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Quality Reporting: Why IT Matters. September 25, 2012 Presenter: Kimberly Rask, MD PhD Medical Director. Driving Improvement. BETTER CARE. AFFORDABLE CARE. BETTER HEALTH FOR POPULATIONS. CMS contracts with QIOs to improve health and health care for Medicare beneficiaries
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Quality Reporting: Why IT Matters September 25, 2012 Presenter: Kimberly Rask, MD PhD Medical Director
Driving Improvement BETTER CARE AFFORDABLE CARE BETTER HEALTH FOR POPULATIONS • CMS contracts with QIOs to improve health and health care for Medicare beneficiaries • Largest federal network dedicated to improving health quality at the community level • QIOs based in all 50 states
2011 Senior Softball World Championships in Phoenix, Arizona • 5 for 5 in playoff game • 2 doubles • and a triple!
Coordinated Federal Focus on Quality • National Quality Strategy • DHHS Action Plan • Partnership for Patients • CMS Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) program priorities
Partnership for Patients National Campaign to Align Priorities and Resources Two Goals • Decrease by 40 percent preventable hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) by 2013 60,000 lives saved, 1.8 million fewer injuries to patients and $20 billion in health care costs avoided • Reduce 30-day hospital readmissions by 20 percent by 2013 1.6 million fewer readmissions and $15 billion in health care costs avoided
“Pay for Reporting” Programs Participation is “voluntary” and hospitals are not required to participate. • Those who choose NOT to participate will receive a reduction of 2 percent for each program in their Medicare Annual Payment Update for the following CMS fiscal year (FY)
What data is collected? • 2004: Hospitals voluntarily report 10 measures and agree to have the data reported publicly to receive an incentive payment (Annual Payment Update) • 2005-2012: New measures added yearly • AMI patients, congestive heart failure patients, pneumonia patients • Surgical patients (Surgical Care Improvement Project or SCIP) • Children’s asthma • 2007: Added mortality rates • 2008: Added patient satisfaction survey • 2009: Added readmission rates • 2011: Added hospital acquired infection rates • 2012:Composite patient safety measure • 2013: Elective deliveries
Quality Measures Reporting • Each measure’s specific data can be collected either retrospectively or concurrently • The same data is submitted to The Joint Commission and CMS – used for quality improvement and public reporting • Quarterly • Hospital Compare website • Validation
Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAI) • Data is submitted to the CDC’s National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) • Central-Line Associated Bloodstream Infection (CLABSI) • Surgical Site Infection (SSI) • Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI)
Value-based Purchasing • Moving from Pay for Reportingto Pay for Performance • Authorized under the Affordable Care Act • Funded by a 1 percent withhold from hospital DRG payments • Minimum of 10 cases for process and outcome measures over 9 month performance period • Minimum of 100 satisfaction surveys
Hospital Total Performance 70% 30% 12 Clinical processes of care • 2 AMI measures • 1 HF measure • 2 pneumonia measures • 7 SCIP measures • Antibiotic selection, given within 1 hour, discontinued • Controlled 6 a.m. glucose • Beta blocker continued • VTE prophylaxis ordered and given 8 Patient experience measures • Nurse communication • Doctor communication • Staff responsiveness • Pain management • Medication communication • Cleanliness and quiet • Discharge information • Overall hospital rating
How will hospitals be evaluated? Achievement Current hospital performance compared to All Hospitals baseline rates Improvement Current hospital performance compared to own baseline rates • Minimum threshold rates to receive any points • Benchmark rates to receive full points
Incentive or Penalty? • Program will be budget neutral overall • Some hospitals will not earn back everything that they had withheld for the pool and some hospitals will earn back more than what they had withheld • Projected that 2 percent of hospitals will earn bonus of more than 0.5 percent • While 2 percent will lose more than 0.5 percent • Penalty or incentive applied to base operating DRG payment for each discharge
CMS Implementation • Selected 3 conditions • Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) • Heart Failure (HF) • Pneumonia (PN) • Calculated “Excess Readmission Ratios” using the National Quality Forum (NQF)-endorsed 30-day risk-standardized readmission methodology • Set a 3-year rolling time period for measurement with a minimum of 25 discharges • For October 1, 2012 penalty determination, the measurement period was July 2008 to June 2011
Excess Readmission Ratio • The ratio compares Actual number of risk-adjusted readmissions from Hospital XX to the Expected number of risk-adjusted admissions from Hospital XX based upon the national averages for similar patients • Ratio >1 means more than expected readmissions <1 means fewer than expected readmissions
Applying the Penalty • Applied to base-DRG payment for all fee-for-service Medicare discharges during the fiscal year (FY) • Not revenue neutral, no bonus for excellent performance • For FY 2013, maximum penalty is 1 percent • Impacting more than 2000 hospitals nationally • Expected to cost hospitals $280 million or 0.3 percent of the total Medicare revenue to hospitals • Excess Standardized Readmission Ratio (SRR) will be public
Hospital-acquired Conditions (HAC) or “Never Events” CMS identified conditions that: • Were high cost, high volume or both • Result in the assignment to a DRG that has a higher payment when present as a secondary diagnosis • “Could reasonably have been prevented through application of evidence‑based guidelines”
HAC Definition Changing • Most individual HACs have been removed from public reporting • Section 3008 of Affordable Care Act requires public reporting of HACs • CMS is proposing an all-cause harm measure with potential to “drill down” on Hospital Compare • Section 3008 creates payment reduction for lowest performing hospitals based upon HAC rates by 2015 • Reduction applied to hospitals in the top quartile of hospital acquired conditions using “an appropriate” risk-adjustment methodology • Those hospitals will have payments reduced to 99 percent of the amount that would otherwise apply to such discharges
IT Capabilities are Critical! • Managing and organizing a growing body of clinical quality information (data) • Coordination with HITECH • Evaluating measures with electronic specifications • Anticipate EHR direct reporting by FY 2015 • From documentation to usable information – forms/screens that allow queries • Real-time data capabilities
It’s not just about “the numbers” • You can impact patient outcomes • Patients hold us accountable and “the numbers” are critical to document good work! This material was prepared by Alliant | GMCF, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for Georgia, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents presented do not necessarily reflect CMS policy. Publication No. 10SOW-GA-IIPC-12-226