CMS BLOG
https://www.cms.gov/blog/cms-national-quality-strategy-person-centered-approach-improving-quality
June 6, 2022
By: Michelle Schreiber, M.D.; Adam C.
Richards, MA; Jean Moody-Williams, RN, MPP; Lee A. Fleisher, M.D.
The CMS National
Quality Strategy: A Person-Centered Approach to Improving Quality
The Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) administers health care coverage for more than 150
million individuals through Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP), and the Marketplace – HealthCare.gov. The vision
of the agency is straightforward: To serve the public as a trusted partner
and steward, dedicated to advancing health equity, expanding access to
affordable coverage and care, and improving health outcomes – the latter
being key to this discussion. In addition to its traditional role in
coverage, CMS has a critically important responsibility for improving
health outcomes, and one aspect of that work is quality.
In order to achieve optimal health
and well-being for all Americans, it is essential to have a high quality,
safe, equitable, and resilient health care system – one that is built on a
foundation of dedicated physicians, clinicians, staff, patients, families
and other caregivers. However, even before the COVID-19 pandemic, our
quality of care continued to rank lowest on many measures of care among all
industrialized nations, despite higher national spending.[1] The onset of COVID-19 illuminated, and in
certain cases exacerbated, the acute need to develop novel solutions to
improve the quality of care for all Americans, especially members of
underserved and under-resourced communities. Taken together, these aspects
drive the need for continued progress on quality within the health care
system.
Improving quality and outcomes is
certainly not a new concept to CMS. In fact, the agency has advanced
previous quality strategies, focusing on making care safer, increasing
engagement, promoting effective prevention and treatment of chronic
disease, and making quality measurement meaningful and transparent to
providers, individuals, and their families. Additionally, CMS establishes
health and safety standards through Conditions for Coverage and Conditions
of Participation (the rules for health care providers to participate in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs), manages a variety of quality reporting and
value-based purchasing programs, runs the largest value-based program—the
Medicare Shared Savings Program—in the country, drives transparency through
public tools such as Care Compare, and strategically uses the Quality
Improvement Organizations, which are health quality experts, clinicians,
and consumers organized to improve the quality of care delivered to people
with Medicare. These efforts have proven successful. One example is the
CMS-led Partnership for Patients, in which multiple federal agencies,
hospitals, clinicians, and patients joined together to achieve a 13% reduction
in hospital-acquired conditions from 2014-2017 according to the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality National Scorecard. This resulted in
saving about 20,700 lives and about $7.7 billion in healthcare costs.[2]
While these are important
achievements, in many cases they have not been sustained or been inclusive
of underserved communities.[3]
CMS recognizes the evolving nature of the United States health care system
and advances in technology, measurement science, quality improvement
approaches, and the many opportunities for improvement that remain.
Driving Improvements in Quality
Given the urgent need for action
within the health care system and the lessons learned during the pandemic,
CMS is taking an aggressive step forward as a national voice for quality.
On April 12, 2022, the agency launched the CMS National Quality Strategy,
an ambitious long-term initiative that aims to promote the highest quality
outcomes and safest care for all individuals.[4]
The CMS National Quality Strategy
focuses on a person-centric approach from birth to death as individuals
journey across the continuum of care, from home or community-based settings
to hospital to post-acute care, and across payer types, including
Traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage, Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program coverage, and Marketplace plans. It builds on our
previous efforts to improve quality across the health care system, incorporates
lessons learned from the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE), and
endeavors to foster and promote the expanded levers used during the
pandemic such as interoperability and data sharing, data collection
specific to social determinants of health and social risk factors,
telehealth, emergency preparedness, leadership, and organizational
governance among others. The CMS National Quality Strategy also embraces
the anticipated acceleration of consumer demand for data and information to
make informed care decisions. Overall, the CMS National Quality Strategy
will help create a more equitable, safe, and outcomes-based health care
system for all individuals.
In developing the CMS National
Quality Strategy, it was important to us to ensure alignment to other key
agency initiatives, such as our strategies for behavioral health, value,
and health equity.[5],[6]
Quality is integral to value, which
is the highest quality care the most affordable cost. So, critical elements
such as safety, person-centered care, integration of physical and
behavioral health, and equity are all foundational components not only of
quality, but of value as well. Quality, including driving better health
outcomes, will be an essential part of value and deeply embedded in CMS
policies and programs. The CMS National Quality Strategy will support the
agency’s approach to value by increasing alignment across the quality
reporting and value-based payment programs, accelerating the path toward
value, and addressing upstream drivers of health.
Importantly, true quality cannot
exist without equity. The CMS National Quality Strategy directly supports
agency efforts to ensure equitable access, quality, and outcomes for all
individuals CMS serves, including members of racial and ethnic minority
communities, people with disabilities, members of the lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) community, individuals with
limited English proficiency, members of rural communities, and people
otherwise adversely affected by persistent poverty or inequality.
