FACT SHEET
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 29,
2015
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS
Media Inquiries
CMS announces payment changes for
Medicare home health agencies for 2016
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today announced
changes to the Medicare home health prospective payment system (HH PPS) for
calendar year (CY) 2016 that will foster greater efficiency, payment accuracy,
and improved quality of care. Approximately 3.5 million beneficiaries received
home health services from 11,900 HHAs, costing Medicare $17.9 billion in
2014.
CMS projects that Medicare payments
to home health agencies (HHAs) in CY 2016 will be reduced by 1.4 percent, or
$260 million. This decrease reflects the effects of the 1.9 percent home health
payment update percentage ($345 million increase); a 0.9 percent decrease in
payments due to the 0.97 percent payment reduction to the national,
standardized 60-day episode payment rate to account for nominal case-mix growth
from 2012 through 2014 ($165 million decrease); and a 2.4 percent decrease in
payments due to the third year of the four-year phase-in of the rebasing
adjustments to the national, standardized 60-day episode payment rate, the
national per-visit payment rates, and the non-routine medical supplies (NRS)
conversion factor ($440 million decrease). Compared to the proposed rule, the
maximum payment reduction in the first year of the value-based purchasing
program was reduced from 5 percent to 3 percent.
The HH PPS final rule is one of several rules for CY 2016 that reflect a
broader strategy to create a health care system that supports better care,
smarter spending, and healthier people. Provisions in these rules will help
move the nation’s health-care system to one that values quality over quantity
and focuses on reforms such as measuring for better health outcomes, helping
patients return home, managing and improving chronic diseases, and fostering a
more-efficient and coordinated health care system.
Background
Medicare pays HHAs through a prospective payment
system in which HHAs are typically paid a
national, standardized 60-day episode payment amount for all covered home
health services, adjusted for case-mix and area wage differences. The national, standardized 60-day episode payment amount is
case-mix adjusted based on relevant data from patient assessments conducted by
clinicians, as currently required for all Medicare-participating HHAs. The HH
PPS payment rates are updated annually by the home health payment update
percentage. The payment update percentage is based, in part, on the home health
market basket, which measures inflation in the prices of an appropriate mix of
goods and services included in home health services.
To qualify for the Medicare home health
benefit, a Medicare beneficiary must be under the care of a physician; have a
part-time or intermittent need for skilled nursing care, physical therapy,
and/or speech-language pathology services, or a continued need for occupational
therapy; and must be homebound. In addition, the beneficiary must receive home
health services from a Medicare-approved HHA. Covered
home health services include skilled nursing, home health aide, physical
therapy, speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, medical social
services, and medical supplies.
Payment Policy Provisions
Rebasing the HH PPS Payment Rates
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) directs CMS to apply an adjustment to the
national, standardized 60-day episode payment rate and other applicable amounts
to reflect factors such as changes in the number of visits in an episode, the
mix of services in an episode, the level of intensity of services in an
episode, the average cost of providing care per episode, and other relevant
factors. CMS is required to phase-in any adjustment over a four-year period, in
equal increments, not to exceed 3.5 percent of the amount (or amounts) as of
the date of the enactment of the ACA (CY 2010), and be fully implemented by CY
2017.
In this CY 2016 final rule, CMS is moving forward with the third year of
the four-year phase-in of the rebasing adjustments to the HH PPS payment rates.
As finalized in the CY 2014 final rule, the adjustments include increases to
the national per-visit payment rates, a 2.82 percent reduction to the NRS
conversion factor, and a reduction to the national, standardized 60-day episode
payment rate of $80.95 for CY 2016.
Recalibration of the HH PPS Case-Mix Weights
CY 2016 will be the second year that CMS is annually recalibrating the HH
PPS case-mix weights. The methodology used to recalibrate the case-mix weights
for CY 2016 is identical to methodology used in CY 2015.
Reduction to the 60-day Episode Rate to Account for Nominal Case-Mix
Growth
CMS is decreasing the national,
standardized 60-day episode payment amount by 0.97 percent each year in CY
2016, CY 2017, and CY 2018 to account for nominal case-mix growth (i.e.,
case-mix growth unrelated to changes in patient acuity) from 2012 to 2014. CMS
has adjusted home health payment in prior years before to account for nominal
case mix growth.
