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1. Health Reform:“Ready or Not, It’s Here!” Barry M. Straube, M.D.
CMS Chief Medical Officer
American Health Quality Association
Annual Meeting – Baltimore, MD
May 4, 2010 1
3. CMS Realignment Update Donald M. Berwick, M.D., nominated as CMS Administrator
Marilyn Tavenner, R.N., named:
Acting CMS Administrator
Principal Deputy CMS Administrator
Acting Chief Operating Officer
CMS Chief Medical Officer and the Director of the Office of Clinical Standards & Quality remain a direct report to the CMS Administrator and the Office of the Administrator
Only 1 of 4 Career direct reports to the Administrator 3
4. CMS Realignment Update Center for Medicare (CM)
Consolidates FFS Medicare, Medicare Advantage and Medicare Part D in one Center
Jonathan Blum, Deputy Administrator
Center for Medicaid, CHIP and Survey & (CMCSC) Certification
Cindy Mann, Deputy Administrator
Center for Strategic Planning (CSP)
Will be Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMI)
Anthony Rodgers, Deputy Administrator
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5. CMS Realignment Update Center for Program Integrity (CPI)
Peter Budetti, M.D., Deputy Administrator
Office of the Chief Operating Officer (COO)
Marilyn Tavenner, R.N., Acting COO
Office of e-Health Standards & Services (OESS)
Office of Information Services (OIS)
Office of Financial Management (OFM)
Office of Operations Management (OOM) 5
6. Realignment: What’s the Significance? Emphasis on quality & value in healthcare
Transition to a data and evidence-based organization
Medicare program centralization
Strengthening of Medicaid & CHIP, alignment with Medicare when appropriate
Major initiative on reforming payment systems, healthcare delivery models
Greater focus on the growing scourge of fraud and abuse
Streamlining & strengthening of major operational support programs that keep the trains running 6
7. What Is OCSQ Already Doing? ARRA/HITECH
Adoption of EHRs and Meaningful Use
Comparative Effectiveness Research
Prevention and Wellness Programs
MIPPA
Bundled Payment Reform in ESRD
The First CMS National VBP Program
ESRD Quality Incentive Program
Report to Congress on Improving Medicare data on race, ethnicity and gender 7
8. What Is OCSQ Already Doing? NCDs on Preventive Services
MIPPA section 101
HIV/AIDS screening tests in Medicare
Expansion of smoking cessation coverage
Further preventive service coverage without statute
Focus on Genomics: Testing and Screening
IT systems development
Clinical quality measures
COPs: Telehealth, Visitation rights, Standing orders, clinical scope of practice, etc. 8
9. Ensuring Quality & Value:CMS Strategies “Contemporary Quality Improvement”
Transparency: Public Reporting & Data Sharing
Incentives:
Financial: Value-Based Purchasing, P4P, P4R, gain-sharing, etc.
Non-financial
Regulatory vehicles
COPs & CfCs
Survey & Certification, Accreditation
Myriad policy decisions: Benefit categories, Fraud & Abuse, etc.
National & Local Coverage Decisions
Demonstrations, pilots, research 9
10. Current Quality & Value Incentive Programs Reporting Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment Update (RHQDAPU)
Hospital Out Patient Quality Data Reporting Program (HOPQDRP)
Physician Quality Reporting Program (PQRI)
E-prescribing Incentive Program
Health Information Technology for Economic & Clinical Health Act (HITECH)
Part of the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 10
11. Other Quality & Value Initiatives Reports to Congress on
Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (November 2007)
Physician Value-Based Purchasing (draft & clearance)
End-Stage Renal Disease
Bundled Payment Reform: January 1, 2011
Quality Incentive Program: January 1, 2012
Pay-for-Reporting programs
HHAs
SNFs 11
12. 12 Open Government Directive Transparency
Promotes accountability through informing citizens about what government is doing
Information and data is a national asset
Should be readily available and usable
Executive branch departments and agencies to harness technology to put operational and decision information online and available
Feedback from public should be solicited
13. 13 Open Government Directive Participation
Public engagement improves decision making quality
Increased opportunities for public to participate in decision making
Collaboration
Tools, methods and systems to partner within and external to government
Individuals, non-profit organizations, businesses, etc.