The CMS National Quality Strategy at a Glance
The CMS National Quality Strategy
consists of eight core goals. These goals add the next layer of depth to
the broader strategic vision for quality within health care that is built
upon a culture of quality and safety at every level.
Goal 1: Embed Quality into the Care
Journey
Making quality a core part of the
care journey is a critical element of the CMS National Quality Strategy as
it seeks to establish quality as a foundational component to delivering
value across an individual’s overall care journey. Quality includes, but is
not limited to, ensuring optimal care and best outcomes for individuals of
all ages and backgrounds as well as across service delivery systems and
settings, including preventive, acute, chronic, and long-term care with a
focus on health-related social needs. Quality also extends across payer
types, such as Traditional Medicare, Medicare Advantage, Medicaid
(fee-for-service and managed care) and CHIP, and Marketplace plans.
This is an important goal because the
health care system is complex and often poses unique challenges to all
individuals at some point along their care journey. Creating a smoother
journey by taking a person-centered approach across an individual’s
lifespan (focusing on combining physical and behavioral health with
health-related social needs), addressing access and barriers, including the
individual’s voice, and resolving gaps in care is critical in helping
individuals achieve the best possible outcomes.
Goal 2: Advance Health Equity
CMS defines health equity as the
attainment of the highest levels of health for all people so that every
person has a fair and just opportunity to attain their optimal health
regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender
identity, socioeconomic status, geography, preferred language, or other
factors that affect access to care and health outcomes.[7] This goal seeks to address the disparities
and injustices that underlie and permeate our health system, both within
and across settings, to ensure equitable access and care for all. The
COVID-19 PHE highlighted many of the stark inequities that exist within our
health care system. CMS’s goal is to advance progress in creating a care
journey that is free from inequity while optimizing opportunities, access,
and outcomes for historically underserved and under-resourced communities.
Goal 3: Promote Safety
This is a bold goal that strives to
prevent all harm or death from health care errors. Health care errors
remain a significant source of injury and death, and this has worsened
during the COVID-19 PHE. Serious safety events are rarely the result of one
individual error; rather, they are typically the result of several system
flaws. CMS aims to ensure that measures, quality improvement, payment, and
certification programs assess, and hold accountable, health care systems
and providers to keep individuals safe. Additionally, CMS strongly supports
a culture of safety as a foundational element to ensuring the best care for
all individuals. This form of culture includes deeply embedded safety
processes, leadership and governance commitments, and strategic oversight
for prevention.
Goal 4: Foster Engagement
CMS has focused significant attention
on increasing engagement among providers, individuals, and their families
to promote informed and collaborative decision-making. All individuals,
their families, providers, and other caregivers should have the opportunity
to engage in open discussions to promote shared decision making as well as
build trust. To promote this aim, CMS’s goal is to ensure that all
individuals, their families, their caregivers, and even payers have access
to understandable and meaningful health care data, which includes
preferences and health-related social needs, and individual care plans
drafted in a culturally and linguistically appropriate manner that will
assist them in making informed care decisions. CMS expects health care
providers to use the data and information in a proactive way to discuss
care options with individuals, their families, and the communities in which
they live and work. It is also critical to ensure the voice of the individual
is included in care decisions and that directly reported feedback regarding
facility, provider, or payer performance is incorporated as a part of a
comprehensive approach to quality. Additionally, actively engaging with
federal entities, external stakeholders, the states and territories,
communities, and others ensures diverse perspectives regarding quality,
outcomes, and performance are considered.
Goal 5: Strengthen Resiliency
The COVID-19 PHE unveiled
opportunities to improve major aspects of the health care system, such as
coordination, operations (including addressing workforce shortages), and
preparedness. In collaboration with federal partners and external
stakeholders, using lessons learned, it is important to develop metrics,
quality assurance and improvement programs, conditions of participation,
and other actions that evaluate and promote the ability of health care
systems and providers to be prepared for a changing health care ecosystem
and be able to flexibly adapt to future emergencies or challenges.
CMS also believes that it is
important to define what resiliency means to providers, from physicians to
nurses to medical assistants, to promote sustainable cultural change across
the health care system that embraces individual values and empowers all
staff to deliver quality care.
Goal 6: Embrace the Digital Age
Electronic data, which is
standardized, shared, and able to communicate with other systems
(interoperable), is essential to promote seamless care coordination and
communication. Interoperable digital health data also supports continuous
learning health care systems and ensures individuals have access to their
information to support informed decision-making as well as referrals and
community planning. The vision for this body of work under the CMS National
Quality Strategy is to ensure timely, secure, seamless communication and
care coordination between providers, plans, payers, community
organizations, and patients through interoperable, shared, and standardized
digital data across the care continuum to achieve desired outcomes and
provide patients direct access to their information. Additionally, CMS
commits to fully transitioning to digital quality measurement as a part of
the long-term strategy to improve payer-provider alignment and give people
access to their health data when and where it is needed.
