From facility to home: How healthcare could shift by 2025

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When patients enter a healthcare facility, their primary aims are to become well again and to go home. While increasing disease burden and rising healthcare costs in the United States have already contributed to a boost in Care at Home services, the COVID-19 pandemic has created a catalyst to truly reimagine their future.1

Based on a survey of physicians who serve predominantly Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) and Medicare Advantage (MA) patients, we estimate that up to $265 billion worth of care services (representing up to 25 percent of the total cost of care) for Medicare FFS and MA beneficiaries could shift from traditional facilities to the home by 2025 without a reduction in quality or access.2 That number represents a three- to fourfold increase in the cost of care being delivered at home today for this population, although how the shift will affect reimbursement rates is not yet clear. What’s more, Care at Home could create value for payers, healthcare facilities and physician groups, Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors. It also could improve patients’ quality of care and experience.

That said, several factors could affect adoption of these services. We outline those factors below, along with actions that stakeholders can take to address them. We also discuss why Care at Home services are rising, how Care at Home could create value for stakeholders and lead to higher-quality care for patients, areas where care could shift from traditional facilities to the home, and strategies for successfully adopting Care at Home.

How the COVID-19 pandemic has catalyzed Care at Home

A variety of pandemic-related factors have created an opportunity to rethink Care at Home. These include the following:

Care at Home may deliver more value and higher-quality care

As the United States faces the ongoing COVID-19 crisis, stakeholders are exploring ways to provide higher-quality care, especially for an aging population. The answer may lie with Care at Home, with examples that include primary-care visits via telehealth, self-administered dialysis at home, and skilled nursing-facility services at home with remote patient monitoring and support for activities of daily living. These interventions can be delivered to different kinds of patient archetypes (for example, high-risk patients with chronic conditions or those who are healthy and at low risk) throughout the patient journey (for example, diagnosis, treatment and discharge, or self-care) as either point solutions or as a comprehensive offering.

To examine the current and future impact of this type of care, we have created hypothetical journeys with Care at Home for various patient archetypes (Exhibit 1). For example, consider 75-year-old Bernadette, who has coronary artery disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and diabetes. She lives with her husband, has limited mobility, and struggles to access healthy food. Under a traditional-care model, she may be admitted to the hospital with a heart attack and then discharged to a skilled nursing facility because of concerns about her ability to stay safe and engaged at home. Under a Care at Home model, she might be evaluated by a physician and sent home, where she could have an assigned nurse and care manager, remote patient monitoring, daily telehealth visits with a physician coupled with in-person care from a nurse, and meals delivered to her home by a community-based organization.

Care at Home could improve the quality of care and the patient experience by providing patients with care in the comfort of their homes and by potentially reducing preventable adverse health events. Additionally, stakeholders—including payers, healthcare facilities and physician groups, Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors—could see substantial value, although the types of benefits and costs would vary by stakeholder (Exhibit 2). For example, a payer could benefit from lower medical costs resulting from the reduction of preventable adverse health events and the use of a lower-cost site of care. Value could also result from enhanced quality performance and more clinically appropriate and accurate risk coding. This value may be partially offset by the reimbursement for Care at Home services and the potential for induced demand through more convenient care. Ultimately, the value from Care at Home will likely depend on which specific opportunities are pursued and adopted.

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Care at Home could generate substantial value for stakeholders, but the benefits and costs may vary.

Where care could shift from traditional facilities to the home

Care at Home cannot succeed without physician buy-in. To understand the percentage of care being delivered in an office or facility today that could be provided at home—in clinically appropriate and cost-effective ways—for different service categories by 2025, we conducted a survey of physicians who serve predominantly Medicare FFS and MA patients.7 We focused on Medicare FFS and MA because beneficiaries expressed an appetite for Care at Home (McKinsey’s Consumer Health Insights survey from June 2021 found that 16 percent of respondents aged 65 and older said that they are more likely now than they were before the pandemic to receive home health services), and some have conditions that could be treated at home at a substantially lower cost. As a result, the opportunity to expand Care at Home services for Medicare FFS and MA beneficiaries could be broader than for other groups.

The survey investigated the extent to which care for a given service can shift to the home in a clinically appropriate and cost-effective way. Based on the results, we estimate that up to $265 billion worth of care currently being delivered in traditional facilities for Medicare FFS and MA beneficiaries (representing up to 25 percent of the total cost of care) could shift to the home. This represents a three- to fourfold increase in the current spend at home for this population today, although how the shift will affect reimbursement rates is not yet clear (Exhibit 3).

3
Up to $265 billion worth of care services currently being delivered in clinics, facilities, and physicians’ offices could shift to the home by 2025.

We categorized the services that can be delivered at home into three groups:

  1. Services with capabilities in place that may benefit from scaling: These services include primary care, outpatient-specialist consults, emergency-department and urgent care, hospice, and outpatient mental- and behavioral-health visits. Many of these services have seen an increase in usage during the COVID-19 pandemic.8 These services have the potential to scale at home as point solutions. Our survey results suggest that roughly 15 to 40 percent of additional Medicare FFS and MA spending for these services could be delivered at home, with emergency-department and urgent care on the lower end, at 15 to 20 percent, and outpatient mental- and behavioral-health visits on the higher end, at 30 to 40 percent (Exhibit 4).
  2. Services where capabilities exist that could be stitched together into a comprehensive offering: These services include dialysis, post-acute care (PAC) and long-term care (LTC), and infusions. Our survey results suggest that roughly 15 to 40 percent of additional Medicare FFS and MA spending on these services could be delivered at home, with dialysis and PAC and LTC on the lower end (15 to 25 percent) and infusions on the higher end (30 to 40 percent).

