| Literature DB >> 26973757 |
Jennifer L Wiler1, Michael Granovsky2, Stephen V Cantrill1, Richard Newell3, Arjun K Venkatesh4, Jeremiah D Schuur5.
Abstract
In 2007, the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) created a novel payment program to create incentives for physician's to focus on quality of care measures and report quality performance for the first time. Initially termed "The Physician Voluntary Reporting Program," various Congressional actions, including the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (TRHCA) and Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) further strengthened and ensconced this program, eventually leading to the quality program termed today as the Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS). As a result of passage of the Affordable Care Act of 2010, the PQRS program has expanded to include both the "traditional PQRS" reporting program and the newer "Value Modifier" program (VM). For the first time, these programs were designed to include pay-for-performance incentives for all physicians providing care to Medicare beneficiaries and to measure the cost of care. The recent passage of the Medicare Access and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Reauthorization Act in March of 2015 includes changes to these payment programs that will have an even more profound impact on emergency care providers. We describe the implications of these important federal policy changes for emergency physicians.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973757 PMCID: PMC4786251 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2015.12.29017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Summary of physician quality reporting system program impact on 2015 reporting and 2017 payments.*
| 2014 | 2015 | |
|---|---|---|
| PQRS | ||
| Bonus for traditional PQRS+ | +0.5% payment in 2015 | No incentives |
| Bonus for PQRS maintenance of certification+ | +0.5% payment in 2015 | |
| Penalty for failure to satisfy PQRS | −2.0% in 2016 | −2.0% in 2017 |
| Value modifier | ||
| Additional penalty for failure to satisfy PQRS | −2.0% in 2016 | Up to −4.0% in 2017 |
| Total potential maximum penalties | −4.0% in 2016 | −6.0% in 2017 |
Increasing impact of physician quality reporting system (PQRS) participation.
2015 Physician quality reporting system (PQRS) reporting options.*
| Reporting mechanism | Measure type | Reporting criteria | Applicability to emergency medicine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Claims | Individual measures |
Report at least 9 measures covering at least 3 National Quality Strategy (NQS) domains, including 1 cross-cutting measure, and report each measure for at least 50% of the Medicare Part B fee for service (FFS) patients seen during the reporting period to which the measure applies. If less than 9 measures apply, report 1–8 measures covering 1–3 NQS domains, but subject to Measures Applicability Validation Process (MAV). Measures with a 0 performance rate will not be counted. |
Viable option. Only option for cross cutting measure applicable to emergency medicine (EM) is #317 – Screening for high blood pressure and follow up documented. |
| Qualified registry | Individual measures |
Report at least 9 measures covering at least 3 NQS domains OR, if less than 9 measures covering at least 3 NQS domains apply, report 1–8 measures covering 1–3 NQS domains, AND report each measure for at least 50% of the Medicare Part B FFS patients seen during the reporting period to which the measure applies. If less than 9 measures apply, report 1–8 measures covering 1–3 NQS domains, but subject to MAV. Measures with a 0 performance rate will not be counted. |
Viable option. |
| Qualified registry | Measures groups |
Report at least 1 measures group, and report each measures group for at least 20 patients, the majority (11 patients) of which must be Medicare Part B FFS patients. Measures groups containing a measure with a 0 percent performance rate will not be counted. |
Not viable option. Measure group specifications for minimum participation do not allow most individuals to successfully report based on low volumes. |
| Direct electronic health record (EHR) product or EHR data submission vendor | Individual measures |
Report 9 measures covering at least 3 of the NQS domains. If an eligible professional’s (EP’s) EHR product/vendor does not contain patient data for at least 9 measures covering at least 3 domains, then the EP would be required to report all of the measures for which there is Medicare patient data. EPs are required to report on at least 1 measure for which there is Medicare patient data. |
Typically not viable. |
| Qualified Clinical Data Registry (QCDR) | Individual PQRS and/or non-PQRS measures |
Report at least 9 measures available for reporting under a QCDR covering at least 3 of the NQS domains, and report each measure for at least 50% of all applicable patients (both Medicare and non-Medicare). Of these measures, at least 2 must be outcome measures, or, if 2 outcomes measures are not available, at least 1 outcome measure and at least 1 resource use, patient experience of care, efficiency/appropriate use, or patient safety measure. |
Will be viable in 2016. |
Option for individual physicians.
