32 min

EP340: How Digital Front Doors Can Enable Value-Based Care, With Kristin Begley Relentless Health Value™

    • Medicine

There’s a next generation of digital front doors being created that open up to a patient/member experience that folds in payer, provider, and employer data—plus behavioral data the patient themselves generates when they browse through content in there. Because that’s what it takes for a so-called personalized experience or patient journey to ensue. This is what I’m talking about in this healthcare podcast with Kristin Begley, PharmD.
In an ideal world, you’d have, for example, a member/patient/customer who goes to their doctor and is handed a tablet to fill out an intake form. When they hit submit, they get access to a digital front door that leads to a vast Web portal inhabited by the doctor as well as the patient’s payer and their employer.
This personalized Web portal then knows this patient has asthma and is nonadherent to their maintenance medication and is using their rescue med a lot, because it’s in the payer PBM (pharmacy benefit manager) data.
The portal also knows the patient is searching a lot on content like what to do when you have a terrible asthma attack.
Further, the portal knows that the patient’s current doctor visit, the one where they’re filling out the intake form, is about a respiratory chief complaint, because it’s in the doctor data and also on that intake form, which, by the way, was immediately uploaded with structured insights available to all parties sharing the portal data.
Now, everybody who needs to know knows this patient is at obvious rising risk.
What can happen now? Lots of things. Because the portal knows what’s included in the patient’s benefit plan, there can be a proactive reach-out to get that patient into an available whole longitudinal program before they wind up in the ER. Maybe that’s a point solution. Maybe that’s a high-quality doctor offering a bundle.
Which leads me to the whole value-based care part of this. Front doors are not only for patients to get steered to the best provider—maybe one with a value-based arrangement—but also, in a way, a front door for providers and payers to work together. A portal can be the “hub,” if you will, the shared neutral interoperable space for all the parties who need to share space for their value-based arrangement to work out.
In fact, some of these portals are taking on risk themselves. Like, you guys all use our portal for your value-based arrangements, and we’ll guarantee this level of performance in those arrangements. Portals sharing risk and taking upside becomes even more relevant when the portal comes with its own network of existing provider users, for example—provider users who want to be paid for value and also with EHR (electronic health record) data and direct access and influence over patient care. It’s the old network effect.
But besides helping make sure the patient gets the right care at the right time, digital front doors also have the potential to ease patient administrative burden. While there’s lots of well-placed attention on affordability, patient administrative burden means delayed or foregone care. That’s as per a new study by Michael Anne Kyle, PhD, and Austin Frakt, PhD.
Kristin Begley is chief commercial officer at Wildflower Health right now, but she started out as a pharmacist before she defected to the business world. She has spent time in the pharmacy space with big companies and small companies before transitioning into the value-based, risk-based world. She’s now at Wildflower leading sales and account management, and she knows a whole lot about digital front doors.
You can learn more at wildflowerhealth.com.   Kristin Begley, PharmD, is a proven leader in the healthcare space with 20 years of experience in health information technology and the pharmaceutical supply chain, focusing on innovative solutions and software. She currently serves as the chief commercial officer of Wildflower Health, a modular digital-enablement care company that activa

There’s a next generation of digital front doors being created that open up to a patient/member experience that folds in payer, provider, and employer data—plus behavioral data the patient themselves generates when they browse through content in there. Because that’s what it takes for a so-called personalized experience or patient journey to ensue. This is what I’m talking about in this healthcare podcast with Kristin Begley, PharmD.
In an ideal world, you’d have, for example, a member/patient/customer who goes to their doctor and is handed a tablet to fill out an intake form. When they hit submit, they get access to a digital front door that leads to a vast Web portal inhabited by the doctor as well as the patient’s payer and their employer.
This personalized Web portal then knows this patient has asthma and is nonadherent to their maintenance medication and is using their rescue med a lot, because it’s in the payer PBM (pharmacy benefit manager) data.
The portal also knows the patient is searching a lot on content like what to do when you have a terrible asthma attack.
Further, the portal knows that the patient’s current doctor visit, the one where they’re filling out the intake form, is about a respiratory chief complaint, because it’s in the doctor data and also on that intake form, which, by the way, was immediately uploaded with structured insights available to all parties sharing the portal data.
Now, everybody who needs to know knows this patient is at obvious rising risk.
What can happen now? Lots of things. Because the portal knows what’s included in the patient’s benefit plan, there can be a proactive reach-out to get that patient into an available whole longitudinal program before they wind up in the ER. Maybe that’s a point solution. Maybe that’s a high-quality doctor offering a bundle.
Which leads me to the whole value-based care part of this. Front doors are not only for patients to get steered to the best provider—maybe one with a value-based arrangement—but also, in a way, a front door for providers and payers to work together. A portal can be the “hub,” if you will, the shared neutral interoperable space for all the parties who need to share space for their value-based arrangement to work out.
In fact, some of these portals are taking on risk themselves. Like, you guys all use our portal for your value-based arrangements, and we’ll guarantee this level of performance in those arrangements. Portals sharing risk and taking upside becomes even more relevant when the portal comes with its own network of existing provider users, for example—provider users who want to be paid for value and also with EHR (electronic health record) data and direct access and influence over patient care. It’s the old network effect.
But besides helping make sure the patient gets the right care at the right time, digital front doors also have the potential to ease patient administrative burden. While there’s lots of well-placed attention on affordability, patient administrative burden means delayed or foregone care. That’s as per a new study by Michael Anne Kyle, PhD, and Austin Frakt, PhD.
Kristin Begley is chief commercial officer at Wildflower Health right now, but she started out as a pharmacist before she defected to the business world. She has spent time in the pharmacy space with big companies and small companies before transitioning into the value-based, risk-based world. She’s now at Wildflower leading sales and account management, and she knows a whole lot about digital front doors.
You can learn more at wildflowerhealth.com.   Kristin Begley, PharmD, is a proven leader in the healthcare space with 20 years of experience in health information technology and the pharmaceutical supply chain, focusing on innovative solutions and software. She currently serves as the chief commercial officer of Wildflower Health, a modular digital-enablement care company that activa

32 min