October 2, 2018
By Seema Verma, Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Better
Data Will Serve as the Foundation in Modernizing the Medicaid Program
Between 2013 and 2016, Federal
spending on Medicaid grew by over $100 billion. The program is often the
first or second largest line item in state budgets. Just recently, CMS’
independent Office of the Actuary released their Medicaid financial report, confirming what we have already
known for quite some time – that our healthcare spending, particularly in
Medicaid – is forecast to continue growing, averaging 5.7% annually over the
next 10 years to reach over $1 trillion by 2026.
Yet as program costs have
continued to rise, we have failed to deliver a level of transparency and
accountability for achieving positive outcomes commiserate with our
significant investment. But this is finally beginning to change. Over the
last several years, CMS has collaborated with states to improve how we
collect and use data to modernize and measure the Medicaid and CHIP program.
Through strong data and systems, CMS and states can drive toward better
health outcomes and improve program integrity, performance, and financial
management in Medicaid and CHIP. These efforts will provide the foundation
that enables CMS to deliver on its commitment to usher in a new era of
Medicaid centered on state flexibility, stronger accountability, and improved
program integrity.
As one example, CMS has worked
with stakeholders to identify two core sets of health care quality measures
that can be used to assess the quality of health care provided to children
and adults enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP. These core sets are tools
states can use to monitor and improve the quality of health care provided to
Medicaid and CHIP enrollees. Under statute, state reporting on these measure
sets is voluntary. In the future, we aim to increase the number of states
reporting on a uniform set of measures and to support states in using these
measures to drive quality improvement for the beneficiaries they serve. And
ultimately, this move toward greater transparency will start an important conversation
about how and when states should be held accountable for the outcomes their
programs produce.
Last week, we released the latest
Federal Fiscal Year 2017 quality measurement data from the Medicaid and CHIP Child and Adult Core Sets that states have voluntarily
reported to CMS. We greatly appreciate the work our state partners have
endured to report these measures. CMS recognizes that quality reporting can
present a significant administrative burden for both states and providers,
and has taken steps to reduce this burden through our Meaningful Measures initiative. In the
future, we hope to leverage existing and more automated data reporting
systems to generate these Medicaid measures on behalf of states, thereby
reducing reporting burden while also improving data consistency,
comparability, and comprehensiveness.
States have worked with CMS over
the last few years to modernize the way in which administrative data is
collected by moving from the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS)
to the Transformed-MSIS (T-MSIS). T-MSIS modernizes and enhances the way
states submit operational data about beneficiaries, providers, claims, and
encounters. It is the foundation of a national analytic data
infrastructure to support programmatic and policy improvements and program
integrity efforts and will help advance reporting on outcomes. It also
enhances the ability to identify potential fraud and improve program
efficiency.
I am pleased to say that all
states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are now successfully
submitting T-MSIS data, marking a significant and exciting milestone in the
history of the Medicaid program.
With these data in hand, we are
shifting our efforts to continuous data quality review and improvement--a
collaboration we will sustain with states. CMS’ ongoing goal is to use
advanced analytics and other innovative solutions to both improve T-MSIS data
and maximize its potential for performance measurement, health care quality
improvement, and program integrity, all while reducing state reporting
burden.
I appreciate our continued
partnership with states. Programs as important as Medicaid and CHIP require
robust, timely, and accurate data in order to ensure the highest financial
and program performance, support policy analysis and ongoing improvement,
identify potential fraud or waste, and enable data-driven decision
making.
We are committed to collaborating
with states on improving their data submissions.
###
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Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Better Data Will Serve as the Foundation in Modernizing the Medicaid Program
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