CMS Releases Proposed Rule On Meaningful Use Stage 2

CMS announced today its proposed rule (NPRM) on Stage 2 of the EHR Incentive Program Meaningful Use requirements.  These requirements apply to both eligible professionals and hospitals participating in the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Program.  As previously announced, and proposed within this NPRM, the onset of the Stage 2 meaningful use requirements will not begin until 2014.

The Stage 2 requirements include greater applicability to specialists, changes to the clinical quality measures, and modifications to the core and menu measures.  CMS has issued a fact sheet that briefly summarizes the Stage 2 requirements.

The NPRM will be published in the Federal Register on March 7, 2012.

For questions regarding the Stage 2 proposed requirements or for assistance related to the Medicare or Medicaid EHR Incentive Program please contact Elana Zana.

CMS Proposed Rule on Overpayments – A 10 Year Burden

CMS recently published its proposed rules on reporting and returning overpayments.  These rules are intended to implement the 60 day overpayment reporting requirement pursuant to the Affordable Care Act (the “ACA”).  The ACA created a new section 1128J(d) of the Social Security Act requiring a person who receives an overpayment to return and report the overpayment to HHS, the State, a carrier or a contractor and notify the recipient of the reason for the overpayment.  The statute requires that all  overpayments be refunded within 60 days after the date the overpayment was identified or the date of any corresponding cost report (as applicable), whichever is later.

The proposed regulations only relate to Medicare Parts A and B.  Medicaid, Medicare Advantage, Part D, and managed care organizations are not covered by the proposed rules; however, the 60 day shot clock noted in the statute still applies.

Reporting Overpayments

The proposed rules rename the current voluntary refund process the “self-reported overpayment refund process” (described more fully in the Medicare Financial Management Manual).  Providers will use voluntary refund forms currently on the websites of their Medicare contractors.  Reports of overpayments will require the inclusion of the following information:

1)      Name;

2)      TIN;

3)      How the error was discovered;

4)      The reason for the overpayment;

5)      The health insurance claim number, as appropriate;

6)      Date of service;

7)      Medicare claim control number, as appropriate;

8)      NPI;

9)      Description of the corrective action plan to ensure the error does not occur again;

10)   Whether the person has a corporate integrity plan with the OIG or is under the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol;

11)   The timeframe and the total amount of the refund for the period during which the problem existed that caused the refund;

12)   If a statistical sample was used to determine the overpayment amount, a description of the statistically valid methodology used to determine the overpayment; and

13)   A refund in the amount of the overpayment.

Under the proposed rules, providers are required to report the overpayment within 60 days of identification and refund the overpayment within the same 60 day period.  Providers may request a refund extension through the extended repayment schedule.  A person has “identified” an overpayment if that person has actual knowledge of the existence of the overpayment or acts in reckless disregard or deliberate ignorance of the existence of the overpayment.  Providers who retain an overpayment after the 60 day deadline for reporting and returning the overpayment are liable under the False Claims Act.  Additionally, any person who knows of an overpayment and does not report and return the overpayment may be found liable for Civil Monetary Penalties and excluded from participation in federal health care programs.

Significantly, the proposed rules also set a lookback period of 10 years, meaning that if a provider identifies an overpayment within 10 years of the date the overpayment is received it will have to report and refund such overpayment.

SRDP and OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol

CMS attempts to reconcile these proposed regulations with the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol and the new CMS Self-Referral Disclosure Protocol (“SRDP”) (which allows reports of Stark Law violations).  The reconciliation falls flat and creates confusion which will hopefully be remedied in the final rule.

The 60 day deadline for returning overpayments will be suspended if the OIG acknowledges receipt of submission to the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol.  This suspension will last until a settlement agreement is entered, the person withdraws from the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol, or the person is removed from the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol.  Additionally, a person satisfies the reporting requirements listed above by making a disclosure under the OIG Self-Disclosure Protocol which results in a settlement agreement.