Goal 7: Incentivize Innovation and
Technology Adoption to Drive Care Improvements
Continuous innovation and change will
help lead health care transformation. CMS must ensure that scientific
evidence and data from all populations the agency serves, including members
of historically underserved and under-resourced communities, is used to
drive decisions. Additionally, evidence and data should support new
payments and policies as well as inform new quality improvement
interventions and educational outreach to help advance these innovations.
Goal 8: Increasing Alignment
This is one area where CMS continues
to receive significant feedback. Current programs, performance metrics, and
policies can sometimes be confusing or burdensome, and we realize this can
be compounded by needless duplication or lack of alignment. Too often the
number of programs and requirements along with different payment approaches
inadvertently become impediments to care, especially when they remain
unaligned. CMS will endeavor to develop a seamless, coordinated, and
transparent approach to align performance metrics, quality improvement
efforts, programs, policy, and payment across CMS, federal affiliates,
states and territories, and the private sector to improve value. The agency
will also strive to create a simplified national picture of quality measurement
that is comprehensible to individuals, their families, providers, and
payers. Importantly, while stronger alignment will promote transparency and
burden reduction, it also helps CMS facilitate the most impactful and
consistent advances in health equity across all programs and the
communities we serve.
Next Steps
The launch of the CMS National
Quality Strategy and discussion of the overall vision for quality is the
first phase in our new multi-part approach. The next and arguably most
important phase is implementation. This is where the proverbial rubber
meets the road – where CMS, in collaboration with stakeholders, develops
and operationalizes both short and long-term actions to drive forward the
goals of the CMS National Quality Strategy. Continuous engagement is
pivotal, and CMS will begin listening sessions in early summer 2022.
Additionally, the agency will look to
federal affiliates, external stakeholders, Quality Improvement
Organizations, private payers, states and territories, and others to
implement the goals outlined in the CMS National Quality Strategy. The
success of this strategy relies on coordination, innovative thinking, and
collaboration across all entities. A unified approach brings everyone one
step closer to the health care system envisioned for every individual.
Now is the time to act. If the
COVID-19 pandemic taught anything, it is that no action is too small to
improve the overall quality and safety for every individual seeking care.
CMS accepts the challenge to drive quality forward over the next decade and
looks forward to working with all interested stakeholders to improve the
United States health care system.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to acknowledge Dr.
LaShawn McIver, Director of the CMS Office of Minority Health and Executive
Co-sponsor of the CMS National Quality Strategy, Dr. Douglas Jacobs, Chief
Transformation Officer in the Center for Medicare, as well as all of the
members of the new CMS Quality Workgroup for their support and dedication
in helping to shape and implement the CMS National Quality Strategy for the
betterment of all individuals. Thank you!
###
[1] Roosa Tikkanen and Melinda K. Abrams, U.S.
Health Care from a Global Perspective, 2019: Higher Spending, Worse
Outcomes? (Commonwealth Fund, January 2020). https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2020/jan/us-health-care-global-perspective-2019.
Accessed on March 31, 2022.
[2] Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) Scorecard on Hospital-Acquired Conditions Final Results for
2014-2017. (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, July 2020). https://www.ahrq.gov/sites/default/files/wysiwyg/professionals/quality-patient-safety/pfp/Updated-hacreportFInal2017data.pdf.
Accessed on April 25, 2022.
[3] Lee Fleisher and Michelle Schreiber, Health
Care Safety during the Pandemic and Beyond – Building a System That Ensures
Resiliency. (New England Journal of Medicine – Perspective, February
2022). https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2118285.
Accessed on April 25, 2022.
[4] CMS National Quality Strategy. (Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services, April 2022). https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cms-national-quality-strategy-fact-sheet-april-2022.pdf.
Accessed on May 24, 2022.
[5] CMS Behavioral Health Strategy. (Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services, April 2022). https://www.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-04/CCI%20Fact%20Sheet%20Behavioral%20Health-4132002-clean-508.pdf.
Accessed on April 27, 2022.
[6] CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022-2032. (Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services, April 2022). https://www.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-04/CMS%20Framework%20for%20Health%20Equity_2022%2004%2006.pdf.
Accessed on April 25, 2022.
[7] CMS Framework for Health Equity 2022-2032. (Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services, April 2022). https://www.cms.gov/sites/default/files/2022-04/CMS%20Framework%20for%20Health%20Equity_2022%2004%2006.pdf.
Accessed on April 25, 2022.
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