| Literature DB >> 33835310 |
Dhruv Khullar1,2, Amelia M Bond3, Yuting Qian3, Eloise O'Donnell3, David N Gans4, Lawrence P Casalino3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medicare's Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) is a major value-based purchasing program. Little is known about how physician practice leaders view the program and its benefits and challenges.Entities:
Keywords: Merit-based Incentive Payment System; administrative burden; physician payment; value-based purchasing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33835310 PMCID: PMC8034038 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-06758-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Characteristics of Practices Interviewed about participation in the Merit-based Incentive Payment System in 2019
| Practice type | Number of practices (no. (%)) | Mean sizea (physicians) | Mean APPs | Medicare shareb (%)—mean |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 30 (100) | 31.5 | 17.5 | 21.9% |
| Region | ||||
| Northeast | 6 | 7.2 | 1.7 | 24.7% |
| South | 10 | 19.0 | 8.3 | 23.3% |
| Midwest | 7 | 65.1 | 49.6 | 20.9% |
| West | 7 | 36.6 | 12.1 | 18.5% |
| APM status | ||||
| APM | 14 (46.7) | 23.9 | 8.4 | 21.6% |
| Non-APM | 16 (53.3) | 38.2 | 25.4 | 22.2% |
| Specialty | ||||
| Small Primary Care | 9 (30.0) | 4.1 | 2.4 | 22.4% |
| Medium Primary Care | 4 (13.3) | 12.0 | 3.8 | 19.4% |
| Small General Surgery | 6 (20.0) | 5.8 | 2.0 | 22.7% |
| Medium General Surgery | 4 (13.3) | 19.0 | 7.8 | 27.8% |
| Large Multispecialty | 7 (23.3) | 107.0 | 63.6 | 18.6% |
Abbreviations: APM, Alternative Payment Model; APPs, advanced practice practitioners
aMean size was defined as the number of unique physicians in the practice
bMedicare share indicates the proportion of Medicare fee-for-service revenue or Medicare fee-for-service patients in the practice
Major Themes and Illustrative Quotes Summarizing Practice Leaders’ Perceptions of MIPS
| Major theme | Illustrative quotes |
|---|---|
| MIPS as a continuation of prior VBP programs—and a marker of things to come | “We felt that this was the direction that eventually we’re going to be forced to go anyway…” |
| “I think when we first started doing this, there was a lot to do. Now we have our interfaces set up and we have been doing this for three or four years. But the initial setup was tremendous.” | |
| “For us, it all started with Meaningful Use and that’s kind of morphed into the MIPS. With Meaningful Use, certain things were required or recommended and we worked those into our practice and carried them forward. It’s just kind of second nature now.” | |
| “We slowly realized that it’s not just MIPS, or even Medicare. This stuff is now coming from all insurers and payors…It’s more and more a part of where health care is going.” | |
| Measures are more relevant for primary care than general surgery or subspecialists | “For surgeons, there are not a lot of measures. We basically choose by what we score the highest on.” |
| “There are very specific specialties [for which] a lot of this primary care data collection isn’t an appropriate form. Let’s have less quality measures to report and make them meaningful to us, and we will be able to report them better.” | |
| “As a multispecialty group…finding measures that the whole group could meet together was a concern.” | |
| “Being a general surgery practice, we would never do any of these. They are so far from what we can even make work.” | |
| Mixed perceptions on whether MIPS improves patient care | “MIPS has absolutely hurt. I see no benefit for patient care.” |
| “I feel like it has improved care but it’s very costly. It takes so much time to gather all that information that you cannot see as many patients.” | |
| “There are positives and negatives. The end result—which is keeping patients healthy, closing gaps, keeping people out of hospital—that goal is what internal medicine is all about. But the hoops that we have to jump through are sometimes very onerous.” | |
| “It feels like MIPS helps patient care. In the beginning, that was hard to see. But I can now that it’s come full circle. It’s becoming less of a burden—maybe there are less things to do, or maybe we’ve figured it out.” | |
| “MIPS is hindering. Making sure they are checking all those boxes. It becomes more about that than the actual patient. But it’s also improved things in a positive way; there are certain things that we wouldn’t have paid attention to if not for MIPS.” | |
| Substantial administrative burden exacerbated by programmatic changes | “Seems like CMS can’t leave things the same ever…” |
| “It’s very hard to give CMS the info that they are looking for. It’s complicated and time consuming. The docs are frustrated with the extra clicking and form filling out. The price that they are having to pay is burnout. It’s just not rewarding.” | |
| “Some doctors have retired instead of working part-time.” | |
| “For us, the biggest part is that doctors can’t see as many patients as they used to...” | |
| Incentives are small relative to effort needed to participate | “I personally think that what we’re doing is avoiding a penalty. Because we know we will be punished financially if we don’t do everything perfectly.” |
| “Penalties make it unbearable not to participate. The carrot isn’t enticing, but the stick is painful.” | |
| “Financially for us it is not at all meaningful. What we received in MIPS payments doesn’t cover the cost and time that we invest.” | |
| “You spend a whole bunch of time and do a lot of work, and then you get a tiny adjustment. It’s not really worth it. | |
| Need for external support for MIPS participation | “We did bring in outside consultants. They ran around with us for a year. They helped us navigate through a lot of very arduous processes with all the extra boxes to collect.” |
| “There are obviously some practices that do not have resources we have, or the time to dedicate to this. I can’t imagine not having the time to do adequate research on this stuff. I mean, it’s very complicated to understand and it changes every year.” | |
| “There was this program funded program by Medicare that was extremely helpful. Someone would meet with me like five times a year and help just muddle through the issues we were having.” |
Ranking of Practice Leaders’ Views of the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS)
| Practice attitude | Practice name | Practice type |
|---|---|---|
| Positive | Practice 1 | Small Primary Care |
| Practice 2 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 3 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Intermediate | Practice 4 | Small Primary Care |
| Practice 5 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 6 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 7 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 8 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 9 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 10 | Medium Primary Care | |
| Practice 11 | Medium Primary Care | |
| Practice 12 | Medium Primary Care | |
| Practice 13 | Medium Primary Care | |
| Practice 14 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 15 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 16 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 17 | Medium General Surgery | |
| Practice 18 | Medium General Surgery | |
| Practice 19 | Medium General Surgery | |
| Practice 20 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Practice 21 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Practice 22 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Practice 23 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Practice 24 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Practice 25 | Large Multispecialty | |
| Negative | Practice 26 | Small Primary Care |
| Practice 27 | Small Primary Care | |
| Practice 28 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 29 | Small General Surgery | |
| Practice 30 | Medium General Surgery |
Note. Two coders independently reviewed each transcript and assigned a favorability rating (favorable, intermediate, or unfavorable). There was concordance on 28 of 30 interviews; 2 discrepancies were resolved through discussion