    The capabilities needed to deliver many of these services at home are available today: for example, infusion services of intravenous therapies, post-acute nursing and rehabilitative therapy, and dialysis are already being provided at home, but these services could grow further by bringing together capabilities in a comprehensive offering.9

    For PAC, such an offering may include a nurse to deliver Care at Home, a remote patient-monitoring device to check patients’ vitals and alert providers if there is a concern, a care manager to follow up with patients to make sure they understand the discharge instructions and to schedule follow-up visits, and prepared meals to be delivered to the home.

  3. Services with some capabilities but others that could be further developed: This category includes a single service: acute care. Our survey results suggest that roughly 20 to 30 percent of additional Medicare FFS and MA spending for acute care can be delivered at home. Some acute-care services can be treated at home today, but others rely on capabilities that require further technological advancement. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has stated that “treatment for more than 60 different acute conditions, such as asthma, congestive heart failure, pneumonia, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) care, can be treated appropriately and safely in home settings with proper monitoring and treatment protocols.”10 However, higher-acuity and more complicated conditions (for example, severe sepsis, unstable cardiac arrhythmias) cannot yet be treated at home in a high-quality and economical way.
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A substantial amount of care currently being performed in clinics, facilities, and physicians’ offices could shift to the home across service categories.

Factors that could affect adoption

The growth of Care at Home services could vary based on several factors. First, stakeholders will need to evaluate which services can be delivered at home to treat patients’ physical, behavioral, and social needs effectively. Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors could play a role here by accelerating innovation.

Second, adoption could depend on the economic viability of Care at Home. Some healthcare facilities and physician groups have had less incentive to pursue Care at Home for their patients because of the potential for lower (or nonexistent) reimbursement for care if provided at home instead of in a higher-cost setting.11 New reimbursement policies or payment innovation (for example, payment parity for telehealth or value-based payment arrangements) could improve adoption.

Third, physician awareness, perceptions, and capabilities may be factors. Physicians could learn about the capabilities of Care at Home, investigate case studies and results of how high-quality care can be delivered at home, and receive training to administer the interventions. Payers could play an important role in spurring awareness and providing training and education to providers.

Finally, adoption will depend on how patients feel about Care at Home. Patients could be made aware of Care at Home options, and they could state a preference for them over facility-based care. To encourage adoption, payers could cover certain services, and providers could recommend Care at Home to patients where clinically appropriate.

How to accelerate growth

To help accelerate the adoption of Care at Home services, payers, healthcare facilities and physician groups, Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors could consider a variety of potential actions:

Payers

  • Develop a value-backed Care at Home strategy with specific use cases. This may include situations where the reduced medical costs and increased revenues will outweigh reimbursement for services and potential for induced demand.
  • Redesign benefits to support direct delivery of Care at Home, as well as enabling services (for example, remote monitoring, care management, social supports, or assistance with daily living).
  • Create awareness and provide training and education to providers on the technologies available for Care at Home, as well as their uses and benefits.
  • Develop a network of high-value Care at Home providers and technology companies, as well as community-based organizations (for example, food banks), that can support Care at Home.
  • Expand reimbursement policies (for example, Care at Home reimbursement at parity with traditional reimbursement) or payment innovation models (such as shared savings on total cost of care) to encourage providers to support Care at Home.
  • Adopt utilization-management policies (for example, determination of appropriate discharge destination as part of transition-of-care programs) to facilitate the shift of care to the home from other settings where medically appropriate.
  • Leverage care management to raise awareness of Care at Home options with members.

Healthcare facilities and physician groups

  • Create value-backed Care at Home strategy with specific use cases in which the economics are favorable and patients benefit from higher-quality and more accessible care.
  • Develop Care at Home clinical models to deploy with patients (for example, primary and specialty telehealth care, in-home acute care, or in-home infusion services).
  • Establish partnerships with other providers or technology companies that can provide Care at Home or enabling services (for example, remote monitoring, care management, social supports, or assistance with daily living) or build capabilities internally.
  • Establish contracts with payers to ensure that Care at Home services are reimbursed in an economically viable way (for example, reimbursement at parity with traditional reimbursement or value-based payment arrangements).
  • Develop analytics to identify patients who would benefit from Care at Home based on the use cases (for example, high-risk patients with chronic conditions who could benefit from more support at home to prevent exacerbations).

Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors

  • Develop business cases or investment theses for Care at Home (for example, primary telehealth care, in-home dialysis, and remote monitoring). Size the market potential, evaluate the market landscape, and understand how the market may be evolving.
  • Evaluate opportunities, with providers and technology companies assessing how to build, buy, or partner for capabilities, and investors identifying potential assets.
  • Implement theses, with providers and technology companies creating new offerings in these markets, and investors investing in assets in the market.

The COVID-19 pandemic has created a catalyst to fundamentally reimagine Care at Home to help improve quality of care and patient experience while also creating potential value for payers, healthcare facilities and physician groups, Care at Home providers, technology companies, and investors. The ultimate value will depend on a variety of factors that are in the hands of stakeholders.

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