Similarly, the 60 day deadline for returning overpayments is suspended if CMS acknowledges receipt of a submission to the SRDP until such time as a settlement agreement is entered, a person withdraws from the SRDP, or the person is removed from the SRDP.  However, the reporting requirement described above is not tolled by submission to the SRDP.

Conclusion

Regardless of these proposed rules, providers must currently report and refund overpayments within 60 days per the ACA.  CMS has opened public comment on these proposed rules through April 16, 2012.  If you would like assistance on drafting comments or assistance with reporting an overpayment please contact Don Black or Elana Zana.

ACO Final Rule – Drastically Reduces Quality Measure Requirements

The Accountable Care Organization (“ACO”) final rules show that comments to CMS really do make a difference.  The public outcry against the 65 quality measures proposed in the spring led to CMS’ 50% cut of the number quality measures.  Along with the large cut, CMS explained its plan for allowing ACOs to meet the measure requirements by reporting on the measures in the first year and receiving “pay for performance” in the following years based on the weighted scores received in each quality measure.

Quality Measures

The revised list of quality measures are broken out into 33 different measures (predominately with NQF measure numbers) with four umbrella categories and five subcategories as follows:

  1. Patient/Caregiver Experience (7 measures)
  2. Care Coordination/Patient Safety (6 measures, includes the EHR Incentive Program)
  3. Preventative Health (8 measures)
  4. At Risk Population (12 measures)
    1. Diabetes (6 measures)
    2. Hypertension (1 measure)
    3. Ischemic vascular disease (2 measures)
    4. Heart failure (1 measure)
    5. Coronary Artery Disease (2 measures)

The tables provided in the final rule at pages 67889-90 are particularly helpful in visually identifying the measures, the method of data submission and whether the particular measure is pay for reporting or pay for performance.  The measures will be submitted to CMS through either surveys (for patient/caregiver experience measures), claims, the EHR Incentive Program, or the Group Practice Reporting Option (“GPRO”) Web Interface.  The surveys will be conducted using the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and System (“CAHPS”) surveys for 2012 and 2013, in future years, ACOs will have to select a CMS approved vendor to administer the surveys.

EHR Incentive Program

One of the significant changes to the quality measures was the expansion of the EHR incentive program related measure.  The quality measure no longer requires that 50% of the primary care providers to achieve meaningful use in order for the ACO to participate.  The EHR quality measure now recognizes those participating in the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program do not have to meet meaningful use requirements in their first year of participation.  As such, the new measure now includes primary care providers that successfully qualify for the EHR Incentive Program under either Medicare or Medicaid.  In addition, CMS cut previously proposed measures that were redundant with the EHR Incentive Program such as the measure concerning clinical decision support and electronic prescribing.

CMS still emphasizes the importance of the usage of the EHR technology by giving the EHR quality measure a higher weight.  Eligible professionals participating in ACOs are still eligible to separately participate in the EHR Incentive Programs or the e-prescribing incentive program.

Pay for Reporting vs. Pay for Performance

In the first year of participation, all of the quality measures may be satisfied by merely reporting on the quality measures.  For pay for reporting, ACOs will earn the maximum sharing rate for complete and accurate reporting of 100% of the required data, and no quality threshold must be met.  In the second year, 25 of the quality measures will be pay for performance, and eight will continue to be pay for reporting.  In the third year, all but one quality measure will be on a pay for performance basis.

In the pay for performance years, each domain will be given equal weight of 25% in the calculation of the ACOs overall quality performance score.  Each of the individual measures will be equally weighted within the domains, except for the EHR Incentive Program quality measure which is double weighted.  ACOs must minimally attain 30% (or be in the national 30th percentile) for that quality measure.  Subregulatory guidance will indicate the quality performance rates an ACO needs to achieve in order to earn the maximum quality points in a domain.

