Our UCLA team, in partnership with United Healthcare (UHC), proposes to form a cooperative agreement with the CDC to evaluate the impact of a UHC national care coordination (NCC) program with innovative care models designed to simultaneously address the medical, behavioral and social determinants of health among the most severely ill and costly commercially insured persons in the US. The NCC is a real-world care coordination program that aims to provide ?whole-person care,? integrating intensive medical, behavioral and social support at a community level to address access barriers in addition to social determinants of health, including food and housing insecurity. The overall goal of the research is to employ rigorous empirical evaluation of the impact of this innovative program on the delivery, outcomes, and cost of care for adult commercial enrollees with diabetes. This proposed evaluation is unique because UHC implemented a pragmatic, randomized control trial of the NCC program in 2015 to the present.
The specific aims for this project are as follows:
Aim 1 will evaluate whether UHC's NCC program to reduce utilization among high-cost, high-need commercially insured beneficiaries with diabetes will lead to reduced diabetes complications. These include major cardiovascular events, fewer emergency room visits and hospitalizations, lower overall costs of care (primary endpoints), reduced amputations, slower progression of chronic kidney disease and improvements in A1c control and improvements in adherence to medications and diabetes processes of care (secondary endpoints).
Aim 2 will evaluate whether the influence of the NCC on the three primary endpoints for beneficiaries with diabetes varies by race or ethnicity.
Aim 3 will compare the relative effectiveness of the NCC on reducing costs of care and utilization, specific emergency room visits and hospitalizations, among beneficiaries with and without diabetes.
Aim 4 is to participate in a collaborative multi- institution network designed to strengthen the research methods for evaluating natural experiments across all sites, and to advance the best analytic methods for natural experiments in the US research community. Our 15 year, highly productive collaboration with UHC makes it very likely that the proposed research analyzing this pragmatic RCT will be successful and will provide critically needed evidence about whether intensive, whole-person care management programs can reduce diabetes related complications, resource utilization, and costs for some of the most vulnerable commercially insured persons with diabetes in the US.

Public Health Relevance

/PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE STATEMENT United Healthcare has implemented an innovative program for its members with the most complicated and expensive health care needs, called the National Care Coordination (NCC) program. The impact of the NCC program on the care of adult enrollees with commercial insurance, specifically those who have diabetes, is a critical and timely question that remains unanswered. Our team will work in collaboration with UHC and the CDC to evaluate the impact of this program to inform future UHC strategies and national policies of care coordination for patients with complicated health care conditions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Chronic Disease Prev and Health Promo (NCCDPHP)
Type
Research Demonstration--Cooperative Agreements (U18)
Project #
1U18DP006535-01
Application #
10093555
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDP1)
Project Start
2020-09-30
Project End
2025-09-29
Budget Start
2020-09-30
Budget End
2021-09-29
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2020
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Type
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095