| Literature DB >> 27148476 |
Sachin M Apte1, Kavita Patel2.
Abstract
With the signing of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act in April 2015, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is now positioned to drive the development and implementation of sweeping changes to how physicians and hospitals are paid for the provision of oncology-related services. These changes will have a long-lasting impact on the sub-specialty of gynecologic oncology, regardless of practice structure, physician employment and compensation model, or local insurance market. Recently, commercial payers have piloted various models of payment reform via oncology-specific clinical pathways, oncology medical homes, episode payment arrangements, and accountable care organizations. Despite the positive results of some pilot programs, adoption remains limited. The goals are to eliminate unnecessary variation in cancer treatment, provide coordinated patient-centered care, while controlling costs. Yet, meaningful payment reform in oncology remains elusive. As the largest payer for oncology services in the United States, CMS has the leverage to make cancer services more value based. Thus far, the focus has been around pricing of physician-administered drugs with recent work in the area of the Oncology Medical Home. Gynecologic oncology is a unique sub-specialty that blends surgical and medical oncology, with treatment that often involves radiation therapy. This forward-thinking, multidisciplinary model works to keep the patient at the center of the care continuum and emphasizes care coordination. Because of the breadth and depth of gynecologic oncology, this sub-specialty has both the potential to be disrupted by payment reform as well as potentially benefit from the aspects of reform that can align incentives appropriately to improve coordination. Although the precise future payment models are unknown at this time, focused engagement of gynecologic oncologists and the full care team is imperative to assure that the practice remains patient centered, embodies the highest quality in research and education, yet transforms into a sustainable and agile sub-specialty to pro-actively and effectively manage the immense and relentless financial pressures and regulatory expectations that will be faced over the next decade.Entities:
Keywords: MACRA; MIPS; alternative payment models; gynecologic oncology; physician payment reform
Year: 2016 PMID: 27148476 PMCID: PMC4831975 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2016.00084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Comparison of oncology payment models by delivery, physician employment, and payment structure, and quality measurement.
| Payment model | Clinical pathways | Oncology PCMH | Bundled payment | Oncology-specific ACO | Global payment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Use of evidence-based pathways or guidelines | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
| Care coordination focus | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
| Requires major practice transformation | No | Yes | No (for the types of bundles currently in market) | Yes | Yes | |
| Single-specialty group, private practice | Medium | Low | Low | Low | Low | |
| Multi-specialty group, private practice | Medium | Medium | Low | Low | Low | |
| Hospital employed, single general hospital | High | Medium | Medium | Low | Medium | |
| Hospital employed, comprehensive cancer center | High | High | Medium | Medium | Medium | |
| Hospital employed, multi-hospital system | High | High | High | High | High | |
| Case-based payment component | Revenue neutral supplemental payment for pathways adherence | PMPM management fee | Episode-based prospective or retrospective payment for pre-determined defined bundle of service | Partial capitation | Total capitation | |
| Transition from P4P to value-driven care | P4P | P4P | Value driven | Value driven | Value driven | |
| Potential for global or capitated payment | No | No | Partially based on boundary of bundle (i.e., inpatient, imaging, ancillary service, etc.) | Yes | Yes | |
| Payment majority linked to quality and financial performance outcomes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
| Incentives for continuous quality improvement activities | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
| Alabama Health Improvement Initiative, Oncology Clinical Pathways Pilot ( | New Mexico Cancer Center ( | MD Anderson and UnitedHealthcare pilot in Head & Neck Cancer ( | Florida Blue and Moffitt Cancer Center ( | All-Payer Innovation Model in State of Maryland ( |
Adapted from KP’s original work (.
Patient-centered medical home (PCMH), accountable care organization (ACO), pay for performance (P4P), per member per month (PMPM).