| Literature DB >> 32928763 |
Ashok Reddy1,2, Leah M Marcotte3,2, Lingmei Zhou3,2, Stephan D Fihn3, Joshua M Liao3,2,4.
Abstract
The Centers for Medicare and Medicade Services (CMS) initiated chronic care management (CCM) codes to reimburse clinicians for coordination activities, but little is known about uptake over time. We find that primary care clinicians drove increasing use over 4 years-a trend that may reflect either new coordination activities or new reimbursements for existing activities. That 5% of chronic care management was denied by Medicare underscores the need for future work evaluating facilitators and barriers to use. Such insight is especially vital given the large number of eligible beneficiaries that have not received chronic care management to date, as well as the limited number of clinicians who currently deliver these services.Entities:
Keywords: Medicare; care coordination; chronic care: disease management/care management; primary care issues
Year: 2020 PMID: 32928763 PMCID: PMC7489968 DOI: 10.1370/afm.2573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Fam Med ISSN: 1544-1709 Impact factor: 5.166