Recognizing that meeting all 33 measures in a given year may be difficult, CMS is requiring that ACOs achieve the quality performance standards on 70% of the measures in each domain.  Failure to achieve the 70% standard will result in a corrective action plan and re-evaluation in the final year.  However, if an ACO scores a zero for an entire measure, it will not be able to share in the savings generated.  Due to the double weight of the EHR measure, failure to meet the EHR measure in the Care Coordination domain would cause the ACO to miss the 70% cut-off.

Reporting Calendar & PQRS

ACOs are expected to report on the quality measures on a calendar year basis, beginning with the reporting period starting January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2012.  Even though a “performance year” in the regulations may begin in April or July of 2012 and end in December 2013, the quality performance for the first performance year will be based on reporting of the measures from January 1, 2013 through December 31, 2013.  Eligible professionals participating in an ACO that start the agreement in April or July of 2012 will also qualify for the 2012 PQRS incentive under the Shared Savings program by reporting the ACO GPRO measures for the full 2012 Physician Quality Reporting System (“PQRS”) calendar year reporting period.

Note that ACO participant entities that want to qualify for PQRS must participate as group practices and not separately participate or earn a PQRS incentive outside of the Shared Savings Program.  Individual ACO providers may not seek to qualify for the individual PQRS incentive under the traditional PQRS plans.  CMS also relaxed its requirements regarding the PQRS incentives.  If an ACO fails to meet the Shared Savings Program quality performance measures and therefore is not eligible for shared savings, the participating entities may still be eligible to receive the PQRS incentive under the Shared Savings Program.   

More Updates Coming

ACO participants should keep an eye out for subregulatory guidance which will detail the annual measure specifications.  CMS plans on releasing specifications in December and in the first quarter of 2012.

For more information regarding the ACO quality measures or ACOs in general, please contact Elana Zana.

The Nuts and Bolts of Determining Shared Savings and Losses for ACOs.

Under the final rules released by CMS on Accountable Care Organizations (“ACOs”), CMS offers ACOs the opportunity to participate in one of two models — a shared savings only model during the duration of the ACO’s first agreement period (Track 1), or a two-sided model in which there is a sharing of both savings and losses (Track 2).

Track 1 – Shared Savings Only Model

Citing the importance of attracting broad participation in the ACO program, including from small, rural, safety net and small and medium-sized physician groups, CMS created a shared savings only model for the duration of the ACO’s first three-year agreement period.  Under Track 1, which CMS deems a “gentler on ramp” into the ACO world, the ACO shares in the savings without the financial risk of sharing in the losses.  After the initial agreement period, the ACO must move to the two-sided model under Track 2.  Unlike in the Proposed Rule, ACOs who experience net losses under Track 1 in their first agreement period may renew their participation under Track 2.

Track 2 – Shared Savings/Losses Model

Track 2 is known as a two-sided model in which the ACO shares in both the savings and losses, with the opportunity for higher reward in exchange for performance-based risk.  Track 2 is available for ACOs during their first agreement period, and is the only option available for ACOs who have exhausted their first agreement period under Track 1.

Determining Shared Savings

In order to determine shared savings, CMS must take the following steps for each ACO:

Step 1.  Establish the expenditure benchmark.  The expenditure benchmark is a three-year benchmark (one year for each year in the agreement period).

Determining Patient Population for Whom the Benchmark is Calculated

 CMS’ methodology for establishing an ACO’s expenditure benchmark is based on the Medicare FFS Parts A and B expenditures of beneficiaries who would have been assigned to the ACO in any of the three years prior to the start of an ACO’s agreement period using the ACO participants’ TINs identified at the start of the agreement period.  CMS indicated, however, that it favors a benchmarking methodology based on an ACO’s actual  assigned population and intends to revisit whether it should adopt such a methodology in future rulemaking.

CMS calculates the benchmark expenditures by categorizing beneficiaries in the following cost categories:  ESRD, disabled, aged/dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and aged/non-dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.  CMS also finalized its proposal to truncate an assigned beneficiary’s total annual Parts A and B FFS per capita expenditures at the 99th percentile of the national Medicare FFS expenditures for each benchmark performance year, which has the advantage of excluding outlier payments from the expenditure benchmark calculations.  CMS adopted its proposed policy of weighting benchmark expenditures for each benchmark year as follows:  BY1 = 10%, BY2 = 30% and BY3 = 60%.