120 days for CTO, OMB and GAO to develop an Open Government Directive
14. Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 Patient Protection & Affordable Care Act (PPACA)
Health Care & Reconciliation Act of 2010 (HCRA)
Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA)
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15. Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 Title I: Quality, Affordable Health Care for all Americans
Title II: Role of Public Programs
Title III: Improving the Quality & Efficiency of Health Care
Title IV: Prevention of Chronic Disease & Improving Public Health
Title V: Health Care Work Force 15
16. Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 Title VI: Transparency and Public Reporting
Title VII: Improving Access to Innovative Medical Therapies
Title VIII: Community Living Assistance Services & Support (CLASS) Act
Title IX: Revenue Provisions
Title X: Strengthening Quality, Affordable Health Care for All Americans (Amendments) 16
17. Quality, Affordable Health Care Bars insurance company discrimination by pre-existing condition, health status, gender
Creates health insurance exchanges
Tax credits and cost-sharing assistance to low income Americans
Invests in Community Health Centers
Annual review of new plans with unjustified premium increases 17
18. Public Programs Expands Medicaid coverage to non-elderly with incomes < 133% of FPL
Federal government pays 100% of costs first three years of coverage, decreasing 2017-2020, then 90%
Extends CHIP funding 2 years to 2015
Increases payments to Medicaid providers 18
19. Improving Medicare Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program (Section 3001)
Start FY2013
Quality Measures
Outcome: AMI, CHF, Pneumonia
SCIP
HAIs
HCAHPS
Efficiency measures
Public reporting on Hospital Compare website
VBP demonstrations for CAHs and small hospitals
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20. Improving Medicare Improvements to PQRI (Section 3002)
PQRI extended to 2014 with bonus payments:
2011: 1.0%
2012-2014: 0.5%
Reductions in fee schedule for failure to report:
2015: 1.5%
2016 and beyond: 2.0%
Maintenance of Certification (MOC) Program inclusion
Integration of PQRI and EHR reporting 20
21. Improving Medicare Improvements to Physician Feedback Program (Section 3003)
Confidential resource use reports based on claims data to physicians
May include linked quality data
Episode groupers by 2012
Risk adjustment: Socioeconomic, geographic, race & ethnicity, health status, etc.
Public availability of methodology
Coordination with VBP programs 21
22. Improving Medicare Quality reporting for LTCHs, Inpatient Rehabilitation Hospitals, Hospices (Section 3004)
Quality measures development with required reporting
Reduction of payment methodology by 2.0% for failure to report starting 2014
Quality reporting for PPS-exempt cancer hospitals (Section 3005): Starts 2014
VBP program for SNFs, HHAs, ASCs (Section 3006)
Report to Congress by January 1, 2011
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23. Improving Medicare VBP modifier under PFS (Section 3007)
Quality compared to costs
Budget neutrality specified
Rulemaking during 2013, implementation 2015
Payment adjustment for conditions acquired in hospitals (Section 3008)
1% payment reduction for HACs starting 2015
Risk adjustment required
Public reporting required
Study with RTC by 1/1/2012 on extending to other providers 23
24. Improving Medicare National Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care (Section 3011, with amendment 399HH)
National priority setting & strategic plan by 1/1/2011
Priority requirements
Improve outcomes, efficiency, patient-centeredness for all populations
Identify areas with potential for most rapid improvement
Address gaps in quality, efficiency and comparative effectiveness
Enhances data use for quality, efficiency, transparency, outcomes
High-cost chronic diseases, preventable admissions & readmissions, patient safety, medical error reduction, HAIs, health disparities, others as determined by Secretary
Website with priorities, agency plans, updates 24
25. Improving Medicare Inter-Agency Work Group on Health Care Quality (Section 3012)
Quality Measurement Development (Section 3013)
Outcomes, Efficiency
Quality Measurement by Consensus-Based Endorsement Body (Section 3014)
Multi-stakeholder group input
Dissemination by Secretary
Data Collection & Public Reporting (Section 3015 with multiple amendments)
Clear public plan for data collection and public reporting developed 2010-2014 25
26. Improving Medicare Establishes a CMS Innovations Center by 2011
Develop patient-centered payment models
Encourage evidence-based, coordinated care for Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP
Rapid piloting/testing of new payment programs
Medicare Shared Savings Program (ACOs)
National Pilot Program on Payment Bundling
Independence at Home Demonstration
Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
Community-Based Care Transitions Program
Extension of Gainsharing Demonstration
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27. Improving Medicare Improving beneficiary access by payment increases or extensions
Rural protections
Improving payment accuracy
Reduces overpayments to Medicare Advantage health plans and strengthens MA benefit and contracting frameworks
Fills Medicare prescription drug “donut hole”
2010: $250 rebate
2011: 50% manufacturer’s discount on brand names
2012-2020: Phase-in filling of donut hole
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28. Improving Medicare Extends Medicare Trust Fund solvency by 9 years to 2026
Trauma Centers creation
Women’s Health provisions
Coordinated care for chronic conditions
Increased payments to primary care physicians in shortage areas
5 year, 10% bonus for PCPs and general surgeons
Medicaid rates 100% of adjusted Medicare rates in 2013 and 2014 28
29. Preventing Chronic Disease & Improving Public Health Eliminates cost-sharing for preventive services
Improves education on prevention and public health
Mandates a national prevention and public health strategy
Outcomes focused
Controlling costs
National Prevention, Health Promotion and Public Health Council
Community Preventive Services Task Force
Increased community access to preventive services
School-based settings, etc.
