Valerie Walters on the Future of the LESC BHCC

July 30, 2019

In a July 29 interview by Caroline Lewis for Crain’s Health Plus New York, Valerie Walters, president and CEO of the Lower Eastside Service Center, talks about the goals, accomplishments and challenges the LESC Behavioral Health Care Collaborative has faced since it first received funding. (Reprinted with permission from Crain’s New York Business, Health Plus)

What makes it difficult for behavioral health providers to adapt to value-based payments?

In the social services arena, we're good at telling stories but not good at measuring outcomes. It's more qualitative than quantitative, and managed-care companies want numbers. The $3.1 million we got from the BHCC program gave us the opportunity to put systems in place where LESC and other agencies could come together and work for the best outcomes of the clients.

What kind of capacity-building have you done to prepare for value-based payments?

All the BHCCs that got money needed IT infrastructure. We put a system in place to allow us to coordinate and track client care and to make sure we have the cost information we need to sit at the table with managed-care companies. We also hired an accountant to go into each individual agency to look at their data and the cost of doing business. The state's goal for the program is for behavioral health care collaboratives to participate in value-based deals with some level of risk-sharing.

Have those opportunities been available?

That's been the biggest challenge so far. We put in our application to become an independent practice association because, as a BHCC, we can only do small projects, but as an IPA, we can talk about contracting. But we need the managed-care companies to be willing to work with us. All the BHCCs are asking the state to encourage managed-care companies to sit at the table with us, but they can't force them.

What are you doing to better position the Lower Eastside Service Center BHCC to negotiate with payers?

We are working on becoming an affiliate of an established IPA/ACO that specializes in primary care. Behavioral health on its own is difficult to measure. Primary care is a key component. We are also working on a pilot we can bring to a managed-care company. Our BHCC serves about 1,300 folks, who fall into the category of the most expensive people in the system because they use the emergency room so much. We want to show how we can work with this unique group of individuals to get them the services they need and demonstrate that after we start working with them, the cost goes down.

What should the state do to support BHCCs moving forward?

I think they should expand this readiness period. Three years is not enough to get all the systems in place. Once we're an IPA, we will use a capital call to raise money from members for back-office support. But if the state could put up more money for IT infrastructure, that's the most expensive part of it. Right now, though, we're at a crossroads where until the managed-care companies are ready to do business with behavioral health, it's a moot.

Read the interview on the Crain’s New York website.