatment of selected mental health disorders and who were seen on an ambulatory basis or were in intermediate treatment with a mental health provider within 7 days after discharge. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 57.4% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 42.5% MA Comm Mean 66.7% MassHealth weighted Mean 55.9% PCCP 55.0% NHP 62.4% NH 57.9% FCHP 70.2% BMCHP 53.9% 30 Day The percentage of members 6 years of age and older who were discharged after treatment of selected mental health disorders and who were seen on an ambulatory basis or were in intermediate treatment with a mental health provider within 30 days after discharge. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 75.0% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 61.0% MA Comm Mean 82.6% MassHealth weighted Mean 75.8% PCCP 74.4% NHP 80.2% NH 79.3% FCHP 91.2% BMCHP 76.4% Understanding the Results Fifty-six percent (55.9%) of MassHealth members 6 years of age and older who were hospitalized for treatment of mental illness had a follow-up visit (i.e., outpatient (OP), intensive OP encounter, or partial hospitalization) within seven days of discharge. Seven-day follow-up rates for individual plans ranged from 53.9% to 70.2%. The rate for one plan (NHP) declined significantly compared to its 2007 rate, while rates for the other four plans remained statistically unchanged from the previous year. Two plans (NHP and FCHP) had rates significantly higher than the benchmark rate (57.4%), two (PCCP and BMCHP) had significantly lower rates, and one (NH) had a rate that did not differ statistically from the benchmark. Seventy-six percent (75.8%) of MassHealth members 6 years of age and older who were hospitalized for treatment of mental illness had a follow-up visit (i.e., OP, intensive OP encounter, or partial hospitalization) within 30 days. Thirty-day follow-up rates for individual plans ranged from 74.4% to 91.2%. One plan (NHP) had a significantly lower rate compared to 2007. Rates for the other plans did not differ significantly from the rates reported for 2007. Three plans (NHP, NH and FCHP) had rates significantly higher than the benchmark (75.0%) while the rates for the other two plans remained statistically unchanged. -------------PAGE 39--------------- Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness Statistical Summary—7 Day Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 65.4% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 42.5% MassHealth Weighted Mean 55.9% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 57.4% MA Commercial Mean: 66.7% MassHealth Median 57.9% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 3016 5480 55.0% 53.7% 56.4% NHP (A) 467 748 62.4% 58.9% 66.0% NH (A) 346 598 57.9% 53.8% 61.9% FCHP (A) 80 114 70.2% 61.3% 79.0% BMCHP (A) 755 1402 53.9% 51.2% 56.5% 2007   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 3,139 5,631 55.7% 54.4% 57.1% NHP (A) 346 482 71.8% 67.7% 75.9% NH (A) 334 574 58.2% 54.1% 62.3% FCHP (A) 49 84 58.3% 47.2% 69.5% BMCHP (A) 781 1405 55.6% 53.0% 58.2% Statistical Summary—30 Day Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 80.3% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 61.0% MassHealth Weighted Mean 75.8% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 75.0% MA Commercial Mean: 82.6% MassHealth Median 79.3% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 4076 5480 74.4% 73.2% 75.5% NHP (A) 600 748 80.2% 77.3% 83.1% NH (A) 474 598 79.3% 75.9% 82.6% FCHP (A) 104 114 91.2% 85.6% 96.9% BMCHP (A) 1071 1402 76.4% 74.1% 78.6% 2007   Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (A) 4,175 5,631 74.1% 73.0% 75.3% NHP (A) 443 482 91.9% 89.4% 94.4% NH (A) 442 574 77.0% 73.5% 80.5% FCHP (A) 67 84 79.8% 70.6% 88.9% BMCHP (A) 1,102 1,405 78.4% 76.2% 80.6% Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 40--------------- Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness Understanding the Results (continued) Other significant predictors of missed follow-up appointments may include: lack of prior psychiatric treatment and continuation of care following discharge; involuntary admission to the hospital; discharge against medical advice; and the presence of psychosocial stressors.54,55,56 In a recent study, adult Medicaid-enrollees from a large mid-Atlantic state who received clinical