Despite clear clinical guidelines, fewer than 1 in 5 patients hospitalized with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) are receiving the recommended quadruple therapy six months later. Humana’s latest Value-Based Care Issue Brief explores how value-based care (VBC) practices may help close this gap. Research found that Medicare Advantage patients treated in VBC practices were nearly 28% more likely to receive this life-saving regimen. This research reinforces that value-based care delivers better medication prescription adherence, better medical management, and higher quality of care. Value-based care is transforming healthcare and driving better health outcomes. Discover more insights in our latest Issue Brief https://huma.na/45utUo4
This is such an important insight! Seeing how value based care improves adherence and outcomes for heart failure patients really highlights the power of this model in closing critical care gaps. Excited to see Humana continuing to lead in advancing quality care through VBC #Humana
Great work by Alex Ding and his team to share these important findings on VBC.
this kind of information, while matched up with real worlds of health interoperability and actuarial science... with a caring heart when it's obvious needs are not being met... could help turn some corners... the investments in clinical studies and real world feedback loops could theoretically create avenues where investment and access to capital could reinforce patients rights and grow the health care industry. Interestingly... FDR said it pretty darn well about fear... yet also.. lots of courses in history of abuse... health, climate and tools matter... a lot. I can remember... pre ACA... Humana was one of the early adopters of looking at hospitalizations numbers in primary care... granted, it was early... but, these understandings matter.
Executive Strategist for Community and Behavioral Health. Medicaid and Medicare Expert, Enthusiastic Influence Broker
1wThis is fascinating! Do you have any VBP intervention/outcome studies in the pipeline for behavioral health?