An Episode-Based Analysis in a Medicare Advantage Population to Identify the Cost Impact of Virtual-First Care for Common Acute Conditions
Speaker(s)
Zaleski A1, Thomas Craig K1, Guan X2, Junk C1, McGill A1, Gordon H1, Verbrugge D1, Caya K1
1CVS Health, Wellesley, MA, USA, 2CVS Health, Atlanta, GA, USA
Presentation Documents
OBJECTIVES: To conduct an episode-based, cost impact analysis of virtual-first versus in-person first care to treat the most prevalent acute conditions among 126,363 Medicare Advantage members of a large national payor.
METHODS: Episode Treatment Group (ETG)® methodology was deployed to evaluate the cost impact of virtual care as the initial modality of care for treating top prevalent acute conditions (compared to in-person-first care) among Medicare Advantage members of a large national health plan. Retrospective episodes-of-care and claims analyses of members enrolled for ≥ six months prior to the episode start date (N=126,363) identified resolved acute primary care episodes (N=141,034) starting between 1/1/2022–6/30/2022. Episodes with inpatient services and/or emergency department-first visits were excluded. Propensity score weighting was used to estimate % difference in healthcare costs between virtual-first episodes (N=10,820) and a cohort of in-person-first episodes (N=130,214) matched for member characteristics and healthcare utilization.
RESULTS: Among the most commonly treated acute episodes (i.e., viral pneumonia, otolaryngology disease, infectious disease exposure, bronchitis, sinusitis, rhinitis, minor bacterial skin infections, and gastroenterology disease), 7.6% (range: 0.7-24.8%) utilized virtual-first care. When treated through virtual-first care, cost-of-episode was 10-24% lower than in-person-first care (all P<0.05) for otolaryngology disease (-24±2%), rhinitis (-21±4%), gastroenterology disease (-20±7%), minor bacterial skin infections (-16±7%), sinusitis (-13±3%), and bronchitis (-10±4%). These reductions were primarily attributed to decreased expenditures related to primary care, specialist care, and use of ancillary services.
CONCLUSIONS: This real-world study demonstrates the potential of virtual-first care as a cost-effective modality for acute conditions in a large, sample of Medicare Advantage members across the nation. The use of episode-based analytical tools enhances the significance of these findings, as this methodology provides a proxy for clinical outcomes and quality, which offers a more comprehensive understanding of the implications and benefits associated with virtual-first care for the treatment of common acute conditions.
Code
RWD160
Topic
Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation, Real World Data & Information Systems
Topic Subcategory
Comparative Effectiveness or Efficacy, Cost-comparison, Effectiveness, Utility, Benefit Analysis, Health & Insurance Records Systems
Disease
Gastrointestinal Disorders, Infectious Disease (non-vaccine), Respiratory-Related Disorders (Allergy, Asthma, Smoking, Other Respiratory), Sensory System Disorders (Ear, Eye, Dental, Skin)