Jan 28

Past Event

Health Care Reform and Older Americans: Achieving Better Chronic Care at Lower Costs

Video

Highlights

  • Panel One

    Mark McClellan moderates discussion on key issues in legislation affecting older adults in a range of institutional and community-based care settings.

    Mark B. McClellan

  • Panel Two

    Panelists examine the latest science and status of performance measurement initiatives as they relate to monitoring and improving quality of care for older adults.

    Mark B. McClellan

  • Luncheon Panel

    Panelists discuss new strategies for improving quality of life for older adults, including the recent launch of the Long-Term Quality Alliance.

    Mark B. McClellan

  • Panel Three and Closing Remarks

    Panelists discuss integrating payment reforms, performance measurement, and delivery models as a next step in reforming care for older adults.

    Mark B. McClellan

Summary

Older Americans face unique health care challenges—many not supported in Medicare’s current payment systems— that tend to promote fragmented, high-volume, and high-intensity care and can undermine quality. Health reform legislation now moving in Congress includes a range of new payment and delivery system reforms designed to improve overall care for patients with complex health needs and chronic conditions.

On January 28, the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings hosted a forum to discuss strategies for improving care for older Americans across a range of institutional and community-based settings. Experts and key stakeholders examined the components of health care reform most likely to influence the care this population receives, and discussed promising models for payment and delivery-system reforms designed to improve quality and efficiency, as well as to better coordinate services across the continuum of care. Participants also outlined specific, practical strategies that policymakers and government agencies can consider when transitioning from legislative action to implementation so older Americans benefit directly from innovations in care delivery. After each panel, participants took audience questions.

An informal information session on the new Long-Term Quality Alliance (LTQA) followed the concluding remarks.

Details

January 28, 2010

9:00 AM - 4:30 PM EST

The Brookings Institution

Saul/Zilkha Rooms

1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • 9:00 AM - Welcoming Remarks

    • mmclellanimage

      Mark B. McClellan

      Director

      Economic Studies

    • Bruce Chernof

      The SCAN Foundation

    • Christopher Langston

      The Hartford Foundation

  • 9:30 AM - Panel I: Perspectives on Health Care Reform and Older Adults

    • mmclellanimage

      Mark B. McClellan

      Director

      Economic Studies

    • Kathy Greenlee

      U.S. Administration on Aging, HHS

    • Carol Raphael

      Visiting Nurse Service of New York

    • Steven Dawson

      Paraprofessional Healthcare Institutee (PHI)

    • Chad Boult

      Johns Hopkins Medicine

  • 10:45 AM - Panel II: Performance Measurement for Older Adults

    • Moderator: James Tallon

      United Hospital Fund of New York

    • Diane Meier

      Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute, Mount Sinai

    • Julie Bynum

      Dartmouth Medical School

    • Greg Pawlson

      National Committee for Quality Assurance

  • 12:20 PM - Luncheon Panel: New Opportunities in Improving Care for Older Adults

    • mmclellanimage

      Mark B. McClellan

      Director

      Economic Studies

    • Mary Naylor

      University of Pennsylvania

    • Richard Frank

      Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, HHS

    • Carolyn Clancy

      Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

    • Katie Maslow

      Alzheimer’s Association

  • 1:25 PM - Panel III: Putting It All Together: Integrating Payment Reforms, Performance Measurement, and Delivery Models that Work

    • Moderator: Stuart Altman

      Brandeis University

    • David Dorr

      Oregon Health and Science University

    • June Simmons

      Partners in Care Foundation

    • David Martin

      UnitedHealthcare Medicare Solutions

    • David Reuben

      UCLA Health Systems

  • 2:40 PM - Concluding Remarks and Next Steps

    • mmclellanimage

      Mark B. McClellan

      Director

      Economic Studies

    • Bruce Chernof

      The SCAN Foundation

    • Christopher Langston

      The Hartford Foundation

  • 3:00 PM - Long-Term Quality Alliance Information Session

    • mmclellanimage

      Mark B. McClellan

      Director

      Economic Studies

    • Mary Naylor

      University of Pennsylvania