services for mental health in the month leading up to hospital admission were more than three times likely to adhere to scheduled follow-up care within 7 or 30 days after discharge than individuals who did not.57 Plans serving MassHealth members with mental illness might improve their follow-up rates by pursuing interventions targeting individuals with one or more of the above risk factors for poor attendance at outpatient visits. For example, hospital discharge planning designed to consider patient preferences for outpatient treatment, promote early and ongoing communication between clinician and patients, and set appropriate expectations for the type and timing of follow-up care could foster compliance with scheduled appointments.58,59 Designating staff to coordinate patient care after hospital discharge has been shown to increase rates of compliance with follow-up care.60 For patients lacking primary social support, plans could initiate interventions that help strengthen existing family supports or create linkages to consumer supports in the community. One model, the Peer Bridger Project of the New York Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services, connects individuals who have a history of psychiatric hospitalization with admitted patients, with the aim of helping the patients identify positive community support groups following their discharge.61 -------------PAGE 41--------------- Getting Better -------------PAGE 42--------------- Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection Current guidelines recommend against prescribing antibiotics for upper respiratory infections (URIs) which are commonly caused by viruses, not bacteria. Adherence to these guidelines is important to the control of the emergence and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which is due in part to the inappropriate use of antibiotics for conditions which do not warrant antibiotic treatment. Despite this, approximately three-fourths of all outpatient prescriptions are given to children with URIs.62 Appropriate Treatment for URI The percentage of members 3 months to 18 years of age who had a URI and were not dispensed an antibiotic prescription on or three days after the outpatient visit where the URI diagnosis was made. Higher rates indicate more appropriate use of antibiotics. Nat'l Mcaid 75th Pctile 90.4% Nat'l Mcaid Mean 84.1% MA Comm Mean 92.2% MassHealth weighted Mean 90.6% PCCP 86.3% NHP 94.8% NH 90.7% FCHP 96.3% BMCHP 93.8% Understanding the Results NCQA has made several changes to this measure that should be considered when comparing HEDIS 2008 to prior rates. These changes include adding Negative Competing Diagnosis in order to exclude members who had claims or encounters with competing diagnoses within three days of the episode (encounter) being evaluated. This is done to ensure that antibiotic prescriptions found in the data are not related to other conditions, for which they would be appropriate. Ninety-one percent (90.6%) of members aged 3 months to 18 years who had a URI were not prescribed an antibiotic within the first three days after diagnosis. The range of rates for individual plans was from 86.3% to 96.3%. Three MassHealth plans (NHP, FCHP and BMCHP) had rates that were significantly better than the 2008 national Medicaid 75th percentile, while one (the PCC Plan) had a rate that was significantly lower than the benchmark. All five plans had a 2008 rate that was significantly better than their 2007 rate. A number of other factors influence the inappropriate prescription of antibiotics for children with URI. These factors include physician’s perception of parental expectations for an antibiotic prescription in response to an illness episode, if the child is of school age, the existence of a chronic illness such as asthma, if the physician is a pediatrician, and the number of years the provider has been in practice.63,64,65 Activities that can help decrease rates of inappropriate antibiotic use for URIs include provider education about current clinical guidelines as well as availability and distribution of educational materials in examination rooms.66 -------------PAGE 43--------------- Appropriate Treatment for Children with URI Statistical Summary— Comparison to Benchmarks: Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile Nat’l Mcaid Mean MA Comm Mean Plan’s 2006 Rate PCCP(A) ? ? ? ? NHP(A) ? ? ? ? NH(A) ? ? ? ? FCHP(A) ? ? ? ? BMCHP(A) ? ? ? ? 