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Title: Presentation to Patient-Centric Primary Care Roundtable:


1
How Can the Federal Government Support
Patient-Centered Care?
  • Presentation to Patient-Centric Primary Care
    Roundtable
  • From Public Policy to Implementation
  • Bob Doherty
  • Senior Vice President
  • Governmental Affairs and Public Policy
  • American College of Physicians
  • March 12, 2007

2
Take home message
  • Congress and CMS should create multiple pathways
    to support patient-centric care
  • Implement the Medicare medical home demo
  • Revamp the Medicare Physician Quality Reporting
    Initiative to focus on high impact measures and
    systems to support patient-centric care
    coordination
  • Create additional incentives for physicians to
    acquire HIT to facilitate patient-centric care
  • Eliminate the Medicare SGR and improve accuracy
    of payments
  • Break down Medicare silos and change budget
    rules to account for total program savings
  • Support state initiatives to redesign Medicaid
    and S-CHIP around the patient-centered medical
    home (PCMH)

3
The Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006
includes a Medicare medical home demonstration
project
  • Based on legislative language proposed by ACP and
    supported by AAFP
  • Purpose of the demo is to redesign the health
    care delivery system to provide targeted,
    accessible and continuous and coordinated
    family-centered care to high need populations
    and under which
  • Care management fees are paid to persons
    performing services as personal physicians
  • Incentive payments are made to physicians
    participating in practices that provide services
    as a medical home
  • Shall include urban, rural and underserved areas
    in a total of no more than eight states
  • Shall be designed to include practices with fewer
    than three FTE physicians as well as physicians
    in larger practices in rural and underserved
    areas

4
Medicare medical home demo
  • High need population means individuals with
    multiple chronic diseases that require regular
    monitoring, advising or treatment
  • Personal physician is defined as a board
    certified physician who provides first contact
    and continuous care for the individual under the
    physicians care and the physician has the
    staff and resources to manage the comprehensive
    and coordinated care of such individuals

5
Medicare medical home demo
  • A personal physician shall perform or provide for
    at least the following
  • Advocates for and provides ongoing support,
    oversight and guidance to implement a plan of
    care that provides an integrated, coherent,
    cross-discipline plan for ongoing medical care
  • Plan is developed in partnership with patients
    and includes all other physicians furnishing care
    to the patient involved
  • Uses evidence-based medicine and clinical
    decision support tools at point of care
  • Uses HIT that may include remote monitoring and
    patient registries
  • Encourages patients to engage in the management
    of their own health through education and support
    systems

6
Medicare medical home demo
  • The Secretary shall provide for payment of a care
    management fee to personal physicians providing
    care under the project, using the relative value
    scale (RUC) processes to develop a care
    management fee code and a value for such code
  • Practices get 80 of dollars saved (such as Part
    A savings) attributable to the medical home, as
    reduced by the total care management fees paid to
    the medical home
  • The amount of such reductions in expenditures
    will be determined using assumptions of
    reductions in the occurrences of health
    complications, hospital rates, medical errors and
    adverse drug reactions

7
Medicare medical home demo
  • Major design issues (value of the care
    coordination fee, shared savings methodologies,
    attribution, recruitment and qualifications of
    practices) remain to be worked out
  • As a demo, the care coordination fee is not
    expected to require a budget neutrality offset
    in payments to doctors
  • Preliminary discussions with CMS indicate that
    the demo will be launched on 1/1/09 and continue
    for three years, so results wont be known until
    2012

8
Congress and CMS should pursue additional avenues
to promote patient-centric care
  • Multiple pathways to enable patient-centric care
    will be more effective than relying only on the
    Medicare Medical Home demo
  • Such pathways should accelerate redesign of
    payment and delivery systems to advance
    patient-centric care, even as the Medicare
    medical home demo allows for a concurrent testing
    of one approach

9
Pathway to patient-centric careRevamp the
Medicare Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
(PQRI)
  • Mandated by Tax Relief on Health Care Act of 2007
  • Transitional program effective July through
    December 2007
  • Physicians receive bonus Medicare payments for
    reporting on at least three selected measures
  • Legislation also includes framework for selecting
    measures for reporting in 2008 . . . but no money
    is set aside to pay for reporting

10
Pathway to patient-centric careRevamp the
Medicare Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
(PQRI)
  • Current program emphasizes paying physicians to
    report for the sake of reporting . . .
  • . . . rather than rewarding them for reporting
    on structural and clinical measures that would
    advance patient-centric care focused on chronic
    illnesses

