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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 23, 2020
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
CMS Unveils Major Organizational Change to Reduce Provider and
Clinician Burden
and Improve Patient Outcomes
New office to continue agency’s work of reducing regulatory
burden to allow providers to focus on patients instead of paperwork and
reducing health care costs
Today, the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is announcing the creation of the
Office of Burden Reduction and Health Informatics to unify the agency’s
efforts to reduce regulatory and administrative burden and to further the
goal of putting patients first. The new office is an outgrowth of the
agency’s Patients over Paperwork (PoP) Initiative, which is the cornerstone
of CMS’s ongoing efforts to implement President Trump’s 2017 executive order to “Cut the Red Tape”
and eliminate duplicative, unnecessary, and excessively costly requirements
and regulations. This announcement permanently embeds a culture of burden
reduction across all platforms of CMS agency operations.
CMS’s burden reduction
work began three years ago with the launch of our PoP Initiative, which has
focused on reducing unnecessary regulatory burden, in order to allow
providers to concentrate on their primary mission: patient care. The results
are expected to save providers and clinicians $6.6 billion and 42 million
unnecessary burden hours through 2021. As part of our efforts to date, CMS
has heard from over 2,500 providers, clinicians, administrative staff, health
care leaders, beneficiaries and their support teams through 158 site visits
and listening sessions. Through more than 10 Requests for Information (RFI)
combined with stakeholder interviews, CMS also has over 15,000 comments to
assist us in our burden reduction efforts.
These efforts have yielded
significant results:
“The Office of Burden
Reduction and Health Informatics will ensure the agency’s commitment to reduce
administrative costs and enact meaningful and lasting change in our nation’s
health care system,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Specifically, the
work of this new office will be targeted to help reduce unnecessary burden,
increase efficiencies, continue administrative simplification, increase the
use of health informatics, and improve the beneficiary experience.”
Today’s announcement
continues CMS’s burden reduction efforts from both before and during the
COVID-19 pandemic. When President Trump declared a national coronavirus
emergency on March 13, 2020, CMS took action nationwide to aggressively respond
to COVID-19. In March, CMS announced unprecedented relief for the
clinicians, providers, and facilities participating in Medicare quality
reporting programs, including the 1.2 million clinicians in the Quality
Payment Program who are on the front lines of America’s fight against
COVID-19, by granting them exceptions to reporting requirements and
extensions for reporting measures and data.
Under these extreme and
uncontrollable circumstances, CMS also implemented additional exceptions for
upcoming measure reporting and data submission deadlines for a number of
programs, including provider, hospital, and post-acute programs, during the
COVID-19 emergency. Additionally, during the pandemic CMS has taken actions
to ease federal rules and to institute new flexibilities to ensure that
states and localities can focus on patient care and can ensure that care is
not delayed due to administrative red tape. CMS is committed to leveraging
the significant flexibilities introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
as we continue to lead the rapid transformation to value-based healthcare.
The new office will
strengthen CMS’s efforts across Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health
Insurance Program and the Health Insurance Marketplace to decrease the hours
and costs clinicians and providers incur for CMS-mandated compliance. It will
take a proactive approach to reducing burden, carefully considering the
impact of new regulations on health care system operations. The new office
will also increase the number of clinicians, providers, and health plans the
Agency engages, to ensure that CMS has a better understanding of how various
regulatory burdens impact healthcare delivery. Stakeholder feedback is
critical to addressing provider and clinician burden, as it helps CMS to
remove or modify outdated regulations that impede innovation, ultimately
resulting in improvements in healthcare delivery.
Additionally, the Office
of Burden Reduction and Health Informatics will focus on the important work
of health informatics, which uses and applies health data and clinical
information to provide better healthcare to patients. Fostering innovation
through interoperability will be an important priority, and the office will
leverage technology and automation to create new tools that allow patients to
own and carry their personal health data with them seamlessly, privately, and
securely throughout the health care system. By providing clinicians with a
complete medical history, they can deliver better coordinated, higher quality
care. Coupled with implementation and enforcement of adopted national
standards, this office will also work with the broader healthcare community
to continue to make key administrative processes increasingly more efficient.
With the formation of the
Office of Burden Reduction and Health Informatics, CMS will continue to draw
on the specialized expertise of staff, and frequent stakeholder input, to
continue to explore innovative ways to address regulatory reform and burden
reduction. All of these efforts will help ensure that providers and
clinicians can focus their efforts on what is most important: keeping
patients healthy, improving health outcomes, and enhancing patient
satisfaction.
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Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS and @CMSgov
[1] https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/omnibus-burden-reduction-conditions-participation-final-rule-cms-3346-f
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Tuesday, June 23, 2020
CMS NEWS: CMS Unveils Major Organizational Change to Reduce Provider and Clinician Burden and Improve Patient Outcomes
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