2008 Comparison Rates Nat’l Mcaid 90th Pctile: 94.2% Nat’l Mcaid Mean: 84.1% MassHealth Weighted Mean 90.6% Nat’l Mcaid 75th Pctile: 90.0% MA Commercial Mean: 92.2% MassHealth Median 93.8% MassHealth Plan Rates 2008   Num Den Rate * LCL UCL PCCP (A) 1,890 13,778 86.3% 85.7% 86.9% NHP (A) 328 6,356 94.8% 94.3% 95.4% NH (A) 380 4,104 90.7% 89.8% 91.6% FCHP (A) 19 515 96.3% 94.6% 98.0% BMCHP (A) 591 9,500 93.8% 93.3% 94.3% 2007   Num Den Rate * LCL UCL PCCP (A) 2,513 15,692 84.0% 83.4% 84.6% NHP (A) 535 6,504 91.8% 91.1% 92.4% NH (A) 557 4,652 88.0% 87.1% 89.0% FCHP (A) 48 487 90.1% 87.4% 92.9% BMCHP (A) 948 10,656 91.1% 90.6% 91.6% * Reported percentages are inverted rates (i.e., 1-(numerator/denominator)). Legend: ??? 2008 rate is significantly above the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is not significantly different from the comparison rate. ?? 2008 rate is significantly below the comparison rate. Num indicates Numerator Elig indicates the Eligible Population Den indicates Denominator LCL indicates Lower Confidence Level UCL indicates Upper Confidence Level (A) = Measure was collected using administrative method (H) = Measure was collected using hybrid method Note: The ability to locate and obtain medical records by a plan or a plan’s contracted vendor can impact performance on a hybrid measure. Per NCQA’s specifications, members for whom no medical record documentation is found are considered non-compliant with the measure. -------------PAGE 44--------------- Use of Services -------------PAGE 45--------------- Mental Health Utilization The HEDIS 2008 Mental Health Utilization measure assesses utilization of mental health services (e.g., inpatient, intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization, outpatient, and emergency department) by MassHealth members during 2007. These data provide insights into the volume of mental health services utilized but do not address their quality (i.e., the appropriateness or effectiveness of care) or the potential for over- or under- utilization of services, particularly across various mental health conditions, such as depression or schizophrenia. The relationship between the volume and quality of mental health services has not been thoroughly studied. One study, however, concluded that health plans with low utilization for outpatient and inpatient mental health services are more likely to demonstrate poor results on other HEDIS behavior health measures, e.g., rates of 7- day and 30-day follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness, and rates of provider contact and acute and continuation phase treatment with antidepressant medication.67 (Data for these measures are presented in this report, on pages 33-39). Percentage of Members Using Services The number and percentage of members who received mental health services during 2007. Mental health services are broken down by inpatient, intermediate, ambulatory, and any service. (The Intermediate category refers to intensive outpatient services and partial hospitalization programs.) The denominator used to calculate the percentages is member years (i.e., member months divided by 12). Data stratified by gender and age (0-12, 13-17, 18-64, and 65+) appear in Appendix H. Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 2,757,546 5,584 2.4% 5,082 2.2% 73,477 32.0% 74,035 32.2% NHP 1,358,803 840 0.7% 725 0.6% 16,570 14.6% 16,670 14.7% NH 1,036,563 764 0.9% 4,257 4.9% 15,664 18.1% 15,783 18.3% FCHP 128,498 135 1.3% 36 0.3% 2,014 18.8% 2,026 18.9% BMCHP 1,910,762 1,634 1.0% 584 0.4% 31,052 19.5% 31,190 19.6% 2008 National Medicaid 75th Percentile 1.0% 0.4% 10.7% 11.1% The source of the National Medicaid 75th Percentile is Quality Compass, 2008. According to the 2007 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), rates of mental health services utilization by U.S. adults have remained relatively constant compared to the 2006 survey results: 13.25% (vs. 12.9% in 2006) received mental health services during the 12-months prior to the survey; 1.0% (vs. 0.7% in 2006) received inpatient treatment and 6.9% (vs. 6.7% in 2006) received outpatient treatment during the same time period.68 Although data on utilization of chemical dependency services was reported in the 2007 NSDUH, this