11
Pathway to patient-centric careRevamp the
Medicare Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
(PQRI)
  • Some specialties have only a few and very basic
    measures that require little or no investment in
    practice-level system improvements
  • While primary care physicians have over a dozen
    measures for high impact and prevalent chronic
    illnesses, requiring a greater investment in
    resources to achieve quality gains
  • Congress recognized potential inequity by
    requiring only 3 measures be reported per
    physician
  • But because measures must be reported for 80 of
    patients to which they apply, primary care
    physicians are likely to see more patients for
    which there will be an applicable measure that
    has to be reported
  • 1.5 bonus unlikely to be sufficient

12
Pathway to patient-centric careRevamp the
Medicare Physician Quality Reporting Initiative
(PQRI)
  • ACP believes Congress should revamp the PQRI to
    provided weighted performance payments for
    reporting on clinical measures that have the
    greatest impact on quality and costs (e.g.
    chronic diseases)
  • And for reporting that they have the HIT and
    systems at the practice level needed to support
    patient-centric care

13
Example of providing tiered payments for
systems to support patient-centric care
  • BTE uses a scoring system that provides higher
    payments for more advanced systems
  • Tier 1 the reporting on evidence-based
    standards of care and maintenance of patient
    registries
  • Tier 2 the use of electronic systems to
    maintain patient records (EHRs) use of
    clinical-decision support tools the use of
    electronic orders for prescriptions and lab tests
    (e-prescribing), the use of patient reminders
    use of e-consults and managing patients with
    multiple chronic illnesses
  • Tier 3 - whether a practices electronic systems
    interconnect and whether they are interoperable
    and can automatically send, receive and integrate
    data such as lab results and medical histories
    from other systems

14
MedPAC supports focusing on measures for chronic
diseases and care coordination
  • Initially, policymakers might consider
    prioritizing the implementation of some
    pay-for-performance measures over others.
    Focusing on measures of high-cost, widespread,
    chronic conditions to maximize benefits to
    beneficiaries might be a good short-term
    strategy. Further, measures that reflect
    coordination between health care sectors (e.g.
    hospitals and physicians) will encourage and
    reward communication among providers, which may
    improve patient outcomes and reduce Medicare
    costs.
  • Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, Report to
    Congress, March 2007

15
Pathway to patient-centric care Provide federal
dollars and office visit add on to support HIT
  • Authorize grants, loans, and tax subsidies to
    physicians who acquire HIT and use it for care
    coordination and quality improvement
  • Create an add on to Medicare office visit fees
    for specific technologies associated with
    patient-centric care (e.g. registries, clinical
    decision support, secure email)
  • The National Health Information Incentives Act of
    2006 included grants and tax incentives plus a
    Medicare office visit add-on (similar legislation
    is expected to be introduced in 110th Congress)

16
Pathway to patient-centric careDirect Medicare
to pay for physician-directed care coordination
  • Medicare should pay physicians for care
    coordination of patients with multiple chronic
    diseases, instead of pay based solely on volume
    of visits/procedures
  • This could be done by creating CPT/HCPCS codes
    and RVUs for care coordination
  • Physicians would bill on a fee-for-service basis
    for such codes with documentation of the services
    rendered

17
Pathway to patient-centric careDirect Medicare
to pay for physician-directed care coordination
  • Examples of possible new codes related to
    patient-centered, longitudinal, coordinated care
    include
  • Care plan oversight, for additional specified
    conditions which would include communication with
    other providers offering the patient treatment
  • Ongoing review of patient medical status and lab
    reports, and care plan modifications
  • Physician e-mail and telephone consultation
    related to a care plan
  • Physician review of remote monitoring
  • Disease self-management training related to a
    care plan conducted by the physician or nurse
    with related follow-up

18
MedPAC supports payment for physician care
coordination
  • Medicare should encourage coordination of care
    and provision of primary care . . .
  • There are a number of care coordination and
    care management models Medicare could implement.
    For example, beneficiaries with chronic
    conditions could volunteer to see a specific
    physician or care provider for the complex
    condition that qualifies them to receive care
    coordination/care management. That physician
    would serve as a sort of medical home for the
    patient..
  • Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, Testimony
    to the House Ways and Means Committee on
    Alternatives to the SGR, March 6. 2007

