CMS Proposes Historic
Changes to Modernize Medicare and Restore the Doctor-Patient Relationship
Proposed changes to the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule and
Quality Payment Program would streamline clinician billing and expand access
to high-quality care
On July 12, CMS proposed historic changes that would increase
the amount of time that doctors and other clinicians can spend with their
patients by reducing the burden of paperwork that clinicians face when
billing Medicare. The proposed rules would fundamentally improve the nation’s
health care system and help restore the doctor-patient relationship by
empowering clinicians to use their Electronic Health Records (EHRs) to
document clinically meaningful information, instead of information that is
only for billing purposes.
“Today’s reforms proposed by CMS bring us one step closer to a
modern health care system that delivers better care for Americans at a lower
cost,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “Such a system requires empowering
American patients by giving them price and quality transparency and control
over their own interoperable health records, goals supported by CMS’s
proposals. These proposals will also advance the successful Medicare
Advantage program and accomplish a historic regulatory rollback to help
physicians put patients over paperwork. Further, today’s proposed reforms to
how CMS pays for medicine demonstrate the commitment of HHS to implementing
President Trump’s blueprint for lowering drug prices. The ambitious reforms
proposed by CMS under Administrator Verma will help deliver on two HHS
priorities: creating a value-based health care system for the 21st century
and making prescription drugs more affordable.”
“Today’s proposals deliver on the pledge to put patients over
paperwork by enabling doctors to spend more time with their patients,” said
CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Physicians tell us they continue to struggle
with excessive regulatory requirements and unnecessary paperwork that steal
time from patient care. This Administration has listened and is taking
action. The proposed changes to the Physician Fee Schedule and Quality
Payment Program address those problems head-on, by streamlining documentation
requirements to focus on patient care and by modernizing payment policies so
seniors and others covered by Medicare can take advantage of the latest
technologies to get the quality care they need.”
The proposals, part of the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) and the
Quality Payment Program (QPP), would also modernize Medicare payment policies
to promote access to virtual care, saving Medicare beneficiaries time and
money while improving their access to high-quality services no matter where
they live. Such changes would establish Medicare payment for when beneficiaries
connect with their doctor virtually using telecommunications technology
(e.g., audio or video applications) to determine whether they need an
in-person visit. Additionally, the QPP proposal would make changes to quality
reporting requirements to focus on measures that most significantly impact
health outcomes. The proposed changes would also encourage information
sharing among health care providers electronically, so patients can see
various medical professionals according to their needs while knowing that
their updated medical records will follow them through the health care
system. The QPP proposal would make important changes to the Merit-based
Incentive Payment System (MIPS) “Promoting Interoperability” performance
category to support greater EHR interoperability and patient access to their
health information, as well as to align this clinician program with the
proposed new “Promoting Interoperability” program for hospitals.
If these proposals were finalized, clinicians would see a
significant increase in productivity – leading to substantially more and
better care provided to their patients. Removing unnecessary paperwork
requirements through the PFS proposal would save individual clinicians an
estimated 51 hours per year if 40 percent of their patients are in Medicare.
Changes in the QPP proposal would collectively save clinicians an estimated
29,305 hours and approximately $2.6 million in reduced administrative costs
in CY 2019.
Proposed CY 2019 PFS Key Changes:
The PFS establishes payment for physicians and medical
professionals treating Medicare patients. It is updated annually to make
changes to payment policies, payment rates and quality-related provisions.
Extensive public feedback the agency has received has highlighted a need to
streamline documentation requirements for physician services known as
Evaluation and Management (E&M) visits, as well as a need to support
greater access to care using telecommunications technology. The proposed
changes to the PFS would reinforce CMS’ Patients Over Paperwork initiative focused
on reducing administrative burden while improving care coordination, health
outcomes, and patients’ ability to make decisions about their own care.