Oral healthcare services promotion
Annual wellness visits with preventive services without copayment
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30. Health Care Workforce Funds shortages in primary care areas
Invests in National Health Service Corps scholarship and loan repayment programs
Incentives for primary care providers to practice in rural and physician shortage areas
Education grants and subsidies
Focus on workforce diversity promotion
Educational best practices and centers of excellence
GME funding provisions 30
31. Transparency & Public Reporting Broad Plan for Public Reporting
Make performance information widely available
Hospitals and Ambulatory Surgery Centers
Expands Hospital Compare
Information on the Value Based Purchasing (VBP) program
Mandates reporting on health care acquired infections, hospital readmissions, and hospital charge data
Physicians
Physician Compare website by January 2011.
Physician ownership or investments in hospitals, ASCs, other provider sites and manufacturers (by September 2013)
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32. Transparency & Public Reporting SNFs, LTCFs
Expansion of Nursing Home Compare by March 2011
Nursing home ownership by March 2012
Multiple efforts directed at fraud & abuse
Stricter enforcement requirements
Private, non-profit entity to identify priorities in patient-centered outcomes research
Nationwide background checks
Dementia and abuse training
Elder justice activities
Sense of the Senate regarding medical malpractice 32
33. Access to Innovative Services Biologic Price competition provisions
Establishes regulatory pathway for FDA approval of biosimilar versions of previously licensed biologics
Expands scope of current 340B drug discount program to expand access to medicines at lower cost
Children and Underserved Communities
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34. Community Living Assistance Services & Support (CLASS) Lifetime cash benefit for people with severe disabilities to allow them to remain in their homes and communities
Voluntary, self-funded insurance program provided through the workplace
Premiums through payroll deductions
Worker participation voluntary
CBO rates this program as actuarially sound 34
35. Revenue Provisions Deficit reduction over 10-20 years
Tightens current health tax incentives
Increases penalties or reduces caps on HSA premature distributions, FSAs, etc.
Excise tax on indoor tanning services
Collects industry fees
Insurance companies that sell high-cost plans (2018)
Modest excise taxes
Slightly increases Medicare HI for individuals and couples $200K/$250K
Taxable base expanded to include net investment income 35
36. How Does QIO Program Fit In? 9th and 10th SOW have focused on key Administration and Health Reform priorities
Prevention
Patient Safety
Care Transitions
Beneficiary Issues: Access, Quality of Care, etc.
But with a fixed apportionment, QIO Program is limited in “units” of quality improvement
Success at 9th SOW Metrics will hopefully justify more funding, more units in 10th SOW 36
37. How Does QIO Program Fit In? Conceptual proposal of a model going forward:
Core SOW focused on high priority themes/tasks
Some degree of directing resources towards those providers/beneficiaries with greatest need
We now have better metrics, evidence-based interventions, unit cost estimates, accountability, and even attribution for the core SOW
“Shell” of aligned collaborative efforts around the core
Mississippi Health First as a paradigm
Funding outside the QIO apportionment?
Leverage resources of other federal agencies, others?
Rapid cycle interventions? 37
38. How Does QIO Program Fit In? QIO Program has attracted attention to align and/or integrate with healthcare reform
Funding sources?
Appropriations
QIO apportionment
? Other sources
Healthcare reform related tasks
Part of the core SOW?
Outside core SOW?
Hybrid/combination of above?
Subject to same metric accountability?
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39. How Does QIO Program Fit In? ACA, HITECH, MIPPA Topics: Good Fit with QIOs?
QIOs role with FQHCs/CHCs should be considered
Technical assistance for VBP Programs
Quality/efficiency measurement, analysis, root cause analysis
Interpretation of feedback reports and how to respond
Evidence-Based interventions
Culture change of organizations
Collaborative, rapid cycle change models
Providing part of the operational framework to implement the National Priority strategies for Healthcare Improvement
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40. How Does the QIO Program Fit In? Similar role as part of the operational framework for implementation of a National Data collection and reporting plan
For the content of both plans, the QIO Program could potentially play a role
Technical assistance for Innovation Demonstrations
Technical assistance for chronic care coordination, women’s health, trauma, healthcare acquired infections, etc.
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41. How Does the QIO Program Fit In? Potential key role in national prevention and public health strategic plan
Need to consider role in public reporting, particularly
Educating beneficiaries in using information/data
Improving usefulness of Compare websites
Possible role in Program Integrity
Might be a reverse step to PRO regulatory atmosphere, however
Could consider a PI beneficiary focus
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42. How Does the QIO Program Fit In? CLASS Act
Focus on community and home services could rejuvenate QIO efforts in:
Post-acute care settings
Home health
Other, new approaches?
EHR adoption, meaningful use, CQMs
Health Disparities
Telehealth
Enormous vacuum in patient-centered quality improvement which will hinge on Redesign of Beneficiary Protection
Alignment of Medicare, Medicaid, CHIP quality & value initiatives
Finally, additional A-19 process legislative changes in progress are needed to fulfill the QIO Program potential 42
43. 43 Contact Information Barry M. Straube, M.D.
CMS Chief Medical Officer, &
Director, Office of Clinical Standards & Quality
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
7500 Security Boulevard
Baltimore, MD 21244
Email: Barry.Straube@cms.hhs.gov
Phone: (410) 786-6841