Jan. 11, 2019
Dive Brief:
- Value-based
care and other healthcare quality initiatives have made inroads, with an
estimated 4% annual growth in value-based payments and 7% average annual
increase in hospitals and clinicians participating in major clinical
registries, a new Q-Centrix report shows.
- The
consultancy's report looks at participation in quality programs and
resource needs in three key quality reporting areas: regulatory, infection
prevention and clinical registries.
- The report estimates value-based
payments make up about 22% of all care delivery payments as of the start
of this year, up from 18% at the beginning of 2018. Meanwhile, the share
of hospitals submitting data to the top 20 inpatient clinical registries
is expected to climb from 18,432 in 2017 to 23,773 in 2021.
Dive
Insight:
Providers
continue to determine the best ways to report clinical and quality data to
improve value-based care and population health efforts.
According
to the report, four of the top five most-participated in registries in 2017
related to cardiovascular disease, while the fifth focused on cancer.
Other
findings in the report include:
- The number
of state registries continues to grow, with 23 active programs in eight
states.
- The
average time to abstract health record data for reporting to registries
that have transitioned to newer versions of their data collection forms
rose 19% in the past two years.
- Some registries are ramping up
data collection requirements, making participation more difficult at a
time when hospital spending on registry abstraction services is rising.
"Not
only can we anticipate an increase in quality program participation, we can
expect it to grow faster than previously thought," Q-Centrix CEO Milton
Silva-Craig said in a statement.
"Looking at all these factors together, the increasing need for new and
more-efficient approaches to quality reporting becomes utterly apparent. Our
impression is when hospitals are able to streamline their quality reporting
processes, that’s when they have the best chance of getting and staying ahead
of their quality reporting demands."
The
four top reported electronic clinical quality measures pertained to emergency
department arrival and department times, care of patients with venous
thromboembolism, care for stroke patients and and perinatal care.
The
report also points to a potential shortage of infection preventionists, noting
750 hospitals had Medicare payments reduced due to hospital-acquired infection
rates. Q-Centrix estimates 5,400 IPs may be necessary to meet current
need.
The
five most used infection prevention screening platforms were surveillance,
pharmacy, multidrug resistant organisms, surgical procedures and antimicrobial
stewardship.
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