Sunday, January 4, 2009

CMS Physician Quality Reporting Initiative, Experience

The American Association of Family Physicians (AAFP) has authored a somewhat disturbing article on the recent Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) report “that examines participation data from its 2007 Physicians Quality Reporting Initiative, or PQRI, and also addresses physicians' frustrations with the program.”

According to the CMS report, Physician Quality Reporting Initiative, 2007 Reporting Experience

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is working to transform the Medicare program from a passive payer into an active purchaser of high-quality care by linking payment to the value of care provided. Initially, CMS developed a voluntary quality reporting program in 2005, the Physician Voluntary Reporting Program (PVRP), to encourage physicians to report information on the quality of care they were delivering. As authorized by Congress, the PQRI builds on the PVRP by linking payments to reporting quality information. The PQRI is an important first step toward establishing a value-based purchasing program for physicians.

The Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (TRHCA), enacted on December 20, 2006, required the Secretary to implement less than seven months later by the start of the first reporting period on July 1, 2007, a system for the reporting of data on quality measures. CMS termed this system “PQRI.” This implementation schedule required rapid finalization of the detailed specifications for 74 clinical quality measures (covering hundreds of procedure and diagnosis codes), the development of an expanded infrastructure to support the reporting system and extensive outreach to more than 700,000 professionals about the requirements they needed to follow to submit data on quality measures.

Physicians who successfully submitted the quality information were eligible for an incentive payment capped at 1.5% “of total allowed charges for covered Medicare Physician Fee Schedule services.”

Not quite 16% of eligible physicians participated; of those who did participate, “Of the more than 14 million quality data codes submitted, 51.6 percent were submitted correctly; 48.4 percent of submissions were invalid.”

AAFP offers this summary of the Submission Data
· According to the new CMS report, the agency paid eligible providers slightly more than $36 million in incentive payments for the 2007 PQRI reporting period. The average bonus paid to individual providers was $635. The average bonus paid to practice groups was $4,700.
· Of the more than 14 million quality data codes submitted, 51.6 percent were submitted correctly; 48.4 percent of submissions were invalid.
· CMS says that nearly 16 percent of all eligible providers and groups submitted at least one quality data code during the 2007 PQRI reporting period. Of those 109,359 providers or groups,
· 92.5 percent submitted at least one quality data code that was valid;
· 64 percent correctly reported quality data on 80 percent of eligible cases for at least one measure;
· 52 percent earned an incentive payment by successfully reporting data on one to three applicable measures for 80 percent of applicable cases; and
· 1 percent were subject to the PQRI incentive cap.

In the report's executive summary, CMS says it is "committed to a successful PQRI program," and promises to "reduce or eliminate" the issues identified in the report. As such, among other modifications, CMS warrants to revise the analytics, redesign the physician feedback report system-- registration to which was "both cumbersome and time consuming," and increase educational outreach. In addition, “CMS has established new reporting options making it easier for EPs to participate in PQRI for 2008.”

AAFP reports that “Earlier this month AAFP Board Chair Jim King, M.D., of Selmer, Tenn., blasted CMS for its bungling of the distribution of PQRI bonus payments and told CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems that if problems weren't addressed, physicians might refuse to participate in the program.”

Read the full AAFP article here.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid recently reported that it is accepting quality measure suggestions for possible inclusion in the 2010 Physician Quality Reporting Initiative program. See the Medicare Update weblog’s post at http://tinyurl.com/czgt4l

HealthReformWatch.blogspot.com said...

Thanks. As a matter of first impression, I'm rather struck by the brevity of the comment period. The submission instructions are dated Feb. 1, 2009-- the deadline Feb. 27.

Although this may comply with the statutory mandate, it seems rather at odds with the stated intention, i.e.,
"The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is working to transform the Medicare program from a passive payer into an active purchaser of high-quality care by linking payment to the value of care provided."

How 27 days is a sufficient time period to ascertain the advice of those charged with supplying the data upon which determinations "to transform the Medicare program" into a purchaser of quality linked services-- I don't know. But I have my doubts.

If one further considers the mere 16% return rate for the 2007 PQRI reporting period--despite a monetary incentive--and that 48.4% of that which was reported was invalid-- my guess is that the system has more difficulties than a 27 day commentary period can hope to rectify.

This seems particularly onerous on the eve of the construction of a national data base in conjunction with the use of electronic medical records. We need to get this right-- and "good enough for government work" will not get us where we need to be.