CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: CMS Media Relations
December 1, 2014 (202) 690-6145 | press@cms.hhs.gov
December 1, 2014 (202) 690-6145 | press@cms.hhs.gov
CMS releases new proposal to improve
Accountable Care Organizations
Shared Savings Program Proposed Rule
reflects focus on primary care and improved incentives for participation,
quality, and efficiency
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today released a proposal to
strengthen the Shared Savings Program for Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)
through a greater emphasis on primary care services and promoting transitions
to performance-based risk arrangements. The proposed rule reflects input from
program participants, experts, consumer groups, and the stakeholder community
at large. CMS is seeking to continue this important dialogue to ensure that the
Medicare
Shared Savings Program ACOs are successful in providing seniors and people with disabilities with better care at lower costs.
Shared Savings Program ACOs are successful in providing seniors and people with disabilities with better care at lower costs.
CMS Administrator Marilyn
Tavenner said, “This proposed rule is part of our continued commitment to
rewarding value and care coordination – rather than volume and care
duplication. We look forward to partnering with providers and stakeholders to
continuously refine and improve the Medicare Shared Savings program.”
Through the Affordable Care Act, ACOs encourage doctors, hospitals
and other health care providers to work together to better coordinate care when
people are sick and keep people healthy, which helps to reduce growth in health
care costs and improve outcomes. ACOs become eligible to share savings with
Medicare when they deliver that care more efficiently while meeting or
exceeding performance benchmarks for quality of care.
The
Shared Savings Program now includes more than 330 ACOs in 47 states, providing
care to more than 4.9 million beneficiaries in Medicare fee for service.
Recently, CMS announced first year Shared Savings Program (SSP) results:
- 58 SSP ACOs held spending below their benchmarks by a total of $705 million and earned shared savings payments of more than $315 million.
- Another 60 ACOs had expenditures below their benchmark, but not by a sufficient amount to earn shared savings.
Other Affordable Care
Act initiatives to improve care and reduce costs have helped
reduce hospital readmissions in Medicare by nearly 10 percent between 2007 and
2013 – translating into 150,000 fewer readmissions – and quality improvements
have resulted in saving 15,000 lives and $4 billion in health spending during
2011 and 2012.
CMS is seeking comment on a
number of adjustments to improve the Medicare Shared Savings Program,
including:
Providing
more flexibility for ACOs seeking to renew their participation in the Program. Many ACOs elect to
enter the Program under a one-sided risk model, where the organization
participates in shared savings with the Medicare program, but does not take on
additional performance-based risk. More experienced ACOs that are ready to
share in financial losses in return for the opportunity for a higher share of
savings may elect to enter a two-sided model. CMS is proposing to give ACOs the
option of a longer lead time to transition to a two-sided performance risk
model after their first agreement period. ACOs would have the opportunity to
renew under the one-sided model for one additional agreement period. ACOs that
enter the Shared Savings Program under the two-sided performance risk model
would see no change.
Encouraging
ACOs to take on greater performance-based risk and reward. CMS is proposing to create a new
two-sided risk model, called “track 3,” which integrates some elements from the
Pioneer ACO model, such as higher rates of shared savings and prospective
attribution of beneficiaries - a list of assigned beneficiaries provided at the
start of the performance year, and no further beneficiaries will be added to
the list during the performance year.
We are seeking comments on
a number of care coordination tools that would make two-sided performance risk
models more attractive to ACOs such as expanded use of telehealth, beneficiary
attestation, and more flexibility around post-acute care referrals to help ACOs
better coordinate care for beneficiaries using these services. These tools
could all help encourage participating providers to improve quality and care
coordination for Medicare beneficiaries, which in turn would result in better
patient experiences and greater shared savings for both the ACO and the
Medicare program.
Emphasis on
primary care.
CMS proposes to refine the way Medicare beneficiaries are assigned to an ACO to
place greater emphasis on primary care services delivered by nurse
practitioners, physician assistants and clinical nurse specialists and to allow
certain specialists not associated with primary care to participate in multiple
ACOs.
Alternative
methodologies for benchmarks.
CMS seeks comment on alternative methodologies that
would make ACO benchmarks for determining shared savings and losses gradually
more independent of the ACO’s past performance and more dependent on the ACO’s
success in being more cost efficient relative to its local market. For example, we are considering whether shared savings
received by an ACO should be added back to the benchmark in future performance
periods.
Streamlining data
sharing and reducing administrative burden. CMS
proposes to streamline the process for ACOs to access beneficiary claims data
necessary for health care operations such as quality improvement activities and
care coordination while retaining the opportunity for beneficiaries to decline
to have their claims data shared with the ACO.
A fact sheet with more
information about the proposed rule is available at: http://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Fact-sheets/2014-Fact-sheets-items/2014-12-01.html
The
proposed rule will be open to a 60-day comment period.
The
proposed rule is available for viewing at: http://www.ofr.gov/(X(1)S(tofvuj12vvyo3oiwkp3jkln3))/inspection.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1
Comments may be submitted
at: http://www.regulations.gov/
This rule is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on 12/08/2014 and available online at http://federalregister.gov/a/2014-28388
This rule is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on 12/08/2014 and available online at http://federalregister.gov/a/2014-28388
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