Streamlining E&M Payment and Reducing Clinician Burden:
CMS and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology have heard from stakeholders that CMS’s extensive
documentation requirements for E&M codes have resulted in unintended
consequences. To meet these documentation requirements, providers have to
create medical records that are a collection of predefined templates and
boilerplate text for billing purposes, in many cases reflecting very little
about the patients’ actual medical care or story.
Responding to stakeholder concerns, several provisions in the
proposed CY 2019 PFS would help to free EHRs to be powerful tools that would
actually support efficient care while giving physicians more time to spend
with their patients, especially those with complex needs, rather than on
paperwork. Specifically, this proposal would:
Advancing Virtual Care:
“CMS is committed to modernizing the Medicare program by
leveraging technologies, such as audio/video applications or patient-facing
health portals, that will help beneficiaries access high-quality services in
a convenient manner,” said Administrator Verma.
Getting to the doctor can be a challenge for some beneficiaries,
whether they live in rural or urban areas. Innovative technology that enables
remote services can expand access to care and create more opportunities for
patients to access personalized care management as well as connect with their
physicians quickly. Provisions in the proposed CY 2019 PFS would support
access to care using telecommunications technology by:
Lowering Drug Costs:
President Trump is putting American patients first and lowering
prescription drug costs, and CMS is committed to advancing this effort. CMS
is proposing changes as part of the continued rollout of the Administration’s
blueprint to lower drug prices and reduce out-of-pocket costs. The changes
would affect payment under Medicare Part B. Part B covers medicines that
patients receive in a doctor’s office, such as infusions. CMS is proposing a
change in the payment amount for new drugs under Part B, so that the payment
amount would more closely match the actual cost of the drug. This change
would be effective January 1, 2019, and would reduce the amount that seniors
would have to pay out-of-pocket, especially for drugs with high launch
prices. This is one of many steps that CMS is taking to ensure that seniors
have access to the drugs they need.
Proposed CY 2019 Quality Payment program Key Changes:
To implement the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of
2015 (MACRA), CMS established the QPP, which consists of two participation
pathways for doctors and other clinicians – MIPS, which measures performance
in four categories to determine an adjustment to Medicare payment, and
Advanced Alternative Payment Models (Advanced APMs), in which clinicians may
earn an incentive payment through sufficient participation in risk-based
payment models. The proposed changes to QPP aim to reduce clinician burden,
focus on outcomes, and promote interoperability of EHRs, including by:
Under the requirements of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, CMS
is continuing the gradual implementation of certain MIPS requirements to ease
administrative burden on clinicians. The proposed changes to the QPP reflect
feedback and input from clinicians and stakeholders, and we will continue to
offer free and customized support from CMS’s technical assistance networks.
Medicare Advantage Qualifying Payment Arrangement Incentive
Demonstration:
Aligning with the agency’s goals of improving quality of care
and responding to the feedback we have received from clinicians, CMS also
proposes waivers of MIPS requirements as part of testing a demonstration
called the Medicare Advantage Qualifying Payment Arrangement Incentive (MAQI)
demonstration. The MAQI demonstration would test waiving MIPS reporting
requirements and payment adjustments for clinicians who participate
sufficiently in Medicare Advantage (MA) arrangements that are similar to
Advanced APMs.
Some MA plans are developing innovative arrangements that
resemble Advanced APMs. However, without this demonstration, physicians are
still subject to MIPS even if they participate extensively in Advanced
APM-like arrangements under Medicare Advantage. The demonstration will look
at whether waiving MIPS requirements would increase levels of participation
in such MA payment arrangements and whether it would change how clinicians
deliver care.
Price transparency: Request for information:
Finally, as part of its commitment to price transparency, CMS is
seeking comment through a Request for Information asking whether providers
and suppliers can and should be required to inform patients about charge and
payment information for health care services and out-of-pocket costs, what
data elements would be most useful to promote price shopping, and what other
changes are needed to empower health care consumers.
Public comments on the proposed rules are due by September 10.
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Monday, July 16, 2018
CMS Proposes Historic Changes to Modernize Medicare and Restore the Doctor-Patient Relationship
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