2015 Physician quality reporting system (PQRS) reporting options.*
| Group practice specifications | Measure type | Reporting mechanism | Reporting criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2–99 Eligible professionals (EPs) | Individual measures | Qualified registry |
Report at least 9 measures covering at least 3 National Quality Strategy (NQS) domains, including 1 cross-cutting measure, and report each measure for at least 50% of the Medicare Part B fee for service (FFS) patients seen during the reporting period to which the measure applies. If less than 9 measures apply, report 1–8 measures covering 1–3 NQS domains, but subject to Measures Applicability Validation Process (MAV). Measures with a 0 performance rate will not be counted. |
| Individual measures and CAHPS for PQRS | Direct EHR product or EHR data submission vendor product and use of Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) certified survey vendor |
The group practice must have all Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) for PQRS survey measures reported on its behalf via a CMS-certified survey vendor, and report at least 6 additional measures, outside of CAHPS for PQRS, covering at least 2 of the NQS domains using the direct EHR product or electronic health record (EHR) data submission vendor product. If less than 6 measures apply to the group practice, the group practice must report up to 5 measures. Of the additional 6 measures that must be reported in conjunction with reporting the CAHPS for PQRS survey measures, a group practice would be required to report on at least 1 measure for which there is Medicare patient data. | |
| 25–99 Eligible professionals | Individual group practice reporting option (GPRO) measures in GPRO web interface | GPRO web interface |
Report on all measures included in the web interface; and populate data fields for the first 248 consecutively ranked and assigned beneficiaries in the order in which they appear in the group’s sample for each module or preventive care measure. If the pool of eligible assigned beneficiaries is less than 248, then group practice must report on 100% of assigned beneficiaries. Must report on at least 1 measure for which there is Medicare patient data. |
| 25–99 EPs, OR ≥100 EPs | Individual GPRO measures in the GPRO web interface and CAHPS for PQRS | GPRO web interface and use of CMS certified survey vendor |
Requires CAHPS be completed for PQRS survey measures reported on its behalf via a CMS-certified survey vendor. Report on all measures included in the GPRO Web Interface (as above). |
| Individual measures and CAHPS for PQRS | Qualified registry and use of CMS certified survey vendor |
The group practice must have all CAHPS for PQRS survey measures reported on its behalf via a CMS-certified survey vendor, and report at least 6 additional measures, outside of CAHPS for PQRS, covering at least 2 of the NQS domains using the qualified registry. If less than 6 measures apply to the group practice, the group practice must report up to 5 measures. Of the additional measures that must be reported in conjunction with reporting the CAHPS for PQRS survey measures, the group practice must report on at least 1 measure in the cross-cutting measure set. |
Group reporting options.
Potential physician quality reporting system (PQRS) reporting measures for emergency care.
| PQRS# | NQS domain | Quality measure title | Reporting mechanism | MAV cluster |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #54 | Clinical effectiveness | EM:12-lead ECG performed for non-traumatic chest pain | Claims | Claims: cluster 4 |
| #76 | Patient safety | Prevention of CRBSI: central venous catheter insertion protocol | Claims | Claims: cluster 12 |
| #91 | Clinical effectiveness | Acute otitis externa (AOE): topical therapy | Claims | Claims: cluster 7 |
| #93 | Efficiency | AOE: systemic antimicrobial therapy – avoidance of inappropriate use | Claims | Claims: cluster 7 |
| #187 | Clinical effectiveness | Stroke & stroke rehabilitation: thrombolytic therapy (tPA) | Registry | Registry: cluster 21 |
| #254 | Clinical effectiveness | Ultrasound determination of pregnancy location for pregnant patients with abdominal pain | Claims | Claims: cluster 4 |
| #255 | Clinical effectiveness | Rh immunoglobulin (Rhogam) for Rh-negative pregnant women at risk of fetal blood exposure | Claims | Claims: cluster 4 |
| #317 | Community-population health | Preventative care and screening: screening for high blood pressure and follow up documented | Claims | Claims: cross cutting |
| #326 | Clinical effectiveness | Atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter: chronic anticoagulation therapy | Claims | Claims: none |
NQS, national quality strategy; MAV, measures applicability validation process; EM, emergency medicine; ECG, electroencephalogram; CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection
Also known as hospital STK-4.
Also known as STK-3.
