CMS Takes Decisive Steps to Reduce
Health Care Disparities Among Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease and
End-Stage Renal Disease
Today,
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is taking action
to close health equity gaps by providing Medicare patients living with
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) with greater access to care. Through the
ESRD Prospective Payment System (PPS) annual rulemaking, CMS is making
changes to the ESRD Quality Incentive Program (QIP) and the ESRD
Treatment Choices (ETC) Model, and updating ESRD PPS payment rates. The
changes to the ETC Model policies aim to encourage dialysis facilities
and health care providers to decrease disparities in rates of home
dialysis and kidney transplants among ESRD patients with lower
socioeconomic status, making the model one of the agency’s first CMS
Innovation Center models to directly address health equity.
“Today’s
final rule is a decisive step to ensure people with Medicare with
chronic kidney disease have easy access to quality care and convenient
treatment options,” said CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure.
“Enabling dialysis providers to offer more dialysis treatment options
for Medicare patients will catalyze better health outcomes, greater
autonomy and better quality of life for all patients with kidney
disease.”
According
to CMS Office of Minority Health’s studies on racial, ethnic and
socioeconomic factors, disadvantaged people with Medicare have higher rates of ESRD. They are also
more likely to experience higher hospital readmissions and
costs, as well as more likely to receive in-center hemodialysis (vs.
home dialysis). Studies also indicate non-white ESRD patients are less
likely to receive pre-ESRD kidney care, become
waitlisted for a transplant, or receive a kidney transplant.
CMS
is improving access to home dialysis for patients of all socioeconomic
backgrounds. For example, CMS is finalizing changes to the ETC
Model to test a new payment incentive that rewards ESRD facilities and
clinicians who manage dialysis patients for achieving significant
improvement in the home dialysis rate and kidney transplant rate for
lower-income beneficiaries. In addition, CMS is approving the first
ever technology under a recently established policy that allows for
enhanced payments for innovative technologies that represent a
substantial clinical improvement relative to existing options. This
approval will help ESRD facilities offer an additional option to
beneficiaries for home dialysis at this critical time in the pandemic.
Consistent
with President Biden’s Executive Order 13985 on “Advancing Racial
Equity and Support for Underserved Communities through the Federal
Government,” CMS is addressing health inequities and improving patient
outcomes in the U.S. through improved data collection for better
measurement and analysis of disparities across programs and policies.
In response to the proposed rule, CMS received valuable feedback on
potential opportunities to collect and leverage diverse sets of data
such as race, ethnicity, Medicare/Medicaid dual eligible status,
disability status, LGBTQ+ and socioeconomic status, to better measure
disparities. CMS also received feedback on various methodical
approaches to advance equity through the ESRD Quality Incentive Program
(ESRD QIP). This valuable stakeholder feedback will help guide future
rulemaking to improve health equity.
The
rule finalizes policies for the ESRD QIP that address the circumstances
of the COVID-19 public health emergency and functionality challenges
relating to the implementation of a new data collection system. These
challenges include a special scoring and payment policy under which no
facility will receive a payment reduction under the ESRD QIP for the
upcoming year, especially since such payment reductions would have been
based on performance during the height of the pandemic in 2020.
CMS’
proposed rule included several requests for information (RFIs) for the
agency to consider as part of its goal to increase access to dialysis
treatments at home. Commenters’ responses to the RFIs included specific
suggestions for improving Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) payment and the
ESRD PPS.
For
a fact sheet detailing the Calendar Year 2022 ESRD PPS Final Rule
(CMS-1749-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/cy-2022-end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-final-rule-cms-1749-f
To
view the final rule, please visit: https://www.federalregister.gov/public-inspection/2021-23907/medicare-program-end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-payment-for-renal-dialysis.
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