Benchmark Adjustments

 CMS adopted the CMS-HHC risk adjustment model that has been used under the Medicare Advantage program for adjusting the ACO’s benchmark expenditures. CMS will make additional risk adjustments for performance years to take into account changes in assigned beneficiaries.  For newly assigned beneficiaries, CMS will annually update the ACO’s CMS-HHC risk scores.  For continuously assigned beneficiaries, if there is no decline in the ACO’s CMS-HHC risk scores, CMS will use demographic factors to adjust for severity and case mix.  However, if the continuously assigned population shows a decline in its CMS-HHC risk scores, CMS will lower the risk score for that population.  An ACO’s updated benchmark will be restated in the appropriate performance year based on the health status of the ACO’s assigned beneficiaries.  In addition, CMS will make adjustments for  ESRD, disabled, aged/dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and aged/non-dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.

Trending Factors

CMS finalized its proposal to trend forward the most recent three years of per-beneficiary expenditures using growth rates in per beneficiary expenditures for Medicare Parts A and B services in order to estimate the benchmark for each ACO.  In addition, CMS will make calculations for separate cost categories for ESRD, disabled, aged/dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries and aged/non-dual eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.  For initial expenditure determinations in the performance period, CMS finalized its proposed rule to use the national growth rate in expenditures for Part A and B services for FFS beneficiaries.  During the rest of the agreement period, CMS will update the benchmark by a flat amount, using the projected absolute amount of growth in national per capita Medicare Part A and B expenditures.

Step 2.  Determine per capita Medicare expenditures in each performance year of the agreement period.

Step 3.  Determine the appropriate minimum savings rate (MSR).

 CMS stated that the purpose of the MSR is to account for normal variation in expenditures.

Track 1 MSR Sliding Scale – Under Track 1, CMS adopted a sliding MSR scale to account for normal variation in expenditures based on the number of Medicare fee for service beneficiaries assigned to the ACO.  For Track 1 the sliding scale varies from a high of 3.6% – 3.9% for 5,000-5,999 assigned beneficiaries, to a low of 2% for 60,000+ assigned beneficiaries.

Track 2 – Flat 2% MSR.  Under Track 2, CMS will apply a flat two percent MSR to all ACOs.

Step 4.  Determine the appropriate sharing rate for ACOs meeting or exceeding the MSR.

 For those ACOs that have realized savings by meeting or exceeding the MSR, the following shared savings rate percentages will apply:

Track 1 – The ACO may earn up to 50% of the shared savings.

Track 2 – The ACO may  earn up to 60% of the shared savings.

Both Track 1 and Track 2 ACOs will share on a first dollar savings once the ACO achieves savings in excess of the MSR.

Step 5.  Determine the required sharing cap.

 CMS adopted the following payment limits, which are the maximum amounts of shared savings that can be realized by the ACO in any performance year and are intended to avoid creating incentives for excessive reductions in utilization.

Track 1 – 10% of the ACO’s updated expenditure benchmark for the performance year.

Track 2 – 15% of the ACO’s updated expenditure benchmark for the performance year.

Determining Shared Losses

 Just as shared savings must be calculated for ACOs, shared losses for Track 2 ACOs must also be determined.  The methodology for determining shared losses under Track 2 will mirror the methodology for determining shared savings, including a formula for calculating shared losses based on the final sharing rate, use of a MLR to protect against losses resulting from random variation and a loss sharing limit to provide a ceiling on the amount of losses an ACO will be required to repay.  To be responsible for sharing losses with the Medicare program, an ACO’s average per capita Medicare expenditures for the performance year must exceed its updated benchmark costs for the year by at least two percent.  Once losses meet or exceed the MLR (which is calculated as one minus the final sharing rate), an ACO would be responsible for paying the percentage of excess expenditures, on a first dollar basis, up to the proposed annual limit (60%) on shared losses.

