Five key considerations
- Focus on communication, training and education: Help physicians across the network understand how the shift to VBC models can deliver better outcomes for their patients and themselves. Develop an ongoing communication and training plan that ensures physician capabilities continuously improve as models evolve. Where necessary, provide technology training to those in need.
- Share trusted, insightful data: Physicians need evidence. In addition, they need to trust the data they are seeing, particularly if they are being asked to link their compensation to it. Carefully consider how your organization plans to integrate all of the data – both internal and external – that is needed to measure performance in a VBC world. Furthermore, develop the tools and techniques needed to communicate them in a trusted and comprehensible way.
- Don’t force a single model: Physicians often argue that their specialty is unique. In addition, when it comes to understanding quality and care measures, they are often right. Work closely with each specialty to understand how to engage them and what the most appropriate compensation models and measures might be. Don’t expect to create a one-size-fits-all model for physician compensation in a VBC world.
- Drive evolution through mixed models: If you haven’t done so already, start moving physicians towards a mixed model that combines traditional RVS compensation models with incentives for quality and efficiency outcomes. Avoid simply forcing physicians to put existing compensation “at risk” and focus instead on creating the right mix of incentives to drive the behavior your payers require in a VBC world.
- Involve the docs in decision-making: Whether through regular meetings with physician organizations or joint steering committees and boards, ensure that the physician network is involved, engaged and participating in the decision-making throughout the shift towards VBC models of care.