CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 18,
2015
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS
Media Inquiries
Affordable
Care Act payment model saves more than $25 million in first performance year
Independence
at Home practices succeed in improving care, lowering costs
The Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) today announced positive and promising results from the
first performance year of the Independence at Home Demonstration, including
both higher quality care and lower Medicare expenditures.
"These results support what
most Americans already want-- that chronically ill patients can be better taken
care of in their own homes. This is a great common sense way for Medicare
beneficiaries to get better quality care with smarter spending from
Medicare," said CMS Acting Administrator Andy Slavitt. "The
Independence at Home Demonstration is one of the tools of the Affordable Care
Act that can bring down the long-term cost of care in a patient-centered manner."
The CMS analysis found that
Independence at Home participants saved over $25 million in the demonstration’s
first performance year – an average of $3,070 per participating beneficiary –
while delivering high quality patient care in the home. CMS will award
incentive payments of $11.7 million to nine participating practices that
succeeded in reducing Medicare expenditures and met designated quality goals
for the first year of the demonstration.
According to CMS’ analysis, all 17
participating practices improved quality in at least three of the six quality
measures for the demonstration in the first performance year. Four
participating practices met all six quality measures. Medicare beneficiaries
who are participating in Independence at Home practices, on average:
- Have fewer hospital
readmissions within 30 days;
- Have follow-up contact
from their provider within 48 hours of a hospital admission, hospital
discharge, or emergency department visit;
- Have their medications
identified by their provider within 48 hours of discharge from the
hospital;
- Have their preferences
documented by their provider; and
- Use inpatient hospital
and emergency department services less for conditions such as diabetes,
high blood pressure, asthma, pneumonia, or urinary tract infection.
The Independence at Home
Demonstration provides chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries with primary care
services in the home setting. In the first performance year, 17 participating
practices served over 8,400 Medicare beneficiaries.
The Independence at Home
Demonstration is part of the innovative framework established by the Affordable
Care Act to move our health care system toward one that rewards doctors based
on the quality, not quantity, of care they give patients. The Administration
earlier this year announced the
ambitious goal of tying 30 percent of Medicare payments to quality and value
through alternative payment models by 2016 and 50 percent of payments by 2018.
To learn more about the
Independence at Home Demonstration, including individual practice results,
visit: http://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/Independence-at-Home/.
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