For more information regarding the shared savings model or ACO’s in general, please contact Carrie Soli.

ACO Fraud and Abuse Law Waivers

In conjunction with the issuance of the final rules related for Accountable Care Organizations (“ACOs”) under the Medicare Shared Savings Program, the OIG published an interim final rule establishing waivers to fraud and abuse laws in connection with the Shared Savings Program.

The waivers were created to address industry concerns that restrictions in certain laws aimed at preventing fraud and abuse of federal health care programs, i.e., the Physician Self-Referral law (commonly known as the “Stark Law”), the federal anti-kickback statute (“AKS”), and the federal civil monetary penalties (“CMP”) law, would limit or otherwise impede development of innovative integrated care models envisioned by the Shared Savings Program.  The goal of the waivers is to effectively balance the need for ACO innovation and flexibility in the Shared Savings Program while protecting beneficiaries and the Medicare program.

The interim final rule establishes five waivers to the fraud and abuse laws which CMS and the OIG deemed necessary to carry out provisions of the Shared Savings Program.  Parties seeking to ensure that an arrangement is covered by a waiver for a particular law may look to any waiver that applies to that law.  An arrangement may meet the criteria of more than one waiver.

Key Points/General Overview:

  • To qualify for a waiver, the arrangement must meet all of the conditions set forth in the waiver.
  • A waiver of a specific fraud and abuse law is not needed for an arrangement to the extent that the arrangement: (1) does not implicate the specific fraud and abuse law, or (2) implicates the law, but either fits within an existing exception or safe harbor, as applicable, or does not otherwise violate the law.  Arrangements that do not fit a waiver have no special protection and must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis for compliance.  Failure to fit in a wavier is not, in and of itself, a violation of the fraud and abuse laws.
  • For purposes of the waivers, “reasonably related to the purposes of the Shared Savings Program” means the purposes of promoting accountability for the quality, cost, and overall care for a Medicare population; managing and coordinating care for Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries through an ACO; and encouraging investment in infrastructure and redesigned care processes for high quality and efficient service delivery for patients, including Medicare beneficiaries.
  • CMS, OIG, and HHS will closely monitor ACOs entering into the program in 2012 through June 2013, and plan to narrow the waivers if they result in the unintended effect of shielding abusive arrangements.  The waivers could be narrowed by modifying the waivers to add or substitute conditions to the waivers; limiting ACO arrangements involving referral sources to those that are fair market value or commercially reasonably or involve services performed by the referral sources; preclude waiver protections for arrangements that involve individuals or entities that are not part of the ACO; or include a requirement that ACOs submit reports regarding their arrangement.  CMS and the OIG seek comments on these approaches to narrow the waivers.

Detailed summaries of the five waivers are provided below:

“ACO Pre-Participation” Waiver.  This waiver of the Stark Law, the AKS, and the gainsharing CMP applies to ACO-related start-up arrangements in anticipation of participation in the Shared Savings Program, but which pre-date an ACO’s participation agreement.

  • The parties must act with the good faith intent to develop an ACO that will participate in the Shared Savings Program starting in a particular year, must submit a completed application to participate in a Shared Savings Program for that year, and must be taking diligent steps to develop an ACO.
  • The ACO’s governing body must make a bona fide determination that the arrangement is reasonably related to the purposes of the Shared Savings Program.
  • Certain documentation of the arrangement must be maintained for at least 10 years following completion of the arrangement and made available to HHS upon request.
  • An ACO may use the pre-participation waiver (including any extensions granted) only one time.
  • As used in the waiver, “start-up arrangement” means any items, services, facilities, or goods (including non-medical items, services, facilities, or goods) used to create or develop an ACO that are provided by such ACO, ACO participants, or ACO providers/suppliers.  Commentary on the waiver provides a non-exhaustive list of examples of items, services, facilities and goods considered as start-up arrangements.
  • The start and end dates for when the waiver applies varies based on the ACO’s target year, whether an ACO’s participation application is accepted or denied, whether the ACO failed to submit an application for the target year, and whether the ACO was granted an extension of the waiver.
  • This pre-participation wavier does not cover arrangements involving drug and device manufacturers, distributors, DME suppliers, or home health suppliers.

