CMS NEWS
For Immediate Release
April 22, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
HHS To Deliver Value-Based Transformation in Primary Care
The CMS Primary Cares Initiative to Empower Patients and Providers to Drive Better Value and Results
Today, U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azar and Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Seema Verma are announcing the
CMS Primary Cares Initiative, a new set of payment models that will transform
primary care to deliver better value for patients throughout the healthcare
system. Building on the lessons learned from and experiences of the previous
models, the CMS Primary Cares Initiative will reduce administrative burdens
and empower primary care providers to spend more time caring for patients
while reducing overall health care costs. The models were developed by the
Innovation Center under the leadership of Adam Boehler and are part of
Secretary Azar’s value-based transformation initiative.
“For years, policymakers
have talked about building an American healthcare system that focuses on
primary care, pays for value, and places the patient at the center. These new
models represent the biggest step ever taken toward that vision,” said HHS
Secretary Alex Azar. “Building on the experience of previous models and ideas
of past administrations, these models will test out paying for health and
outcomes rather than procedures on a much larger scale than ever before.
These models can serve as an inflection point for value-based transformation
of our healthcare system, and American patients and providers will be the
first ones to benefit.”
Empirical evidence shows
that strengthening primary care is associated with higher quality, better
outcomes, and lower costs within and across major population subgroups.
Despite this evidence, primary care spending accounts for a small portion of
total cost of care, and is even lower for patients with complex, chronic
conditions. Primary care clinicians serve on the front lines of the
healthcare delivery system, furnishing services across a wide range of
specialties, from family medicine to behavioral health to gerontology. For
many patients, the primary care clinician is the first point of contact with
the healthcare delivery system. CMS’s experience with innovative models,
programs and demonstrations to date have shown that when incentives for
primary care clinicians are aligned to reward the provision of high value
care, the quality and cost effectiveness of patient care improves.
“As we seek to unleash
innovation in our health care system, we recognize that the road to value
must have as many lanes as possible,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma.
“Our Primary Cares Initiative is designed to give clinicians different
options that advance our goal to deliver better care at a lower cost while
allowing clinicians to focus on what they do best: treating patients.”
Administered through the
CMS Innovation Center, the CMS Primary Cares Initiative will provide primary
care practices and other providers with five new payment model options under
two paths:
Primary
Care First and Direct
Contracting.
The five payment model
options are:
The Primary Care First
(PCF) payment model options will test whether financial risk and performance
based payments that reward primary care practitioners and other clinicians
for easily understood, actionable outcomes will reduce total Medicare
expenditures, preserve or enhance quality of care, and improve patient health
outcomes. PCF will provide payment to practices through a simplified total
monthly payment that allows clinicians to focus on caring for patients rather
than their revenue cycle. PCF also includes a payment model option that
provides higher payments to practices that specialize in care for high need
patients, including those with complex, chronic needs and seriously ill
populations (SIP).
Both models under PCF
incentivize providers to reduce hospital utilization and total cost of care
by potentially significantly rewarding them through performance-based payment
adjustments based on their performance. These models seek to improve
quality of care, specifically patients’ experiences of care and key
outcome-based clinical quality measures, which may include controlling high
blood pressure, managing diabetes mellitus, and screening for colorectal
cancer. PCF will be tested for five years and is scheduled to begin in
January 2020. A second application round is also planned for participants
starting in January 2021.
Like the PCF payment model
options, the Direct Contracting (DC) payment model options are also focused
on transforming primary care, allowing health care providers to take greater
control of managing the costs of care for an aligned population of Medicare
fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries. While the PCF models are focused on
individual primary care practice sites, the DC payment model options aim to
engage a wider variety of organizations that have experience taking on
financial risk and serving larger patient populations, such as Accountable
Care Organizations (ACOs), Medicare Advantage (MA) plans, and Medicaid
managed care organizations (MCOs). The DC payment model options are
designed to create a competitive delivery system environment where
organizations offering greater efficiencies and better quality of care will
be financially rewarded. The payment model options include a focus on care
for patients with complex, chronic needs and SIPs, as well as a voluntary
alignment option that allows beneficiaries to align with the health care
provider of their choosing.
Depending on the DC
payment model option in which an organization is participating, the model
participant will receive a fixed monthly payment that can range from a
portion of anticipated primary care costs to the total cost of care.
Participants in the global payment model option will ultimately bear full
financial risk, while those in the professional payment model option will
share risk with CMS. This will provide prospective model participants a range
of financial risk arrangements from which to choose while providing a more
predictable revenue stream and reducing health care provider burden
commensurate with level of financial risk.
In addition, CMS is
seeking public comment on one DC payment model option with an expected
performance period launch in January 2021. The Geographic Population-Based
option is designed to offer innovative organizations the opportunity to
assume responsibility for the total cost of care and health needs of a
population in a defined target region. Driving accountability to a local
level empowers communities to devise strategies best designed to meet their
health care needs. Given the novelty of this option, we are seeking public
comment through a new Request for Information.
Together, CMS anticipates
these five payment model options administered under the Primary Cares
Initiative could:
All five payment model
options focus on supporting care for patients who have chronic conditions and
serious illnesses. Through the PCF payment model options, high need patients
with serious illness who do not have a primary care practitioner or care
coordination and indicate an interest in receiving care from a practice
participating in the model will be assigned to a model participant.
Participating practices that choose to care for SIP patients will be required
to provide care to clinically stabilize the patient. All payment model
options include enhancements to encourage participation of providers who are
focused on care for these populations.
CMS based the design of
these payment model options on considerable stakeholder input. The models
draw from Physician-Focused Payment Model Technical Advisory Committee (PTAC)
review of proposals, including, but not limited, to The Advanced Primary Care Model
from the American Academy of Family Physicians, An Innovative Model for Primary Care Office Payment
from Jean Antonucci, MD, The
Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness Model from the
American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, and The Advanced Care Model
from the Coalition to Transform Advanced Care. All payment model options are
responsive to stakeholder feedback that we received from advanced primary
care practices expressing interest in accepting increased financial risk in
exchange for greater flexibility and fewer requirements.
For a fact sheet on the
CMS Primary Care First payment model options, please visit https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/primary-care-first-foster-independence-reward-outcomes.
More information on CMS Primary Care payment model options is at: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/primary-care-first-model-options/.
For a fact sheet on the
Direct Contracting payment model options, please visit https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/direct-contracting.
More information on the Direct Contracting model options is at: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/direct-contracting-model-options/.
To view a fact sheet on
the CMS Primary Cares Initiative, please visit: https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/x/primary-cares-initiative-onepager.pdf.
To review the Direct
Contracting—Geographic Request for Information, please visit: https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/x/dc-geographicpbp-rfi.pdf.
CMS is also releasing the
first annual evaluation report for the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+)
Model, which details the implementation experience and impact on beneficiary
outcomes over the first year for practices that started participating in the
CPC+ model in January 2017. To view the findings-at-a-glance, please visit: https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/reports/cpcplus-fg-firstannrpt.pdf.
To see the report, please visit: https://downloads.cms.gov/files/cmmi/cpcplus-first-ann-rpt.pdf.
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Monday, April 22, 2019
HHS To Deliver Value-Based Transformation in Primary Care
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