measure is not being evaluated in the 2008 HEDIS Report. For HEDIS 2008, NCQA modified the criteria for identifying utilization of mental health services obtained on an outpatient or emergency basis. Due to this change, comparisons of the 2008 HEDIS results to HEDIS 2006 data, including benchmarks, are inappropriate. -------------PAGE 46--------------- Appendix A: MassHealth Regions and Service Areas -------------PAGE 47--------------- MassHealth Service Areas and Regions Region Service Areas* Western Adams, Greenfield, Holyoke, Northampton, Pittsfield, Springfield, and Westfield Central Athol, Framingham, Gardner-Fitchburg, Southbridge, Waltham, and Worcester Northern Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn, Malden, Salem, and Woburn Boston-Greater Boston Boston, Revere, Somerville, and Quincy Southern Attleboro, Barnstable, Brockton, Fall River, Falmouth, Nantucket, New Bedford, Oak Bluffs, Orleans, Plymouth, Taunton, Wareham * each service area includes multiple cities and towns. -------------PAGE 48--------------- Appendix B: Antigen-Specific Childhood Immunization Rates -------------PAGE 49--------------- Antigen-Specific Childhood Immunization Rates 2008 Comparison Rates— 4 DTaP/DT Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 87.1% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 84.3% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 77.8% MA Commercial Mean: 84.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 86.5% MassHealth Median: 86.9% DTaP   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 362 4091 411 88.1% 84.8% 91.3% NHP (H) 313 3500 360 86.9% 83.3% 90.6% NH (H) 349 2847 411 84.9% 81.3% 88.5% FCHP (H) 228 256 256 89.1% 85.0% 93.1% BMCHP (H) 352 5289 411 85.6% 82.1% 89.2% 2008 Comparison Rates— 3 IPV Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 95.4% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 92.9% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 87.4% MA Commercial Mean: 87.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 92.4% MassHealth Median: 92.8% IPV   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 390 4091 411 94.9% 92.6% 97.1% NHP (H) 334 3500 360 92.8% 90.0% 95.6% NH (H) 366 2847 411 89.1% 85.9% 92.2% FCHP (H) 245 256 256 95.7% 93.0% 98.4% BMCHP (H) 378 5289 411 92.0% 89.2% 94.7% 2008 Comparison Rates— 1 MMR Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 95.4% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 94.2% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 90.4% MA Commercial Mean: 90.7% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 93.1% MassHealth Median: 93.4% MMR   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 384 4091 411 93.4% 90.9% 95.9% NHP (H) 333 3500 360 92.5% 89.6% 95.4% NH (H) 371 2847 411 90.3% 87.3% 93.3% FCHP (H) 243 256 256 94.9% 92.0% 97.8% BMCHP (H) 389 5289 411 94.6% 92.3% 96.9% 2008 Comparison Rates— 3HiB Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 95.3% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 93.0% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 87.7% MA Commercial Mean: 89.5% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 95.1% MassHealth Median: 95.3% HiB   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 395 4091 411 96.1% 94.1% 98.1% NHP (H) 341 3500 360 94.7% 92.3% 97.2% NH (H) 383 2847 411 93.2% 90.6% 95.7% FCHP (H) 244 256 256 95.3% 92.5% 98.1% BMCHP (H) 393 5289 411 95.6% 93.5% 97.7% 2008 Comparison Rates— 3 HepB Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 95.8% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 93.9% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 87.2% MA Commercial Mean: 86.7% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 93.0% MassHealth Median: 93.9% HepB   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 382 4091 411 92.9% 90.3% 95.5% NHP (H) 338 3500 360 93.9% 91.3% 96.5% NH (H) 369 2847 411 89.8% 86.7% 92.8% FCHP (H) 245 256 256 95.7% 93.0% 98.4% BMCHP (H) 386 5289 411 93.9% 91.5% 96.3% 2008 Comparison Rates— 1 VZV Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 94.4% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 92.8% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 88.8% MA Commercial Mean: 89.8% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 91.3% MassHealth Median: 97.7% VZV   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 