September 7, 2016
Patrick Conway, M.D., CMS Principal Deputy Administrator and Chief Medical Officer
Patrick Conway, M.D., CMS Principal Deputy Administrator and Chief Medical Officer
Round One
State Innovation Model Initiative Test Awards Show Some Promising Progress and
Lessons Learned
The State Innovation Models (SIM) Initiative began in April
2013, and has supported over 38 states, territories and the District of
Columbia in two rounds of awards. Today, we are releasing the second
annual independent evaluation report for the Round 1 State Innovation Model
Test Awards, including the first findings available for SIM after the baseline
data summary. This report shows both progress in states being catalysts
for health care transformation and the value of CMS’ collaboration with states.
Overview of SIM
SIM states are testing strategies to transform health-care
across their entire state, specifically to have a preponderance of payments to
providers from all payers in the state be in value-based purchasing and/or
alternative payment models.
In the SIM Initiative, CMS is testing models for how state
governments can use their policy and regulatory levers to accelerate statewide
health care system transformation from encounter-based service delivery to care
coordination, and from volume-based to value-based payment. Round 1
states are implementing statewide health care innovation plans that support
health care transformation through a variety of methods, including:
- primary care practice transformation through
patient-centered, coordinated care;
- integration of primary care with other health and
social services, including behavioral health services and long-term
services and supports;
- payment reforms that promote delivery system
transformation and a variety of enabling strategies to facilitate and
sustain an improved health system that puts the patient at the center of
care delivery; and
- community-based population health and prevention.
Central to enhanced care coordination, population health,
behavioral and physical health integration, and alternative payment models is
the use of health information technology (IT) and a robust data
infrastructure. The Round 1 Test states are strengthening these
capacities through:
- engaging and supporting providers that have not
typically been connected to health IT;
- requiring participating providers to report on data
and/or implement health IT;
- making available patient-level health information to
providers and systems to improve care coordination; and
- improving data analytics to support quality improvement
and payment reform, and aligning metrics and data infrastructure across
payers and initiatives.
Evaluation findings from Year 2 of SIM Round 1
In SIM Round 1, Model Test awards were made to six states:
Arkansas, Massachusetts, Maine, Minnesota, Oregon, and Vermont. The SIM
Initiative has made notable progress in accelerating health care transformation
among the Round 1 Test states. Over time, many states have been able to
increase the populations served by their SIM-supported models.
- Over 70% of eligible Medicaid primary care providers
participate in Arkansas’ patient-centered medical home, which serves about
80% of their eligible Medicaid population.
- Alternative payment models supported by SIM funds in
Minnesota and Vermont are reaching about 50% of each state’s total
population, with Oregon and Vermont also reaching over 80% of their total
Medicaid population.
The evaluation found that states have been successful in
engaging a wide swath of the payer, provider, purchaser, and patient
communities and building stakeholder consensus by balancing standardization and
flexibility when expanding payment reforms statewide. States have leveraged
multi-payer efforts to implement payment and delivery system reforms, engaged
the provider community in SIM-related activities, and used a range of policy
levers to effect change. Some of the most substantial changes to delivery
systems and payment methods are in areas where public and private payers are
working together to accelerate transformation. For example:
- In Arkansas, Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield,
QualChoice and some large self-insured employer groups, including Walmart,
participate in the SIM-supported patient-centered medical home and episode
of care models.
- Vermont’s SIM Initiative focuses on supporting
Accountable Care Organizations. Providers participating in both Medicaid
and commercial ACOs now represent a significant majority of the state’s
available primary care providers. ACOs offer services to nearly all
residents statewide, and about half of eligible beneficiaries were
participating as of late 2014.
- In Oregon, participation in the Coordinated Care Model
under the SIM Initiative currently includes commercial insurance carriers
contracting with the state to cover state employees and Medicaid
beneficiaries.
It remains too early to attribute specific quantitative results
directly to the SIM Initiative. However, analyses based on Medicare and
commercial populations show that states were making progress on health
outcomes, such as declines in emergency room visits and inpatient readmissions
through models pre-dating SIM and models upon which SIM efforts are expanding.
Future evaluation reports will provide more detail on quantitative results and
whether and how the SIM Initiative is affecting and accelerating trends in
health outcomes and spending.
SIM Supports Health Care Transformation
The Affordable Care Act provides tools through the CMS
Innovation Center, like the SIM Initiative, to move our health care system
toward one that provides better care to patients, spends dollars more wisely,
and results in healthier communities. Today’s announcement is part of the
Administration’s broader strategy to improve the health care system by paying
providers for what works, unlocking health care data, and finding new ways to
coordinate and integrate patient care to improve quality.
In 2015, the Administration announced goals for Medicare to tie
payment to quality or value. These goals are for 30 percent of Medicare
fee-for-service payments to be made through alternative payment models by the
end of 2016 (and 50 percent by 2018), and tying 85 percent of payments to
quality or value by 2016 (90 percent by 2018). In early 2016, the Secretary
announced that HHS had reached its goal of 30 percent of Medicare payments made
through alternative payment models ahead of schedule. HHS is also working with
private payers, employers, consumers, providers, states and state Medicaid
programs, and other partners to expand alternative payment models. Initiatives
like SIM are an important part of states’ role in health care transformation
and tying payments to quality or value.
CMS supports states through SIM and other innovation efforts to
move towards this vision of multi-payer delivery system reform across an entire
state. Health system transformation and improvement happens at the state
and local level and CMS will continue to support states in their transformation
journey to improve care for people across the nation.
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