“ACO Participation” Waiver.  This waiver of the Stark Law, the AKS, and the gainsharing CMP applies to ACO-related arrangements during the term of the ACO’s participation agreement under the Shared Savings Program and for a limited time thereafter.

  • The ACO must have entered into a participation agreement and remain in good standing under its participation agreement.
  • The ACO’s governing body must make a bona fide determination that the arrangement is reasonably related to the purposes of the Shared Savings Program.
  • Certain documentation of the arrangement must be maintained for at least 10 years following completion of the arrangement and made available to HHS upon request.
  • The waiver period starts on the start date of the participation agreement, and ends six (6) months following the earlier of the expiration of the participation agreement (including any renewals thereof) or the date on which the ACO has voluntarily terminated the participation agreement.  If CMS terminates the participation agreement, the waiver period ends on the date of the termination notice.

“Shared Savings Distribution” Waiver.  This waiver of the Stark Law, the AKS, and the gainsharing CMP applies to distributions and uses of shared savings payments earned under the Shared Savings Program.  The waiver permits shared savings to be distributed or used with the ACO in any form or manner, including “downstream” distributions or uses of shared savings funds between or among the ACO, its ACO participants, and its ACO providers/suppliers.

  • The ACO must have entered into a participation agreement and remain in good standing under its participation agreement.
  • The waiver applies to distributions and uses of shared savings earned during the term of the ACO’s participation agreement, even if the actual distribution or use of the shared savings occurs after expiration of the agreement.  The waiver also applies to individuals or entities that were ACO participants and ACO providers/suppliers at the time the shared savings were earned, even if they are not part of the ACO at the time of the actual distribution.
  • The waiver does not protect distributions of shared savings to referring physicians outside the ACO, unless those referring physicians are being compensation (using shared savings) for activities that are reasonably related to the purposes of the Shared Savings Program or were ACO participants or ACO providers/suppliers during the year in which the shared savings were earned by the ACO.
  • Under this waiver, payments of shared savings distributions made directly or indirectly from a hospital to a physician are not made knowingly to induce the physician to reduce or limit medically necessary items or services to patients to patients under the physician’s direct care.

“Compliance with the Physician Self-Referral Law” Waiver.  This waiver of the AKS and the gainsharing CMP applies to ACO arrangements that implicate the Stark Law but which meet an existing exception under the Stark Law.

  • The ACO must have entered into a participation agreement and remain in good standing under its participation agreement.
  • The financial relationship must be reasonably related to the purposes of the Shared Savings Program.
  • The financial relationship must fully comply with an exception under the Stark Law, as set forth at 42 CFR §411.255 through 411.357.
  • The waiver period begins on the start date of the participation agreement, and ends on the earlier of the expiration of the term of the participation agreement (including any renewals thereof) or the date on which the participation agreement has been terminated.

“Patient Incentive” Waiver.  This waiver of the beneficiary inducement CMP and the AKS applies to medically related incentives offered by ACOs under the Shared Savings Program to beneficiaries to encourage preventive care and compliance with treatment regimes.  More specifically, those fraud and abuse laws are waived with respect to items or services provided by an ACO, its ACO participants, or its ACO providers/suppliers to beneficiaries for free or below fair market value.