377 4091 411 91.7% 88.9% 94.5% NHP (H) 332 3500 360 92.2% 89.3% 95.1% NH (H) 364 2847 411 88.6% 85.4% 91.8% FCHP (H) 236 256 256 92.2% 88.7% 95.7% BMCHP (H) 377 5289 411 91.7% 88.9% 94.5% The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 50--------------- Antigen-Specific Childhood Immunization Rates 2008 Comparison Rates— 4 PCV Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 84.9% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 81.3% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 73.9% MA Commercial Mean: 84.0% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 84.6% MassHealth Median: 84.7% PCV   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 346 4091 411 84.2% 80.5% 87.8% NHP (H) 304 3500 360 84.4% 80.6% 88.3% NH (H) 348 2847 411 84.7% 81.1% 88.3% FCHP (H) 225 256 256 87.9% 83.7% 92.1% BMCHP (H) 349 5289 411 84.9% 81.3% 88.5% -------------PAGE 51--------------- Appendix C: Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life (Rates for 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 Visits) -------------PAGE 52--------------- Well-Child rates (0,1,2,3,4 and 5 Visits) 2008 Comparison Rates— 0 visits Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 7.8% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 3.3% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 5.7% MA Commercial Mean: 2.3% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 1.1% MassHealth Median: 1.2% 0 visits Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 0 3251 240 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% NHP (H) 3 3003 279 1.1% 0.0% 2.5% NH (H) 8 2587 411 1.9% 0.5% 3.4% FCHP (H) 6 212 209 2.9% 0.4% 5.4% BMCHP (H) 5 4497 411 1.2% 0.0% 2.4% 2008 Comparison Rates— 1 visit Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 6.4% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 3.3% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 3.3% MA Commercial Mean: 0.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 0.6% MassHealth Median: 0.2% 1 visit   Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 3 3251 240 1.3% 0.0% 2.9% NHP (H) 0 3003 279 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% NH (H) 1 2587 411 0.2% 0.0% 0.8% FCHP (H) 0 212 209 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% BMCHP (H) 3 4497 411 0.7% 0.0% 1.7% 2008 Comparison Rates— 2 visits Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 7.5% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 5.1% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 3.9% MA Commercial Mean: 0.5% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 0.3% MassHealth Median: 0.4% 2 visits  Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 1 3251 240 0.4% 0.0% 1.4% NHP (H) 1 3003 279 0.4% 0.0% 1.2% NH (H) 2 2587 411 0.5% 0.0% 1.3% FCHP (H) 3 212 209 1.4% 0.0% 3.3% BMCHP (H) 0 4497 411 0.0% 0.0% 0.1% 2008 Comparison Rates— 3 visit Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 9.9% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 8.1% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 6.2% MA Commercial Mean: 0.9% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 1.6% MassHealth Median: 1.5% 3 visits Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 6 3251 240 2.5% 0.3% 4.7% NHP (H) 3 3003 279 1.1% 0.0% 2.5% NH (H) 5 2587 411 1.2% 0.0% 2.4% FCHP (H) 7 212 209 3.3% 0.7% 6.0% BMCHP (H) 6 4497 411 1.5% 0.2% 2.7% 2008 Comparison Rates— 4 visits Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 16.1% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 13.6% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 10.8% MA Commercial Mean: 2.0% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 5.7% MassHealth Median: 4.6% 4 visits Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 8 3251 240 3.3% 0.9% 5.8% NHP (H) 20 3003 279 7.2% 4.0% 10.4% NH (H) 19 2587 411 4.6% 2.5% 6.8% FCHP (H) 6 212 209 2.9% 0.4% 5.4% BMCHP (H) 29 4497 411 7.1% 4.5% 9.7% 2008 Comparison Rates— 5 visits Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 23.4% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 20.8% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 17.1% MA Commercial Mean: 6.4% MassHealth Weighted Mean: 9.7% MassHealth Median: 11.9% 5 visits Num Elig Den Rate LCL UCL PCCP (H) 13 3251 240 5.4% 2.3% 8.5% NHP (H) 24 3003 279 8.6% 5.1% 12.1% NH (H) 50 2587 