19
Payment for care coordination has broad support
within medicine
  • Direct ing Medicare to pay medical practices
    for care coordination services that fall outside
    of a face-to-face encounter. System-wide
    savingssuch as reductions in hospital admissions
    and readmissions (Part A) and more effective use
    of pharmacologic therapies (Part D)achieved by
    these programs should be applied to funding the
    care coordination services. If enacted by
    Congress, such a policy should be considered a
    change in law that would not require a budget
    neutrality offset in the Medicare Physician Fee
    Schedule.
  • Joint Recommendations to Congress On Eliminating
    the SGR and Supporting Efforts to Promote
    Health Care Quality and Appropriateness,
    Statement signed by AMA, AAFP, ACP, AAP, ACS,
    AOA and over 40 physician and other health
    professional groups, February 2007

20
Pathway to patient-centric careEliminate the
SGR and improve accuracy of payments
  • The sustainable growth rate (SGR) cuts payments
    whenever spending exceed per capita GDP
  • Since 2002, Congress has replaced annual cuts
    with temporary measures that have only driven up
    the price tag of a permanent solution
  • CBO estimates it will cost more than 250 billion
    just to bring annual updates up to inflation
  • If Congress does not act, the SGR will trigger an
    across-the-board Medicare fee cut to doctors in
    2008, and cuts of 40 or more over the next
    several years
  • Continued payment cuts will create access
    problems, lead to cost shifting, and make it
    impossible for physicians to acquire systems to
    deliver patient-centric care

21
Pathway to patient-centric careEliminate the
SGR and improve accuracy of payments
  • Congress must repeal the SGR and replace it with
    a framework that
  • provides positive updates to all physicians
  • allocates a separate pool of dollars to support
    physician-led quality improvement programs that
    offer the greatest potential for quality gains
    and cost savings (e.g. such as higher payments to
    physicians who practice in a qualified PCMH)
  • pool of dollars to support physicians quality
    improvements should grow when savings are
    achieved in other parts of Medicare

22
Pathway to patient-centric careEliminate the
SGR and improve accuracy of payments
  • Medicare should continue to improve the accuracy
    of the Medicare relative value units (RVUs)
  • Create a system to identify potentially
    mis-valued services for review by a
    multi-specialty expert process (e.g. the RVS
    Update Committee), based on evidence that work
    has decreased
  • Any reductions in RVUs for mis-valued services
    should be redistributed back to the physician
    payment pool
  • Review the accuracy of the practice expense RVUs,
    which determine more than 40 of the total
    approved payment per service
  • Work with the medicine to assure that advisory
    processes provide balanced representation of
    primary care and physician experts in management
    of chronic diseases

23
Pathway to patient-centric careBreak down
Medicare silos and change budget rules to
account for total program savings
  • Current Medicare rules do not allow physicians to
    share in savings in other parts of the program
    except as part of Medicare demos
  • Congress should direct HHS to create a
    methodology to allow for shared savings resulting
    from care coordination and the PCMH (such as
    preventable hospital admissions)
  • Congress should revise Medicare physician fee
    schedule budget neutrality rules so that it
    takes into account the impact of proposed care
    coordination services on reducing total program
    costs, rather than being funded solely through
    redistribution of physician fees
  • Congress should work with CBO to make changes in
    scoring rules to consider impact of new
    services and benefits on achieving program-wide
    savings and over a longer period of time

24
Pathway to patient-centric careSupport state
initiatives to redesign care around a PCMH
  • Several states (Missouri, North Carolina,
    Louisiana) have initiated their own programs, or
    applied to the federal government for waivers or
    demonstration project funding, to redesign of
    Medicaid, S-CHIP and other health programs around
    a medical home
  • December 2006 report by the Medicaid Commission
    to HHS recommends that all Medicaid enrollees
    receive care from a physician-directed medical
    home, without requiring a federal waiver

25
Pathway to patient-centric careSupport state
initiatives to redesign care around a PCMH
  • Congress and CMS should support states by
  • Granting or expediting waivers for states that
    wish to redesign financing and delivery around
    the PCMH
  • funding demonstration projects to enroll S-CHIP,
    dual eligibles, and Medicaid recipients in PCMHs
    supported by an alternative physician payment
    structure
  • providing authority, funding and direction as
    part of the S-CHIP reauthorization bill to states
    that choose to organize care for S-CHIP
    recipients around the PCMH

26
Conclusions
  • The Medicare medical home demo is an essential
    step that should allow for evaluation of the PCMH
    in multiple sites and practices
  • Congress should at the same time pursue other
    pathways to advance patient-centric care
  • Such pathways would include revamping Medicare
    pay for reporting, providing funding for HIT,
    paying physicians for care coordination services,
    eliminating the SGR and improving accuracy of
    payments, breaking down the Medicare silos, and
    supporting state initiatives on patient-centered
    care
  • The support of the employer community will be
    critical in persuading Congress to pursue
    multiple pathways to advance patient-centric care
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