  • The ACO must have entered into a participation agreement and remain in good standing under its participation agreement.
  • There must be a reasonable connection between the items or services and the medical care of the beneficiary.
  • The items or services must be in-kind, and must be either preventive care items or services, or advance certain clinical goals (i.e., adherence to a treatment regime, drug regime or follow-up care plan, or management of a chronic disease or condition).
  • The waiver does not protect financial incentives to beneficiaries, such as waiving or reducing patient cost sharing amounts (i.e., co-payments or deductibles).  (Note that the Shared Savings Program itself prohibits ACO, ACO participants, and ACO providers/suppliers from providing gifts or other remuneration to beneficiaries as inducement from receiving items or services from, or remaining in, an ACO.)
  • The waiver also does not protect or the provision of free or below fair market value items or services by manufacturers or other vendors to beneficiaries, the ACO, ACO participants, or ACO providers/suppliers, including any discount arrangements between a manufacturer and an ACO.
  • The waiver period begins on the start date of the participation agreement, and ends on the earlier of the expiration of the term of the participation agreement (including any renewals thereof) or the date on which the participation agreement has been terminated.  However, a beneficiary may keep items received before the participation agreement expired or was terminated, and may receive the remainder of any service initiated before the participation agreement expired or was terminated.

For more information regarding the OIG’s fraud and abuse waiversor ACO’s in general contact Lee Kuo.

CMS Releases Final Rule on Accountable Care Organizations

On October 20, 2011, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released its final rule on Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), also known as the Medicare Shared Savings Program (the “Program”), enacted as a part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (aka Health Reform).  The Program is designed to encourage providers and hospitals to create networks that deliver efficient and collaborative care, and allows ACOs to receive a portion of the savings that they produce.

The proposed rule was met with criticism from many providers, hospitals, and trade groups.  In response, CMS adopted a relaxed version of the proposed requirements for ACOs.  Some key changes, include:

  • One-Sided Risk Model:  Under the proposed rule, all ACOs would have operated under a “two-sided” risk model where ACOs had the chance of losing money if they did not produce sufficient savings.  In the final rule, ACOs are allowed to participate in a “one-side” risk model, which will allow providers to participate in the program without risking a loss in the event that their ACO does not produce savings.  The final rule also allows ACOs to opt into a “two-sided” risk model in exchange for the opportunity to receive a greater share of savings.
  • Shared Savings:  The proposed rule originally required that the ACO provide a savings of at least 2% to receive the shared savings payments.  Under the final rule, ACO’s are eligible beginning with the first savings they create.
  • Prospective Beneficiary Assignment:  Originally, CMS intended to assign Medicare beneficiaries retrospectively based on where the beneficiaries received care during the previous year.  In the final rule, CMS sought to provide ACOs more certainty about their beneficiary population and thus implemented a “preliminary perspective assignment” of Medicare beneficiaries.  CMS will modify the beneficiary assignment lists at the end of each contract year in order to determine final assignments.
  • Reduction in Quality Measures:  The proposed rules required ACOs to track 65 performance measures; whereas the final rule requires ACOs to track only 33 measures.
  • Eliminating the Savings Threshold:  The proposed rule required ACOs to produce savings of at least two percent in order to be eligible for shared savings.  The final rule allows ACOs to share in savings beginning with the first savings that they produce.
  • Changes to ACO Organization and Governance: The final rules allows for more flexible ACO organization and governance requirements.  Under the final rule, ACOs are still required to be a legal entity, as recognized under state, federal, or tribal law.  ACOs must meet requirements for governance, leadership, and management. However, the final rule also allows CMS to consider an innovative ACO with a management or governance structure that does not meet the regulatory requirements.
  • Advanced Payment Model:  In attempt to remove some funding hurdles faced by small ACOs, CMS introduced an Advance Payment program that will allow a select number of rural and small physician-owned ACOs to receive up-front payments that the agency will later recoup from the savings that the ACOs produce.
  • Expanded Participation:  The final rule broadens participation to include RHCs and FQHC, as well as practices/organizations in which specialists provide primary care.
  • Relaxed EHR Requirements:  The final rule eases EHR burdens by no longer requiring EHR meaningful use compliance for participation in the Program.  Under the final rule, EHR is retained as a quality measure, but weighted higher than measures for quality scoring purposes.

CMS will begin to accept applications for the Program on January 1, 2012, with start dates on April 1, 2012 and July 1, 2012.