411 12.2% 8.9% 15.4% FCHP (H) 28 212 209 13.4% 8.5% 18.3% BMCHP (H) 49 4497 411 11.9% 8.7% 15.2% The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 53--------------- Appendix D: Use of Appropriate Medication for People with Asthma— PCC Plan Members with Essential Coverage -------------PAGE 54--------------- Use of Appropriate Medication for People with Asthma—PCC Plan Members with Essential Coverage Use of Appropriate Medications for People with Asthma—18 to 56 Years 2008 Comparison Rates Nat'l Medicaid 90th Percentile: 90.7% Nat'l Medicaid 75th Percentile: 88.7% Nat'l Medicaid Mean: 84.4% MA Commercial Mean: 89.5% Num Den Rate LCL UCL PCC Plan w/o Essential (A) 3,875 4,779 81.1% 80.0% 82.2% Essential Only (A) 296 384 77.1% 72.7% 81.4% The source of the National Medicaid 90th Percentile, National Medicaid 75th Percentile, National Medicaid Mean, and MA Commercial Mean is Quality Compass, 2008. -------------PAGE 55--------------- Appendix E: PCC Plan Antidepressant Medication Management Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage -------------PAGE 56--------------- PCC Plan Antidepressant Medication Management Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage Optimal Practitioner Contacts 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL Basic (A) 50 147 34.0% 26.0% 42.0% Essential (A) 172 544 31.6% 27.6% 35.6% NonBasic/ NonEssntl (A) 478 1790 26.7% 24.6% 28.8% Effective Acute Phase Treatment 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL Basic (A) 73 147 49.7% 41.2% 58.1% Essential (A) 308 544 56.6% 52.4% 60.9% NonBasic/ NonEssntl (A) 871 1790 48.7% 46.3% 51.0% Effective Continuous Phase Treatment 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL Basic (A) 53 147 36.1% 28.0% 44.2% Essential (A) 221 544 40.6% 36.4% 44.8% NonBasic/ NonEssntl (A) 588 1790 32.9% 30.6% 35.1% -------------PAGE 57--------------- Appendix F: PCC Plan Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/ Non-Essential Coverage -------------PAGE 58--------------- PCC Plan Follow-up After Hospitalization for Mental Illness for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage 7 Day 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL Basic (A) 171 366 46.7% 41.5% 52.0% Essential (A) 485 1035 46.9% 43.8% 49.9% NonBasic/ NonEssntl (A) 2845 5114 55.6% 54.3% 57.0% 30 Day 2008   Num Den Rate LCL UCL Basic (A) 236 366 64.5% 59.4% 69.5% Essential (A) 662 1035 64.0% 61.0% 66.9% NonBasic/ NonEssntl (A) 3840 5114 75.1% 73.9% 76.3% -------------PAGE 59--------------- Appendix G: PCC Plan Mental Health Utilization Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage -------------PAGE 60--------------- PCC Plan Mental Health Utilization Rates for Members with Basic, Essential, and Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage Members with Basic Coverage Ages 18-64 Member Inpatient Intermediate Outpatient/ED Any Service Months N % N % N % N % 65,641 431 7.9% 374 6.8% 4,414 80.7% 4,484 82.0% Members with Essential Coverage Ages 18-64 Member Inpatient Intermediate Outpatient/ED Any Service Months N % N % N % N % 566,109 1,281 2.7% 977 2.1% 10,616 22.5% 10,840 23.0% Members with Non-Basic/Non-Essential Coverage Member Inpatient Intermediate Outpatient/ED Any Service Months N % N % N % N % Ages0-12 860,195 427 .6% 1,232 1.7% 12,671 17.7% 12,820 17.9% Ages1 3-17 366,328 675 2.2% 1,159 3.8% 10,016 32.8% 10,163 33.3% Ages 18-64 1,465,380 4,082 3.3% 2,349 1.9% 47,355 38.8% 47,564 39.0% Ages total 2,691,905 5,151 2.3% 4,657 2.1% 68,422 30.5% 68,890 30.7% -------------PAGE 61--------------- Appendix H: Mental Health Utilization Rates, Age and Gender Stratifications, All Plans -------------PAGE 62--------------- Mental Health Utilization—Percentage of Members Using Services Male ages 0-12 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 450,597 325 0.9% 866 2.3% 7,950 21.2% 8,047 21.4% NHP 321,728 68 0.3% 137 0.5% 2,594 9.7% 2,606 9.7% NH 262,383 72 0.3% 825 3.8% 3,276 15.0% 3,278 15.0% FCHP 25,975 4 0.2% 0 0.0% 338 15.6% 339 15.7% BMCHP 472,813 111 0.3% 66 0.2% 6,032 15.3% 6,039 15.3% Female ages 0-12 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 409,598 102 0.3% 366 1.1% 4,721 13.8% 4,773 14.0% NHP 316,362 18 0.1% 50 0.2% 1,590 6.0% 1,595 6.1% NH 255,169 22 0.1% 528 2.5% 2,143 10.1% 2,144 10.1% FCHP 26, 024 1 0.1% 0 0.0% 204 9.4% 204 9.4% BMCHP 455, 925 52 0.1% 16 