Other Updates
The Affordable Care Act requires
that the market basket update for HHAs be adjusted by changes in economy-wide
productivity. The CY 2016 home health market basket (2.3 percent) combined with
the multifactor productivity adjustment (0.4 percentage points) results in a
1.9 percent home health payment update percentage.
Home Health Quality Reporting Program (HH QRP) Update
Section 2(a) of the Improving Medicare Post-Acute Care Transformation Act
of 2014 (the IMPACT Act) requires HHAs, Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs),
Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs), and Long-Term Care Hospitals
(LTCHs) to submit standardized patient assessment data, as well as standardized
data on quality measures and resource use and other measures. The data
reporting requirements and implementation of standardized patient assessment
data is intended to enable interoperability and improve quality, payment, and
discharge planning, among other purposes.
The IMPACT Act requires collection of data across eight domains. In
keeping with the requirements of the IMPACT Act, CMS is finalizing as proposed
one standardized cross-setting measure for CY 2016 under the “skin integrity
and changes to skin integrity” domain. Measures for the other domains will be
addressed through future rulemaking. CMS received feedback on four future,
cross-setting measure constructs to potentially meet requirements of the IMPACT
Act domains of:
- All-condition risk-adjusted potentially preventable
hospital readmission rates,
- Resource use, including total estimated Medicare
spending per beneficiary,
- Discharge to the community, and
- Medication reconciliation
The Home Health Conditions of Participation (CoPs) require HHAs to submit
OASIS assessments as a condition of payment and also for quality measurement
purposes. HHAs that do not submit quality
measure data to CMS will see a two percent reduction in their annual HH payment
update percentage. CMS is finalizing its
proposal to require all HHAs to submit both admission
and discharge OASIS assessments for a minimum of 70 percent of all patients
with episodes of care occurring during the reporting period starting July 1,
2015. CMS is also finalizing as proposed to
incrementally increase this compliance threshold by ten percent in each of the
subsequent periods (July 1, 2016 and July 1, 2017) to reach 90
percent.
Home Health Value-Based Purchasing (HHVBP) Model
CMS is also finalizing a new initiative designed to support greater
quality and efficiency of care among Medicare-certified HHAs across the nation.
Authorized under the ACA and implemented by the Center for Medicare and
Medicaid Innovation, the HHVBP model supports
the Department of Health and Human Services’ efforts
to build a health care system that delivers better care, spends health care
dollars more wisely, and results in healthier people and
communities.
The HHVBP model leverages the successes of and lessons learned from other
value-based purchasing programs and demonstrations – including the Hospital
Value-Based Purchasing Program and the Home Health Pay-for-Performance
Demonstration – to shift from volume-based payments
to a model designed to promote the delivery of higher quality care to Medicare
beneficiaries. The model will test whether incentives for better quality
care can improve outcomes in the delivery of home health services.
Beginning January 1, 2016, CMS will implement the HHVBP model among all
HHAs in nine states representing each geographic area in the nation. All Medicare-certified HHAs that provide services
in Massachusetts, Maryland, North Carolina, Florida, Washington, Arizona, Iowa,
Nebraska, and Tennessee will compete on value in the HHVBP model, where payment
is tied to quality performance. HHAs in these nine states will have their
payments adjusted by a maximum payment adjustment of 3-percent (upward or
downward) in 2018, a maximum payment adjustment of 5-percent (upward or
downward) in 2019, a maximum payment adjustment of 6-percent (upward or
downward) in 2020, a maximum payment adjustment of 7-percent (upward or
downward) in 2021, and a maximum payment adjustment of 8-percent (upward or
downward) in 2022.
This model is designed so there is no selection bias, participants are
representative of home health agencies nationally, and there is sufficient
participation to generate meaningful results among all Medicare-certified HHAs
nationally.
For additional information about
the Home Health Prospective Payment System, visit here.
For additional information about the HHVBP, visit here.
The final rule can be viewed at
https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection. Please be mindful this
link will change once the rule is published on November 5, 2015 in the Federal
Register.
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