Foundations for a Successful Patient-Centered ACO: Federal Law Background Jim Dearing, D.O., FACOFP,...

17
Foundations for a Successful Patient-Centered ACO: Federal Law Background Jim Dearing, D.O., FACOFP, FAAFP Chief Medical Officer, Physician Network John C. Lincoln Health Network

Transcript of Foundations for a Successful Patient-Centered ACO: Federal Law Background Jim Dearing, D.O., FACOFP,...

Foundations for a Successful Patient-Centered ACO:

Federal Law Background

Jim Dearing, D.O., FACOFP, FAAFPChief Medical Officer, Physician Network John C. Lincoln Health Network

ACO Video

There have been many precursors to ACOs (PHOs, MSOs, HMOs, patient centered medical homes), but recent interest in Accountable Care Organization development started with the passage of the Affordable Care Act of 2010.

What is an ACO?

An Accountable Care Organization “. . . is an organization of health care providers that agrees to be accountable for the quality, cost, and overall care of Medicare beneficiaries who are enrolled in the traditional fee-for-service program who are assigned to it.” (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2010.)

Accountable Care Organizations are established to manage the care of populations.

ACOs must have, at a minimum, sufficient numbers of primary care physicians to provide primary care for at least 5,000 Medicare patients.

ACOs also must “have defined processes to

(a) promote evidenced-based medicine;

(b) report the necessary data to evaluate quality and cost measures, Electronic Prescribing (eRx), and Electronic Health Records (EHR); and

(c) coordinate care.”

Other requirements for ACOs

Have a formal legal structure to receive and distribute shared savings

Have sufficient information regarding participating ACO health care professionals as the Secretary determines necessary to support beneficiary assignment and for the determination of payments for shared savings.

Demonstrate it meets patient-centeredness criteria, as determined by the Secretary.

CMS Assigns Medicare Patients to ACOs based on historic E/M billing by the ACO’s primary care physicians.

ACO providers (Physicians, Hospitals and others) bill Medicare fee for service.

CMS calculates costs of caring for patients assigned to the ACO and distributes incentive payments

Years 1 - 3

End of Year 3

ACO Payment Flow from CMS

In October 2010, 64% of all US health systems

were planning to create ACO programs.

October 2010 –

ACO = Awesome Consulting Opportunities!

March 2011 – Proposed CMS rules for ACO’s caused most health care organizations to re-think and postpone ACO development

Suddenly, ACOs didn’t look like such a good idea . . .

Tremendous costs to establish

High financial risk and limited upside rewards

ACOs would be required to track at least 64 quality measures

Retro Attribution of patients!

AAFP response to CMS proposed ACO rules

Allow primary care physicians to join multiple ACOs

Provide more flexibility so that ACOs don’t have to be part of a large health care system

Limit number of quality measures to reduce cost and complexity

Narrow definition of primary care physicians to family medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics and geriatrics

What is next for ACOs and Healthcare Integration?

Continued cost pressure from CMS and commercial payors will result in new “ACO” like organizations which allow providers to accept population risk.

The development of payor sponsored provider networks designed to severely limit hospital and subspecialist physician utilization.

New provider-sponsored clinical integration models that allow investment in information systems, quality management and other tools necessary to manage the health of populations.

April 2012

FIRST ACCOUNTABLE CARE ORGANIZATIONS UNDER THE MEDICARE SHARED SAVINGS PROGRAM

On April 10, 2012, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced the selection of the first 27 accountable care organizations (ACOs) to participate in the Medicare Shared Saving Program (Shared Savings Program).  The selected organizations have agreed to be responsible for improving care for nearly 375,000 beneficiaries in eighteen states through better coordination among providers.

http://www.cms.gov/apps/media/press/facsheet.asp?

Questions/Comments