0.0% 3,671 9.7% 3676 9.7% Male ages 13-17 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 191,610 339 2.1% 565 3.5% 5,465 34.2% 5,531 34.6% NHP 102,833 71 0.8% 98 1.1% 1,496 17.5% 1,513 17.7% NH 70,699 42 0.7% 369 6.3% 1,136 19.3% 1,146 19.5% FCHP 8,640 7 1.0% 0 0.0% 135 18.8% 135 18.8% BMCHP 136,534 92 0.8% 25 0.2% 2,343 20.6% 2,353 20.7% Female ages 13-17 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 174,718 336 2.3% 594 4.1% 4,551 31.3% 4,632 31.8% NHP 108,344 98 1.1% 112 1.2% 1,530 17.0% 1,540 17.1% NH 69,824 75 1.3% 377 6.5% 1,205 20.7% 1,210 20.8% FCHP 9,150 7 0.9% 1 0.1% 146 19.2% 146 19.2% BMCHP 137,187 133 1.2% 35 0.3% 2,444 21.4% 2,453 21.5% -------------PAGE 63--------------- Mental Health Utilization—Percentage of Members Using Services Male ages 18-64 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 544,275 2,000 4.4% 1,180 2.6% 17,875 39.4% 18,027 39.7% NHP 114,983 177 1.9% 86 0.9% 1,790 18.7% 1,815 18.9% NH 103,868 174 2.0% 456 5.3% 1,734 20.0% 1,776 20.5% FCHP 17,420 39 2.7% 9 0.6% 280 19.3% 247 19.8% BMCHP 179,392 413 2.8% 127 0.9% 3,591 24.0% 3,632 24.3% Female ages 18-64 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 986,746 2,482 3.0% 1,511 1.8% 32,914 40.0% 33,024 40.2% NHP 394,262 408 1.2% 242 0.7% 7,545 23.0% 7,576 23.1% NH 274,617 379 1.7% 1,702 7.4% 6,170 27.0% 6,229 27.2% FCHP 41,289 77 2.2% 26 0.8% 911 26.5% 915 26.6% BMCHP 528,907 833 1.9% 315 0.7% 12,971 29.4% 13,037 29.6% Male ages 65+ Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NHP 126 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 10 95.2% 10 95.2% NH 1 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Female ages 65+ Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 2 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 600.0% 1 600.0% NHP 165 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 15 109.1% 15 109.1% NH 2 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 4 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% * The MassHealth managed care program serves members under the age of 65. MassHealth members 65 years and older were included in the eligible populations for the HEDIS 2008 measures whenever the specifications for the measure included the 65 and older population, the members’ coverage had not yet been terminated, and the members met all eligible population criteria such as the continuous enrollment and enrollment anchor date requirements. -------------PAGE 64--------------- Mental Health Utilization—Percentage of Members Using Services Ages unknown -- Male Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NH 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 9 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Ages unknown -- Female Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NH 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Age group totals by gender -- Male Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 1,186,482 2,664 2.7% 2,611 2.6% 31,290 31.7% 31,605 32.0% NHP 539,670 316 0.7% 321 0.7% 5,890 13.1% 5,944 13.2% NH 436,951 288 0.8% 1,650 4.5% 6,146 16.9% 6,200 17.0% FCHP 52,035 50 1.2% 9 0.2% 753 17.4% 761 17.6% BMCHP 788,739 616 0.9% 218 0.3% 11,966 18.2% 12,024 18.3% Age group totals by gender -- Female Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 1,571,064 2,920 2.2% 2,471 1.9% 42,187 32.2% 42,430 32.4% NHP 819,133 524 0.8% 404 0.6% 10,680 15.7% 10,726 15.7% NH 599,612 476 1.0% 2,607 5.2% 9,518 19.1% 9,583 19.2% FCHP 76,463 85 1.3% 27 0.4% 1,261 19.8% 1,265 19.9% BMCHP 1,122,023 1,018 1.1% 366 0.4% 19,086 20.4% 19,166 20.1% -------------PAGE 65--------------- Mental Health Utilization—Percentage of Members Using Services TOTAL Male/Female: Ages 0—12 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 860,195 427 0.6% 1,232 1.7% 12,671 17.7% 12,820 17.9% NHP 638,090 86 0.2% 187 0.4% 4,184 7.9% 4,201 7.9% NH 517,552 94 0.2% 1,353 3.1% 5,419 12.6% 5,422 12.6% FCHP 51,999 5 0.1% 0 0.0% 542 12.5% 543 12.5% BMCHP 928,738 163 0.2% 82 0.1% 9,703 12.5% 9,715 12.6% TOTAL Male/Female: Ages 13—17 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 366,328 675 2.2% 1,159 3.8% 10,016 32.8% 10,163 33.3% NHP 211,177 169 1.0% 210 1.2% 3,026 17.2% 3,053 17.4% NH 140,523 117 1.0% 746 6.4% 2,341 20.0% 2,356 20.1% FCHP 17,790 14 0.9% 1 0.1% 281 19.0% 281 19.0% BMCHP 273,721 225 1.0% 60 0.3% 4,787 21.0% 4,806 21.1% TOTAL