CMS Issues Stage 1 Info Sheets on Meaningful Use (updated July 2013)

CMS has issued information sheets on the meaningful use requirements.  Releasing one sheet for eligible professionals and another for eligible hospitals, these sheets are designed to explain each meaningful use objective and its respective measure.  The sheets provide links to each meaningful use objective and then explains the numerator and denominator requirements, attestation requirements and relevant additional information.  To access the information sheets click on the links below:

Stage 1 EHR Meaningful Use Specification Sheets for Eligible Professionals or view the table of contents.

Stage 1 EHR Meaningful Use Specification Sheets for Eligible Hospitals

CMS is also offering a National Provider call regarding meaningful use on August 18th.  To register for the call click here.

Understanding the meaningful use measures and objectives is sometimes complicated.  For assistance with meaningful use or the EHR Incentive Programs in general contact Elana Zana.

Hospital Deadline for Medicare EHR Incentive Payments Near

For those hospitals interested in applying for the Medicare EHR Incentive Payments for 2011, the last day to begin the 90-day reporting period is July 3rd.  Hospitals and CAHs must demonstrate meaningful use for 90-days during the 2011 fiscal year (which ends September 30, 2011).  Hospitals and CAHs have until November 30, 2011 to register and attest to meaningful use.

CMS Issues Medicare EHR Incentive Checks

Beginning this week, CMS will begin issuing Medicare EHR Incentive Payments to those providers who have successfully attested to meeting meaningful use.  Eligible Professionals who have met the meaningful use requirements can expect payment of $18,000.  (Note, Eligible Professionals that have not yet met the $24,000 Medicare allowed charges threshold will not receive a check until that threshold is met).  Eligible Hospitals that have attested to meaningful use can also begin to expect their incentive payments.

CMS will issue incentive payments in the same manner as providers receive payments for Medicare services, via electronic funds transfer or check. Payments will be made to the TIN selected during registration for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program.

For those providers who have not yet registered for the EHR Incentive Program there is still plenty of time in 2011 to do so.  The Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs have launched in some states, with other expecting to launch later this Summer.

For assistance with registering for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program or understanding meaningful use please contact Elana Zana.

Attestation for EHR Incentive Programs Available

Earlier this month, CMS launched the attestation portion of the EHR Incentive Payment Program.  Beginning on April 18th, eligible professionals and hospitals are now able to attest to meaningful use (or adopt, implement or upgrade for Medicaid).  Along with the attestation itself, CMS launched its Meaningful Use Attestation Calculator, a wizard which walks eligible professionals and hospitals through the meaningful use objectives and enables the entity to determine if it can successfully meet the meaningful use standards prior to filling out the registration form. 

For those providers that are able to begin the registration and attestation process, access to registration and attestation is available here.  The CMS website also has a user guide that is helpful when registering as well as FAQs.  To be eligible for either the Medicare or Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs an eligible professional or hospital must be using certified EHR technology.  The ONC provides a list of which EHR systems are “certified.”

In addition, CMS is offering teleconferences regarding registration and attestation:

  • Tuesday, May 3, 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. ETRegister to join this call if you are an eligible hospital or CAH who wants to learn more about the attestation process for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program.
  • Thursday, May 5, 1:30 – 3:00 p.m. ETRegister to join this call if you are an EP who wants to learn more about the attestation process for the Medicare EHR Incentive Program.

Some states are also offering webinars about the Medicaid EHR Incentive Payment Program and how to register.  Registration for the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program requires both registration with CMS and on the state level.  However, eligible professionals and hospitals will not be able to register with CMS for the Medicaid EHR Incentive Program until their state is ready to start its Medicaid EHR Incentive Program.  Washington expects to go-live in June 2010; California plans to go-live this Summer for eligible professionals. 

If you have questions regarding the Medicare or Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs or would like some assistance with understanding meaningful use or calculating patient volume (Medicaid) please contact Elana Zana or Dave Schoolcraft.