FACT SHEET
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 24, 2017
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS
Media Inquiries
Market Saturation and
Utilization Data Tool
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has developed a
Market Saturation and Utilization Data Tool that includes interactive maps
and a dataset that shows national-, state-, and county-level provider
services and utilization data for selected health service areas. Market
saturation, in the present context, refers to the density of providers of a
particular service within a defined geographic area relative to the number
of the beneficiaries receiving that service in the area.
The fifth release of the data tool includes a quarterly update of the
data to the ten health services areas from release 4, and also includes
Long-Term Care Hospitals and Chiropractic Services data. Release 5 will
therefore include five, twelve-month reference periods and the following
health service areas: Home Health, Ambulance (Emergency, Non-Emergency,
Emergency & Non-Emergency), Independent Diagnostic Testing Facilities
(Part A and Part B), Skilled Nursing Facilities, Hospice, Physical and
Occupational Therapy, Clinical Laboratory (Billing Independently),
Long-Term Care Hospitals, and Chiropractic Services.
The Market Saturation and Utilization Data Tool can be used by CMS to
monitor and manage market saturation as a means to prevent fraud, waste,
and abuse. The data can also be used to reveal the degree to which
use of a service is related to the number of providers servicing a
geographic region. Provider services and utilization data by geographic
regions are easily compared using an interactive map. There are a number of
research uses for these data, but one objective of making these data public
is to assist health care providers in making informed decisions about their
service locations and the beneficiary population they serve. The tool is
available through the CMS website at: https://data.cms.gov/market-saturation.
Future releases may include comparable information on additional health service
areas.
Methodology
The analysis is based on paid
Medicare claims data from the CMS Integrated Data Repository (IDR). The IDR
contains Medicare and Medicaid claims, beneficiary data, provider data, and
plan data. Claims data are analyzed for a 12-month reference period, and
results are updated quarterly to reflect a more recent 12-month reference
period.
The Market Saturation and
Utilization methodology is different from other public use data with
respect to determining the geographic location of a provider. In this
analysis, claims are used to define the geographic area(s) served by a
provider rather than the provider’s practice address. Further, a provider
is defined as “serving a county” if, during the 12-month reference period,
the provider had paid claims for more than ten beneficiaries located in a
county. A provider is defined as “serving a state” if that provider serves
any county in the state.
The Market Saturation and
Utilization methodology is also different from other public use data with
respect to determining the number of Medicare beneficiaries who are
enrolled in a fee-for-service (FFS) program. In this analysis, a FFS
beneficiary is defined as being enrolled in Part A and/or Part B with a
coverage type code equal to “9” (FFS coverage) for at least one month of
the 12-month reference period. There must not be a death date for that
month or a missing zip code for the beneficiary so that the beneficiary can
be assigned to a county. Other public use data may define a FFS beneficiary
using different criteria, such as requiring the beneficiary to be enrolled
in the FFS program every month during the reference period.
The Market Saturation and
Utilization Data Tool includes an interactive map that is color-coded based
on an analysis that separates the distribution into the following
categories of states/counties for the selected metric: lowest 25 percent,
second lowest 25 percent, third lowest 25 percent, top 25 percent excluding
extreme values, and extreme values. An extreme value is one that
greatly differs from other values in its field (e.g., Number of Providers).
For those interested in states and counties affected by CMS’ temporary
provider enrollment moratoria during the reference periods for which data
are available, the interactive map permits a visualization that identifies
those states and counties. In this visualization, ambulance and home health
service areas for moratoria versus non-moratoria states/counties are also
identified based on color scheme. Counties that are excluded from the
analysis are colored gray in the interactive map.
The examples below utilize the
Ambulance (Emergency & Non-Emergency) service area data (selected for
illustration purposes only). Similar maps can be created through the Data
Tool for all of the health service areas included in the fifth release and
for the five, twelve-month reference periods: 2014-10-01 to 2015-09-30,
2015-01-01 to 2015-12-31, 2015-04-01 to 2016-03-31, 2015-07-01 to
2016-06-30, and 2015-10-01 to 2016-09-30.
Map 1 displays the distribution of providers by state for the Ambulance
(Emergency & Non-Emergency) service area for the October 1, 2014
through September 30, 2015 reference period. This map utilizes a single
color scale, which does not distinguish between moratoria and non-moratoria
states.
Map 1. Ambulance
(Emergency & Non-Emergency):
National Distribution of Number of Providers
October 1, 2014 – September 30, 2015
Single Color Scale
Map 2 displays the distribution of providers by state for the October 1,
2014 through September 30, 2015 reference period. This map utilizes a dual
color scale, which distinguishes between moratoria and non-moratoria
states.
Map 2. Ambulance
(Emergency & Non-Emergency):
National Distribution of Number of Providers
October 1, 2014 – September 30, 2015
Color by Moratoria Status
Map 3 drills down to the county level and displays the distribution of
providers by county within the State of Texas for the October 1, 2014
through September 30, 2015 reference period. This map utilizes a single
color scale, which does not distinguish between moratoria and non-moratoria
counties.
Map 3. Ambulance
(Emergency & Non-Emergency):
County Distribution of Number of Providers
October 1, 2014 – September 30, 2015
Single Color Scale
Map 4 drills down to the county level and displays the distribution of
providers by county within the State of Texas for the October 1, 2014
through September 30, 2015 reference period. This map utilizes a dual color
scale, which distinguishes between moratoria and non-moratoria counties.
Map 4. Ambulance
(Emergency & Non-Emergency):
County Distribution of Number of Providers
October 1, 2014 – September 30, 2015
Color by Moratoria Status
Similar maps can be created at the national- and state-level for the
other metrics included in the Data Tool: Number of FFS Beneficiaries,
Average Number of Users per Provider, Percentage of Users out of FFS
Beneficiaries, Number of Users, and Average Number of Providers per County.
###
|
No comments:
Post a Comment