White paper detailing how the CMS Innovation Center will develop and test new payment and delivery models is in alignment with many ACP policies
Feb. 4, 2022 (ACP)鈥擳he Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Innovation Center (CMMI), which investigates better ways to reimburse medical professionals, detailed a new vision for the future in a strategy paper released in October, which is closely aligned with the policies of the 麻豆直播app.
The CMMI white paper generally reflects ACP priorities regarding the future of the American health care system, said Nadia Daneshvar, an ACP associate of health IT policy. 鈥淭he shift to value-based care is long overdue,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd we hope the center will take time to carefully consider our comments and recommendations for improving their strategy and aligning it more closely with the needs of clinicians and their patients.鈥
The CMMI was established through the Affordable Care Act. Its mission is to develop and test new health care payment and delivery models that improve quality of care, mitigate costs and reformulate payment systems to incentivize patient-centered practices in Medicare, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program, Daneshvar said. CMMI is also heavily involved in implementation of the Medicare Quality Payment Program, which rewards physicians for providing 鈥渉igh-quality and cost-efficient care.鈥
In the paper, CMMI announced it will evaluate more aspects of proposed payment systems, such as equity, care delivery transformation, patient outcomes and market characteristics. It also wants to reduce complexity in payment models, streamline participation requirements and reduce administrative burden.
On Jan. 12, ACP sent a 19-page letter to the CMS administrator expressing the ACP perspective on the future of the CMMI. Dr. William Fox, ACP chair of the Medical Practice and Quality Committee, wrote that ACP is 鈥渧ery pleased鈥 to find many parallels between the CMMI strategies and ACP recommendations as addressed in two ACP policy papers: the 2020 鈥淰ision for the U.S. Health Care System鈥 and the 2021 鈥淐omprehensive Framework to Address Disparities and Discrimination in Health Care.鈥
鈥淥f course, our support also depends on how the execution of these strategies goes,鈥 Daneshvar cautioned. 鈥淪ometimes implementation can look very different from what is planned. And as usual, the devil is in the details.鈥
Daneshvar added that ACP is also 鈥渆xtremely pleased鈥 that CMMI will be reexamining its activities with a major focus on value-based care. ACP is in favor of the CMMI shift to using broader measures of model success, 鈥渆specially health equity and person-centered care, instead of relying almost exclusively on its original metric of improved quality while either maintaining or reducing cost, or reduced cost while maintaining or improving quality,鈥 she said.
However, 鈥渨hile ACP understands and agrees with the broader metrics the Innovation Center will be using to supplement its assessment of models鈥攅.g., impacts on health equity, person-centered care and health system transformation鈥擜CP does not support the continued use of cost of care as the most fundamental metric,鈥 Daneshvar said.
Reducing administrative burden is currently a top priority for ACP. 鈥淲hile ACP supports many of the Innovation Center's strategic objectives, we emphasize that any new models should increase quality and access without imposing undue burdens on clinicians and other medical professionals,鈥 Daneshvar said. 鈥淥n a related note, we hope the Innovation Center does not introduce mandatory models prematurely.鈥
For now, she said, 鈥渨e thank the Innovation Center for outlining its strategic plan for the next decade and for the opportunity to provide feedback on the white paper.鈥