FACT SHEET
November 25, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
Direct Contracting: Professional and Global
Direct Contracting creates
a new opportunity for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (Innovation Center) to test an
array of financial risk-sharing arrangements to reduce Medicare expenditures
while preserving or enhancing the quality of care furnished to beneficiaries.
Direct Contracting leverages lessons learned from other Medicare Accountable
Care Organization (ACO) initiatives, such as the Medicare Shared Savings
Program and the Next Generation ACO (NGACO) Model, as well as innovative
approaches from Medicare Advantage (MA) and private sector risk-sharing
arrangements. This model is part of a strategy by the CMS Innovation
Center to use the redesign of primary care as a platform to drive broader
health care delivery system reform.
Direct Contracting creates
a variety of pathways for health care providers and suppliers to take on
financial risk supported by enhanced flexibilities. Because the model
reduces burden, supports a focus on complex, chronically and seriously ill
patients, and aims to encourage organizations to participate that have not
typically participated in Medicare fee-for-service (FFS), Innovation Center
models, or both, we anticipate that this model will appeal to a broad range
of physician organizations and other types of health organizations. Direct
Contracting provides an opportunity to participate in a value-based care
arrangement under Medicare FFS for health care providers that have not
previously been eligible for the Shared Savings Program, the NGACO Model, or
both due to an insufficient number of assigned or aligned Medicare FFS
beneficiaries. In addition, Direct Contracting offers another model
option for NGACO Model participants to consider after NGACO ends in 2020.
CMS will test two
voluntary risk-sharing options in Direct Contracting: (1) Professional, a
lower-risk option (50% Shared Savings/Shared Losses (SS/SL)) and Primary Care
Capitation (PCC) equal to 7% of the total cost of care benchmark for enhanced
primary care services; and (2) Global, a full risk option (100% SS/SL) and
either PCC or Total Care Capitation (TCC). Additional information will
be provided at a later date regarding a third option that CMS is considering
offering, the Geographic option, which is a full risk option (100% SS/SL) for
the total cost of care of all Medicare FFS beneficiaries in a defined target
region.
The goals of Direct
Contracting are to transform risk-sharing arrangements in Medicare FFS,
broaden participation in CMS Innovation Center models, empower beneficiaries,
and reduce health care clinician burden. The Model options seek to
align financial incentives, provide a prospectively determined and
predictable revenue stream for participants, and put a greater emphasis on
beneficiary choice.
Who can
participate in the Direct Contracting model options?
A key aspect of Direct
Contracting is providing new opportunities for a variety of different
organizations (Direct Contracting Entities or DCEs) to participate in
value-based care arrangements in Medicare FFS. In addition to
organizations that have traditionally provided services to a Medicare FFS
population, Direct Contracting will provide new opportunities for
organizations without significant experience in FFS to enter into value-based
care arrangements.
Under Direct Contracting,
there will be three types of DCEs with different characteristics and
operational parameters. These three types of DCEs are:
How will
DCEs be paid under the model options?
DCEs will be required to
have a capitated payment arrangement whereby CMS makes a capitation payment
to the DCE, which may be used by the DCE to support population health, for
example by allowing the DCE to enter into value based payment arrangements
with its downstream DC Participant Providers, and if they elect it, Preferred
Providers, or to invest in health care management tools, such as health care
technologies. The type of risk-sharing arrangement the DCE enters into
will determine the type of capitation payments. available to the DCE.
For the DCEs participating in the Professional option, CMS will offer Primary
Care Capitation (PCC) equal to 7% of the Performance Year benchmark paid to
the DCE per beneficiary per month to pay its DC Participant Providers and
applicable Preferred Providers. This payment is intended to cover the
Primary Care Based Services furnished to aligned beneficiaries by DC
Participant Providers and those Preferred Providers who have agreed to a
claims reduction, along with an additional amount for enhanced primary care
services, which can include infrastructure, technology, tools, and resources
to support increased access to primary care, provision of care, and care
coordination. For DCEs participating in the Global option, CMS will
offer the choice of PCC or Total Care Capitation (TCC), which encompasses all
Medicare Part A and B services furnished to aligned beneficiaries by DC
Participant Providers and Preferred Providers, who have agreed to
participate.
Advanced Payment is an
optional payment mechanism only available to DCEs that select PCC and
functions similar to the population-based payments available in the NGACO
Model. Advanced Payments are a cash flow mechanism under which CMS
prospectively pays DCEs the estimated value of the reduction in Medicare
payments for non-primary care claims submitted by DC Participant Providers
and Preferred Providers who have agreed to a Medicare FFS claims reduction.
Unlike the Capitated Payment Mechanisms, the value of Advanced Payments made
to DCEs will be reconciled against the actual value of the Medicare FFS
claims for services furnished to aligned beneficiaries after the end of the
Performance Year.