2015 Emergency medicine cluster.
| Title | PQRS # | Domain | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 4 | |||
| Emergency care | 54 | Effective clinical care | Emergency medicine: 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) performed for non-traumatic chest pain |
| 254 | Effective clinical care | Ultrasound determination of pregnancy location for pregnant patients with abdominal pain | |
| 255 | Effective clinical care | Rh immunoglobulin (Rhogam) for Rh-negative pregnant women at risk of fetal blood exposure | |
| Cross-cutting | 317 | Population & community health | Preventative care and screening: screening for high blood pressure and follow-up documented |
Note: Cross-cutting measures represents a core set where Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services (CMS) believes that there are significant performance gaps across specialties. Measure #317 is the only measure that applies to emergency care patients as defined by the measure specifications. Because most emergency physicians will be subject to the Measure Applicability Validation (MAV) because of a limited number of attributable quality measures, CMS created a Emergency Medicine cluster. If eligible professionals use this cluster they will pass the MAV process.
Potential qualified clinical data registries (QCDR) physician quality reporting system (PQRS) quality measures.
| PQRS# | Measure title | NQS domain |
|---|---|---|
| #54 | 12-lead electroencephalogram (ECG) performed for non-traumatic chest pain | Clinical effectiveness |
| #76 | Prevention of catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSI): central venous catheter insertion protocol | Patient safety |
| #91 | Acute otitis externa (AOE): topical therapy | Clinical effectiveness |
| #93 | Acute otitis externa (AOE): systemic antimicrobial therapy–avoidance of inappropriate use | Clinical effectiveness |
| #187 | Stroke and stroke rehabilitation: thrombolytic therapy (tPA); also known as hospital STK-4 | Clinical effectiveness |
| #254 | Ultrasound determination of pregnancy location for pregnant patients with abdominal pain | Clinical effectiveness |
| #1 | ED utilization of CT for minor blunt head trauma for patients aged 18 years and older | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #2 | ED utilization of CT for minor blunt head trauma for patients aged 2 through 17 years | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #3 | Coagulation studies in patients presenting with chest pain with no coagulopathy or bleeding | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #4 | Appropriate ED utilization of CT for pulmonary embolism | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #5 | ED LOS for discharged ED patients–overall rate | Patient experience of care |
| #6 | ED LOS for discharged ED patients–general rate=(overall rate – psych patients – transfer patients) | Patient experience of care |
| #7 | ED LOS for discharged ED patients–psych mental health patients | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #8 | ED LOS for discharged ED patients–transfer patients | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #9 | Door to diagnostic evaluation by a qualified medical personnel | Patient safety |
| #10 | Anti-coagulation for acute pulmonary embolism patients | Patient safety |
| #11 | Pregnancy test for female abdominal pain patients | Patient safety |
| #12 | Three-day return rate for ED visits | Communication & care coordination |
| #13 | Three-day return rate for UC visits | Communication & care coordination |
| #14 | Tobacco screening and cessation intervention for asthma and COPD patients | Effective clinical care |
| #15 | tPA considered | Community-population health |
| #16 | Adult sinusitis: antibiotic prescribed for acute sinusitis | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #17 | Adult sinusitis: appropriate choice of antibiotic | Efficiency & cost reduction |
| #18 | Avoidance of antibiotic treatment in adults with acute bronchitis | Efficiency & cost reduction |
NQS, National Quality Strategy; ED, emergency department; CT, computed tomography; LOS, length of stay; UC, urgent care
Calculation of the 2017 value modifier using the quality-tiering approach.†
| Cost/quality | Low quality | Average quality | High quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low cost | 0.0% | +2.0x | +4.0x |
| Average cost | −2.0% | 0.0% | +2.0x |
| High cost | −4.0% | −2.0% | 0.0% |
Groups with >10 eligible professionals.
Groups eligible for an additional +1.0% (if average beneficiary risk score in the top 25% of all beneficiary risk scores where “x” represents the upward payment adjustment factor. The upward payment adjustment factor will be determined after the performance period has ended based on the aggregate amount of downward payment adjustments).
Calculation of the 2017 value modifier using the quality-tiering approach.†
| Cost/quality | Low quality | Average quality | High quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low cost | 0.0% | +1.0x | +2.0x |
| Average cost | 0.0% | 0.0% | +1.0x |
| High cost | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
Groups with 2–9 eligible professionals and solo practitioners.
Groups eligible for an additional +1.0% (if average beneficiary risk score in the top 25% of all beneficiary risk scores where “x” represents the upward payment adjustment factor. The upward payment adjustment factor will be determined after the performance period has ended based on the aggregate amount of downward payment adjustments).