NEW YORK & CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In 2008, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) proposed the Triple Aim, a strategic framework to achieve better health and system performance based on the simultaneous pursuit of improved care for individuals, better health for populations, and reduced per capita health care costs. This concept became an important part of the care redesign innovation opportunities built into the national strategy developed as a result of the Affordable Care Act of 2010.
In a new study in the June 2015 issue of The Milbank Quarterly, an IHI team that has played a leading role helping organizations pursue the Triple Aim looks at how this work has progressed in the last seven years—specifically, why some organizations have made progress implementing the Triple Aim and others have not. They describe three principles that are essential for health care organizations to successfully pursue the Triple Aim. The paper highlights numerous examples from around the country and the world, of health systems or communities that are making progress—and how they’re doing it.
“The Triple Aim has had an influence beyond our wildest dreams—in the nation and around the world,” states John W. Whittington, one of the framework’s original architects, and lead author of the study with IHI Senior Fellow Kevin Nolan, IHI Executive Director Ninon Lewis, and IHI Senior VP Trissa Torres. “It’s the configuration that has caught on—a simple framework focusing on three goals simultaneously.”
Background
In 2007, IHI began recruiting organizations from
around the world to participate in a collaborative to implement what
became known as the IHI Triple Aim. The 141 participating organizations
included health care systems, hospitals, insurance companies, and others
in health care. Other groups were represented, such as public health
agencies, social service groups, and community coalitions. IHI’s work
with the collaborative provided a structure for observational research.
Findings
The three principles essential for health care
organizations to successfully pursue the Triple Aim:
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Create the right foundation for population management
Focus on a population or populations for which all three dimensions of the Triple Aim are important. Populations were chosen for economic, geographic or medical reasons. Overall, the IHI team noted that there was much success with enrolled populations (groups of individuals who are receiving care within a health system).
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Manage services at scale for the population
Assess the needs and assets of the population—and create a portfolio of projects that meet the needs of this population.
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Establish a learning system to drive and sustain the work
Build a learning system that fosters testing and provides feedback loops to compare performance with specific aims and measures for a specific population.
About The Milbank Quarterly
Continuously published
since 1923, The Milbank Quarterly features peer-reviewed original
research, policy review, and analysis from academics, clinicians, and
policymakers. The Quarterly’s multidisciplinary approach and
commitment to applying the best empirical research to practical
policymaking offer in-depth assessments of the social, economic,
historical, legal, and ethical dimensions of health and health care
policy. The Milbank Quarterly is published in March, June,
September, and December on behalf of the Milbank Memorial Fund by John
Wiley & Sons. www.milbank.org/the-milbank-quarterly
About the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
IHI is a
leading innovator in health and health care improvement worldwide. For
more than 25 years, we have partnered with visionaries, leaders, and
front-line practitioners around the globe to spark bold, inventive ways
to improve the health of individuals and populations. Recognized as an
innovator, convener, trustworthy partner, and driver of results, we are
the first place to turn for expertise, help, and encouragement for
anyone, anywhere who wants to change health and health care profoundly
for the better. To advance our mission, IHI’s work is focused in five
key areas: Improvement Capability; Person- and Family-Centered Care;
Patient Safety; Quality, Cost, and Value; and Triple Aim for
Populations. Learn more at ihi.org.