Medicare Shared Savings Program Flashcards
Definition of ACO (4)
- ) New category of health care providers created by ACA as part of Medicare Shared Savings program
- ) Definition - a legal entity composed of certified medicare providers or suppliers. These providers and suppliers work together to coordinate care for a defined population of Medicare FFS beneficiaries, and they have control over the ACO’s decision-making process.
- ) ACOs that meet specified quality performance standards are eligible to receive payments for shared savings if they can reduce spending growth below target amounts.
- ) Medicare beneficiaries will be assigned to ACOs based on where they received certain primary care and preventive services in most recent 12 months.
Eligibility requirements for ACOs to participate in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (7)
- ) Must be eligible type of provider
- ) Must be capable of receiving and distributing shared savings, repaying share losses, ensuring all providers comply with program requirements, and performing other required functions
- ) Governing body must be at least be 75% of participating provider and include medicare beneficiaries served by the ACA
- ) Leadership and management critiera include: clinical oversight done by senior level medical director who is a board-certified physician and providers must make meaningful financial or human investment to the clinical integration program
- ) Must exhibit strong patient-centeredness element
- ) Must have at least 5,000 beneficiaries and sufficient PCPs
- ) Must have a compliance plan, lead compliance official, and mechanisms for identifying compliance problems
Providers eligible to participate in an ACO (7)
- ) Prof in group practice arrangements
- ) Networks of individual practices
- ) joint venture arrangement between hospitals and professionals
- ) Hospitals employing professionals
- ) Critical access hospitals that are paid by medicare in a way that supports collection of data needed to assign patients to providers
- ) Rural health clinics
- ) Federally qualified health clinics
Ways ACOs must demonstrate patient-centeredness (8)
- ) A beneficiary care experience survey
- ) Patient involvement in ACO governance by representation in the governing body
- ) Process for evaluating the health needs of the population
- ) System in place to identify high-risk individuals and develop individualized care plans for targeted populations
- ) Mechanism in place for coordination of care
- ) Process in place for communicating clinical knowledge to beneficiaries in an understandable way
- ) Process to allow beneficiaries to access their medical records
- ) Processes for measuring clinical or service performance and using these results to improve care and service
Quality Performance Core Domains (4)
- ) Patient Experience
- ) Care coordination and patient safety
- ) Preventive care
- ) Caring for at risk population
ACO Beneficiary Assignment (2)
- ) Beneficiary assigned to ACO if physician in that ACO account for the largest total Medicare allowable charges that beneficiary’s primary and preventive services for most recent 12 months.
- ) CMS will review the claims for the remaining unassigned beneficiaries who had at least 1 primary or preventive services by a provider in ACO.
Data sources for performance measures (3)
- ) Survey instruments
- ) Claims (supplied by CMS)
- ) Electronic health record incentive program data
Public reporting requirements of ACOs (2)
- ) Organizational information (I.e list of all participants and members of the governing body)
- ) Quality performance scores and shared savings or losses
Benchmark Calculation (5)
- )Based on prior 3 years of ACO baseline costs. Benchmark cost is weighted average of prior 3 years: yr 3 =60%, yr 2 = 30%, yr 1 = 10%.
- ) Costs are risk adjusted for changes in health status.
- ) Separate benchmark expenditures for certain beneficiaries.
- ) Benchmark based on baseline only calculated at beginning of contract. The other years are trended.
- ) Benchmark trended by Medicare part a and b trends a. Theses are risk adjusted.
Payment Model Approach (2)
- ) 1 sided model; but only can do once
2. ) 2 sided model
Minimum Savings Rate (MSR) (2)
- ) For 1-sided model, this is based in number of assigned beneficiaries. Once number of beneficiaries hit over 6,100, then this is 2%. Min is 500 with MSR =3.9%.
- ) For 2 sided model, flat 2%
Shared savings and losses percentages (2)
- ) For 1-sided model, shared savings is 50%
2. ) For 2-sided model, gain is 60%. Losses is the min of 60% and (1-60% with quality score).
Caps on gains and payouts
- ) For 1 sided model, cap is 10% of benchmark cost.
- ) For 2 sided model, gain cap is 15% of benchmark cost. Payout cap as percent of benchmark cost: yr 1 = 5%, yr 2 = 7.5%, yr 3 = 10%.
CMS monitors ACO impact on at risk beneficiary (2)
- ) CMS relies on beneficiary complaints, site visits, audits
- ) data audited includes utilizations and cost data, quality performance measures, and shared savings distributions
CMS actions if ACO is not in compliance (3)
- ) Issues warning
- ) Placed ACO on corrective plan or special monitoring
- ) Terminates ACO