After progressive Democratic lawmakers urged CMS to shut down a
fee-for-service Medicare model aimed at fostering more value-based care
arrangements, the agency’s Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI)
on Feb. 24 unveiled a revamped version that it said more closely
aligns with its “vision of creating a health system that achieves equitable
outcomes through high quality, affordable, person-centered care.”
While the three types of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)
that may participate starting next year appear to largely mirror the Direct
Contracting Entities (DCEs) of the current Global and Professional Direct
Contracting (GPDC) Model, CMS aims to ensure that participants in the new model
operate as provider-led organizations, have a proven track record of providing
care in underserved communities and will not be shifting any enrollees into
Medicare Advantage — a key concern expressed by lawmakers and advocates.
CMS enhances provider-led standards
- CMS on Feb. 24 issued a request for applications (RFA)
for the new REACH model and said accepted applicants on Aug. 1 may begin
participating in an implementation period that would run through the end
of the year.
- According to a side-by-side comparison of the REACH and GPDC models,
participating providers must now have at least 75% of the governing board
voting rights, up from the previous requirement of at least 25%.
- Moreover, each REACH ACO must include a beneficiary
representative and a consumer advocate, who must hold governing board
voting rights and be different people, whereas the GPDC said those roles
could be filled by the same person and neither needed to have voting
rights, explained CMS.
CMS seeks to limit risk score gains
- In a Feb. 25 note from Citi, analyst Jason Cassorla
said “soft” changes such as the increased governing board voting rights
will be “relatively easy to comply with and are not likely to impact the
financial performance of the participating entities.”
- Some harder changes, however, may have a more material
impact down the line, he cautioned. These include tying the symmetrical 3%
risk score cap to demographic changes in the underlying population over
time — potentially limiting risk adjustment on a relative basis — and
lowering the Global ACO discount rate to encourage participation in the
full-risk track.
MAOs Could Still Theoretically Apply
- While most of the 99 participants are provider-led organizations, MA
insurers Bright Health, Clover Heath and Humana Inc. have DCEs in the 2022
performance year. CMS also lists Aetna subsidiary ActiveHealth as a High
Needs Population DCE for 2022, and Cigna Corp. at press time unveiled its participation through the company’s
CareAllies subsidiary.
- Aisha Pittman, vice president of policy with Premier
Inc., a value-based consulting partner to health systems and physician
groups, says she doesn’t see anything in the new RFA that would prevent an
MAO from applying. “I think what we’ll likely see happen with the MA
organizations is that they’ll form a new entity so that with the board
structure they can meet the requirements,” she tells AIS.
From Radar on Medicare Advantage
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