FACT SHEET
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 27, 2017
Contact: CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS
Media Inquiries
2019 Medicare Advantage
Part I Advance Notice – Risk Adjustment
Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released
Part I of the 2019 Advance Notice of Methodological Changes for Medicare
Advantage Capitation Rates and Part D Payment Policies (the Advance
Notice), which contains key information about proposed updates to the Part
C Risk Adjustment Model and the use of encounter data.
The 2019 Advance Notice is being published in two parts this year due to
requirements in the 21st Century Cures Act, which mandated
certain changes to the Part C risk adjustment model and a 60 day comment
period for these changes. Changes to other payment methodologies proposed
for the following calendar year that are typically contained in the Advance
Notice only require a 30 day comment period and will be released in
accordance with that statutory deadline. The payment policies for 2019,
proposed in both in Part I and Part II of the Advance Notice, will be finalized
in the annual Rate Announcement. To be assured consideration, comments on
the proposals announced today should be submitted by March 2, 2018.
2019 Part C Risk Adjustment Model proposal
The 21st Century Cures Act amended the Social Security Act by, in part,
requiring CMS to make improvements to risk adjustment for 2019 and
subsequent years. In response to these requirements, we are proposing
changes to the CMS-HCC Risk Adjustment model that is used to pay for aged
and disabled beneficiaries enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans. These
proposals reflect changes to risk adjustment required by the 21st Century
Cures Act, including an evaluation of adding mental health, substance use
disorder, and chronic kidney disease conditions to the risk adjustment model
and making adjustments to take into account the number of conditions an
individual beneficiary may have, as well as a variety of additional
technical updates. Further, the 21st Century Cures Act requires that CMS
fully phase in the required changes to the risk adjustment model by 2022.
We are therefore proposing to begin the phase in of this new model in 2019,
starting with a blend of 75% of the risk adjustment model used for payment
in 2017 and 2018 and 25% of the new risk adjustment model proposed.
For 2019, CMS is proposing a model that includes additional mental
health, substance use disorder, and chronic kidney disease conditions in
the risk adjustment model.
With respect to taking into account the number of conditions an
individual beneficiary has, in Part 1 of the Advance Notice we describe a
proposed new risk adjustment model and discuss an alternative model. The
model we are proposing – the “Payment Condition Count model” – takes into
account the number of conditions that a beneficiary has, only among the
conditions that are included in the payment model. The model discussed as
an alternative – the “All Condition Count model” – takes into account all
conditions that a beneficiary has, including both those in the payment
model and those not in the model.
The charts below indicate the range of contract-level impacts of each of
these CMS-HCC Risk Adjustment models on Medicare Advantage risk scores.
Overall, while the experience of individual plans would vary, the Payment
Condition Count model is projected to increase MA risk scores by 1.1%,
while the All Condition Count model would decrease MA risk scores by
-0.28%. Under the Payment Condition Count model, the change in MA
contracts’ risk scores is generally positive and less varied than the All Condition
Count model. The change in MA contracts’ risk scores under the All
Condition Count model is more varied, with both negative and positive
changes.
Payment Condition Count model – Percent change in MA
contract-level risk scores
This graph displays the estimated percent change in payment
for 446 Medicare Advantage contracts. Each line indicates the Payment
Condition Count model’s estimated impact on payment for 1 contract.
All Condition Count model – Percent
change in MA contract-level risk scores
This graph displays the estimated percent
change in payment for 446 Medicare Advantage contracts. Each line indicates
the All Condition Count model’s estimated impact on payment for 1 contract.
Using Encounter Data
The model we are proposing in Part 1 of the Advance Notice also makes
technical updates, including calibrating the model with more recent data,
selecting diagnoses with the same method used for encounter data, and
supplementing encounter data used in payment with inpatient data submitted
to the historical risk adjustment data collection system (the Risk
Adjustment Processing System (RAPS)).
CMS calculates risk scores using diagnoses submitted by Medicare FFS
providers and by Medicare Advantage organizations. Historically, CMS has
used diagnoses submitted into CMS’ RAPS by Medicare Advantage
organizations. In recent years, CMS began collecting encounter data from
Medicare Advantage organizations, which also includes diagnostic
information. In 2016, CMS began using diagnoses from encounter data to
calculate risk scores, by blending 10% of the encounter data-based risk
scores with 90% of the RAPS-based risk scores. For 2017 and 2018, CMS
continued to use a blend to calculate risk scores, by calculating risk
scores with 25% encounter data and 75% RAPS in 2017, and 15% encounter data
and 85% RAPS in 2018. For 2019, CMS proposes to calculate risk scores by adding
25% of the risk score calculated using diagnoses from encounter data and
FFS diagnoses with 75% of the risk score calculated with diagnoses from
RAPS and FFS diagnoses. CMS is also proposing to implement the phase-in of
the new risk adjustment model by calculating the encounter data-based risk
scores exclusively with the new risk adjustment model, while maintaining
use of the current 2018 risk adjustment model for calculating risk scores
with RAPS data.
Process
Comments on the proposals set forth in Part I of the proposed Advance
Notice must be submitted by Friday, March 2, 2018. The final 2019 Rate
Announcement will be published by Monday, April 2, 2019.
To submit comments or questions electronically, go to www.regulations.gov,
enter the docket number “CMS-2017-0163” in the “search” field , and follow
the instructions for ‘‘submitting a comment.’’
The Advance Notice and Draft Call Letter may be viewed through: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Health-Plans/MedicareAdvtgSpecRateStats/index.html
and selecting “Announcements and Documents.”
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