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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: CMS Media Relations New
Measures Under Consideration Mark a Milestone for CMS’s Reimagined Quality
Strategy to Increase Digital Innovation and Reduce Burden Measures
advance better quality care The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today
unveiled its 2020 list of quality and efficiency measures under
consideration. Quality measures are tools the agency uses to collect data
from providers on the effectiveness, safety, efficiency, and timeliness of
care beneficiaries receive. Every year, CMS evaluates all measures in its
programs, proposing to remove those that have become less relevant and
proposing new measures that may be more meaningful based on review by
external health care experts. This year, almost all of the measures proposed
would be collected digitally, meaning information comes from claims and other
electronic sources, and would not require doctors to retrieve data manually.
As a signal for CMS’s broader direction as the agency puts patients over
paperwork in the push for quality and innovation, the 2020 list of measures
under consideration represents “a first” on several important fronts,
particularly where digital innovation and reducing administrative burden are
concerned. Releasing the list is the first step in the “pre-rulemaking
process,” when measures under consideration go to the National Quality
Forum’s Measure Applications Partnership (MAP). Funded by CMS, the MAP is an
independent, voluntary collaborative of organizations representing a broad
group of stakeholders interested in or affected by the use of quality and
efficiency measures and convened per statute to provide input on their
selection. In a broader “CMS first,” a majority of measures under
consideration in 2020 also rely on digital reporting of existing information,
which can help providers spend more time with patients and less time
collecting data. Coupled with a limited number of non-digital measures
emphasizing patient-reported health outcomes, another priority for CMS, this
digital innovation continues the reimagined quality strategy announced by CMS
Administrator Seema Verma in 2017 as part of the Meaningful Measures
initiative. “We launched Meaningful Measures because too many providers were
wasting precious time and resources reporting on quality metrics, many of
which were barely relevant to their specialty,” said CMS Administrator Verma.
“Over the last four years, this initiative has delivered better, less onerous
metrics that are actually useful to those who use them. The measures we are
announcing today represent more of the same. They prioritize health outcomes,
reduce burden, and give providers more time to do the work they entered
medicine to do: treat patients.” Quality measures form the backbone of CMS’s ongoing effort to
promote health for millions of Americans. The previously adopted measure for
controlling high blood pressure, for example, helps CMS evaluate the quality
of care by collecting data on the percentage of beneficiaries 18-85 years old
whose high blood pressure has been adequately controlled during the
measurement period, meaning their blood pressure readings were less than
140/90 mmHg. Additionally, reporting on these measures holds clinicians accountable
for ensuring the best possible outcomes for beneficiaries. However, many quality measures have required intensive manual
data collection and individual chart reviews, robbing doctors and other
health professionals of valuable time spent caring for Americans. Over the
last several years, CMS has been working to reduce provider burden by
shifting toward measures that can be collected digitally using existing data.
That strategy has the next iteration of the Meaningful Measures framework –
or Meaningful Measures 2.0, the comprehensive initiative launched in 2017 to
identify high-priority areas for quality measurement and improvement – at its
heart. Though including a measure on the consideration list does not
guarantee its adoption, the list represents a key first step and one built on
collaboration between CMS and providers. Annually, the agency invites health
care specialty societies and other stakeholder groups to submit candidate
measures, due this year by June 30, narrowed down to identify promising
candidates that warrant expert review as “measures under consideration.” The
2020 list – which includes a number of new measures, as well as several
updates to modernize or replace existing measures – features:
All but three measures under consideration rely on digital
rather than traditional “pen-and-paper” data collection. Of the non-digital
measures, two are measures aimed at assessing COVID-19 vaccinations among
health care personnel and patients in ESRD facilities, and the other reflects
key patient-reported health outcomes, which help prioritize patient voices
and empower patients to take an active role in their health. CMS expects to receive the MAP’s input on the 2020 measures
under consideration by February 1, 2021. Experts at CMS and the Department of
Health and Human Services will work collaboratively based on this assessment
to select final measures available for further public comment through a
notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register. For more information or to review the 2020 list of measures
under consideration, please visit: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/measures-under-consideration-list-2020-report.pdf. ### Get
CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS news via email and follow CMS on Twitter CMS
Administrator @SeemaCMS and @CMSgov. |
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Tuesday, December 22, 2020
CMS NEWS: New Measures Under Consideration Mark a Milestone for CMS’s Reimagined Quality Strategy to Increase Digital Innovation and Reduce Burden
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