How will
providers and suppliers be paid under the model options?
For DCEs that elect PCC,
DC Participant Providers delivering primary care services will be required to
be paid through the PCC. For DCEs that elect TCC, all DC Participant
Providers will be required to be paid through the TCC. DCEs may choose
to pay Preferred Providers through the applicable Capitation Payment
Mechanism (PCC or TCC) if they consent to this type of payment arrangement.
These providers and suppliers will receive payments directly from the DCE
according to established agreements with the DCE. All DC Participant Providers
and Preferred Providers will continue to submit claims to the Medicare
payment systems.
How is
the benchmark calculated?
The benchmark will be
developed by: (1) calculating the DCE’s historical baseline spending for its
aligned beneficiary population; (2) trending the historical benchmark
expenditures forward based on the U.S. Per Capita Cost growth trend; (3)
blending the historical baseline expenditures with regional expenditures
using an adjusted Medicare Advantage Rate Book; (4) making adjustments to the
blended expenditures to account for the risk of the aligned beneficiaries;
and (5) applying a discount for DCEs that selected the Global option and
holding a portion of the benchmark “at risk” subject to the DCE’s performance
on quality measures. More details on the benchmarking methodology can
be found in Section VI.F of the RFA. Additional detail will also be
provided in a Payment Methodology webinar later this year.
How does
quality reporting fit into the benchmark?
CMS will assess each DCE’s
quality performance to ensure that the DCE meet the model goals of improved
quality of care and health outcomes for Medicare beneficiaries. Similar
to the NGACO model, Direct Contracting will include a quality “withhold,” in
which five percent of each DCE’s performance year benchmark will be held
“at-risk,” contingent upon the DCE’s quality performance. DCEs have the
opportunity to earn back this withhold based on their quality reporting and
performance. DCEs that improve their performance each year and/or are
among the highest performing DCEs will earn back higher levels of the
withhold, and potentially even more via a High Performers Pool (HPP).
More details on this methodology is provided in the RFA and will be included in a future
financial methodology paper.
What
quality measures will CMS use for quality reporting?
CMS will assess DCE
quality performance based on a core set of claims-based quality measures as
well as information from administration of the Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) for Accountable Care Organizations
(ACOs) surveys. CAHPS® is a program of the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, U. S. Department of Health and Human Services.
The quality strategy for Direct Contracting is designed to provide achievable
performance criteria that incentivize practice transformations necessary to
reduce utilization and improve quality of care.
How will
eligible beneficiaries be aligned to the DCEs?
For the purpose of
assigning accountability for risk sharing and the total cost of care,
beneficiaries may be aligned to a DCE in two ways: (1) voluntary alignment
where beneficiaries communicate their desire to be aligned to a DC
Participant Provider, which is a provider who has contracted with the DCE to
participate in the model; and (2) claims-based alignment, where beneficiaries
are aligned based on where the beneficiary has historically received the
plurality of their primary care services. Eligibility requirements can
be found in the Direct Contracting RFA available at https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/direct-contracting-model-options/.
Note that the beneficiary alignment options available to a DCE will depend
upon the DCE type.
Is Direct
Contracting an Advanced Alternative Payment Model (APM)?
Direct Contracting will be
an Advanced Alternative Payment Model (APM) starting in the first performance
year (PY1), which will be 2021.
Under
what authority is the Innovation Center testing Direct Contracting?
The Innovation Center is
testing Direct Contracting under section 1115A of the Social Security Act,
which established the Innovation Center to test innovative payment and
service delivery models that have the potential to reduce program
expenditures while preserving or enhancing the quality of care furnished to
beneficiaries.
What is
the model timeline?
The model will be tested
over six years, with an optional initial Implementation Period (IP), followed
by five performance years (PY1-5). For purposes of this RFA, the IP
will occur in calendar year 2020, and PY1, PY2, PY3, PY4 and PY5 will occur
in calendar years 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 respectively.
When is
the application period?
There are two application
submission periods for Global and Professional. CMS will stagger the
deadlines for submitting applications so it can process applications from
DCEs wanting to participate in the Implementation Period (IP) in 2020 before
processing applications for those wanting to start the model in the first Performance
Year (PY1), which is 2021. The application for organizations interested in
the IP will be made available in early December. Please continue to
check the website for application timeline updates. The application for
organizations interested in starting in PY1 is expected to open in Spring of
2020.
Is an LOI
required to submit an application to Direct Contracting?
Yes, an LOI (letter of
intent) is required to apply for Direct Contracting. CMS will be
reopening the LOI link for two weeks for interested organizations that did
not previously submit an LOI. Please continue to check our website for
timeline updates. The link to the LOI is https://app1.innovation.cms.gov/dc.
Resources
and Support
Email: DPC@cms.hhs.gov
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Monday, November 25, 2019
Direct Contracting: Professional and Global
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