Male/Female: Ages 18—64 Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 1,531,021 4,482 3.5% 2,691 2.1% 50,789 39.8% 51,051 40.0% NHP 509,245 585 1.4% 328 0.8% 9,335 22.0% 9,391 22.1% NH 378,485 553 1.8% 2,158 6.8% 7,904 25.1% 8,005 25.4% FCHP 58,709 116 2.4% 35 0.7% 1,191 24.3% 1,202 24.6% BMCHP 708,299 1,246 2.1% 442 0.8% 16,562 28.1% 16,669 28.2% TOTAL Male/Female: Ages 65+ * Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 2 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 600.0% 1 600.0% NHP 291 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 25 103.1% 25 103.1% NH 3 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 4 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% * The MassHealth managed care program serves members under the age of 65. MassHealth members 65 years and older were included in the eligible populations for the HEDIS 2008 measures whenever the specifications for the measure included the 65 and older population, the members’ coverage had not yet been terminated, and the members met all eligible population criteria such as the continuous enrollment and enrollment anchor date requirements. -------------PAGE 66--------------- Mental Health Utilization—Percentage of Members Using Services TOTAL Male/Female: Ages Unknown Member Inpatient Intermediate Ambulatory Any Service Months N % N % N % N % PCCP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% NH 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% FCHP 0 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% BMCHP 9 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% -------------PAGE 67--------------- References 1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2007). Recommended immunization schedules for persons aged 0--18 years---United States, 2008. MMWR, 56(51&52):Q1--Q4. 2. 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Psychiatr Serv, 51(7):885-889. 52. Centorrino F, Hernan MA, Drago-Ferrante G, et al. (2001). Factors Associated with Noncompliance with Psychiatric Outpatient Visits. Psychiatr Serv, 52(3):378-380. 53. Kruse GR, Rohland BM. (2002). Factors Associated with Attendance at a First Appointment after Discharge from a Psychiatric Hospital. Psychiatr Serv, 53(4):473-476. 54. Ibid. 55. Compton MT, Rudisch BE, Craw J, Thompson T, Owens DA. (2006). Predictors of Missed First Appointments at Community Mental Health Centers after Psychiatric Hospitalization. Psychiatr Serv, 57(4):531-537. 56. Stein BD, Kogan JN, Sorbero MJ, Thompson W, Hutchinson SL. (2007). Predictors of Timely Follow-up Care among Medicaid-Enrolled Adults after Psychiatric Hospitalization, Psychiatr Serv, 58(12):1563-9. 57. Ibid. 58. Ibid. 59. Compton MT, et. al. (2006). 60. Orlosky MJ, Caiati D, Hadad J, Arnold G, Camarro J. (2007). Improvement of Psychiatric Ambulatory Follow-Up Care by Use of Care Coordinators, Am J Med Qual, 22(2):95-7. 61. Compton MT, et. al. (2006). 62. Dowell SF, Marcy, S. Michael, Phillips, William R., Gerber, Michael A., Schwartz, Benjamin. (1998). Principles of Judicious Use of Antimicrobial Agents for Pediatric Upper Respiratory Tract Infections. Pediatrics, 101:163-165. 63. Mangione-Smith R, McGlynn EA, Elliott MN, Krogstad P, Brook RH. (1999). The relationship between perceived parental expectations and pediatrician antimicrobial prescribing behavior. Pediatrics, 103(4 Pt 1):711-718. 64. Nyquist AC, Gonzales R, Steiner JF, Sande MA. (1998.) Antibiotic prescribing for children with colds, upper respiratory tract infections, and bronchitis. JAMA, 279(11):875-877. 65. Mainous AG, 3rd, Hueston WJ, Love MM. Antibiotics for colds in children: who are the high prescribers? (1998). Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 152(4):349-352. 66. Harris RH, MacKenzie TD, Leeman-Castillo B, et al. (2003). Optimizing antibiotic prescribing for acute respiratory tract infections in an urban urgent care clinic. J Gen Intern Med, 18(5):326-334. 67. Druss BG, Miller CL, Pincus HA and Shih S. (2004). The Volume-Quality Relationship of Mental Health Care: Does Practice Make Perfect? Am J Psychiatry, 161(12):2282-2286. 68. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2007). Results from the 2007 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: National Findings. (Office of Applied Studies, NSDUH Series H-34, DHHS Publication No. SMA 08- 4343.) Rockville, MD.