CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 4, 2018
Contact:
CMS Media Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS to
Strengthen Oversight of Medicare’s Accreditation Organizations
Agency’s website will increase transparency into Accrediting Organization performance, and CMS will streamline and strengthen the validation of Accrediting Organization surveys
Today, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) took action to improve quality and safety in
healthcare facilities and empower patients with information to make decisions
about where to receive care.
“Today we are taking action to
improve our oversight of Accrediting Organizations, including by increasing
transparency for patients on the organizations’ performance,” said CMS
Administrator Seema Verma. “The public trusts CMS to ensure the quality
and safety of patient care, and we take this responsibility very
seriously. Today's changes will bolster the processes for overseeing
how effective Accrediting Organizations, who work on CMS’ behalf, are in
evaluating healthcare facilities.”
Currently, Medicare-participating
healthcare providers and suppliers are surveyed either by State survey
agencies or by Accrediting Organizations (AOs) to ensure that they meet CMS’
quality and safety standards. AOs receive deeming authority from CMS, which
affirms that AOs’ health and safety standards meet or exceed those of
Medicare. Only facilities and suppliers that have been deemed by state or AO
surveyors to meet CMS’ standards may receive payments from Medicare. There
are currently 10 CMS-approved AOs, each of which surveys one or more
different types of facilities.
CMS will enhance and strengthen its
oversight and quality transparency of AOs in three ways: 1) the public
posting of AO performance data; 2) a redesigned process for AO validation
surveys and 3) the release of the Annual Report to Congress. Taken together,
these efforts will provide important insights to the public and assist AOs,
providers, and suppliers in ensuring patient health and safety.
Posting AO Performance Data
Online
To increase transparency for
consumers, CMS will post new information on the CMS.Gov website, including:
The latest quality-of-care deficiency findings following complaint
surveys at facilities accredited by AOs; a list of providers determined by
CMS to be out of compliance, with information included on the provider’s AO;
and overall performance data for AOs themselves. To view AO performance data,
visit: https://qcor.cms.gov/hosp_cop/HospitalCOPs.html
Today, the public relies on
accreditation status as a way to gauge providers’ and suppliers’ quality of
care. By posting more detail—accredited hospitals’ complaint surveys,
out-of-compliance information, and performance data for AOs themselves—CMS
will offer the public more nuanced information than accreditation status
alone provides. The agency is currently prohibited by law from
disclosing the actual surveys done by AOs, except for surveys of home health
agencies and surveys related to an enforcement action.
Pilot Testing Direct Observation
for AO Validation Surveys
CMS is testing a more
streamlined, efficient way to assess AOs’ ability to ensure that facilities
and suppliers comply with CMS requirements.
CMS evaluates the ability of AOs
to accurately assess providers’ and suppliers’ compliance with health and
safety standards through a validation survey process. Historically, CMS has
measured the effectiveness of AOs by choosing a sample of facilities,
performing state-conducted assessment surveys within 60 days following AO
surveys, and comparing results of the state surveys with the AO surveys. In a
pilot test, CMS will eliminate the second state-conducted validation survey
and instead use direct observation during the original AO-run survey to
evaluate AOs’ ability to assess compliance with CMS’s Conditions of
Participation.
Direct observation will enable
CMS not only to evaluate AO performance more effectively, but also to suggest
improvements and address concerns with AOs immediately. This approach will
relieve providers from having to undergo the burden of a state’s follow up
assessment. The approach is another example of the wide-ranging effort
at CMS to eliminate duplication and relieve burden, reducing the amount of
time that healthcare facilities must spend on compliance activities.
CMS will also analyze and
incorporate State complaint investigations of accredited facilities as part
of the agency’s strengthened validation program. This work will focus on
identifying and monitoring accredited facilities that are out of compliance
with Medicare health and safety requirements. CMS will use this information
as an additional indicator of AO performance.
Posting the Most Recent Annual
Report to Congress Regarding AO Performance
CMS has also posted the most
recent annual Report to Congress, the “Review of Medicare’s Program for
Oversight of Accrediting Organizations and the Clinical Laboratory
Improvement Validation Program Fiscal Year 2017,” on the CMS website.
As the changes announced today inform and bolster our oversight of AOs,
CMS will continue to publish this report online annually to demonstrate the
impact of these changes on the oversight of AOs and to provide greater
transparency for the public. The FY 2017 Report to Congress is posted online:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/SurveyCertificationGenInfo/Policy-and-Memos-to-States-and-Regions.html
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Thursday, October 4, 2018
CMS to Strengthen Oversight of Medicare’s Accreditation Organizations
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