Thursday, April 28, 2016

AMDA, the Society for Post-Acute/LTC Medicine has Victory MACRA Proposed Rule: Pass to MD/NPP that care for SNF residents

Pass to any physician/NPP that bills visits in a SNF.  This is big.  They will be happy.  Now,  require them to join AMDA and become a Certified Medical Director, or hit the road.

From AMDA, the Society for Post-Acute/Long Term Care Medicine today:


MACRA Proposed Rule Released; Victories for PA/LTC Professionals 

Yesterday the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued their proposed rulefor implementing certain provisions of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA). MACRA ended more than a decade of last-minute fixes to the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula and made improvements to various health care programs by streamlining quality based payments programs such as the Physician Quality Reporting System, the Value Modifier Program, and the Medicare Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program.
Congress streamlined these various programs into a single framework to help clinicians transition from payments based on volume to payments based on value. The proposed rule would implement these changes through the unified framework called the Quality Payment Program, which includes two paths: The Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Advanced Alternative Payment Models (APMs).
This rule proposes polices to improve physician payments by changing the way Medicare incorporates quality measurement into payments and by developing new policies to address and incentivize participation in alternative payment models.
“It’s gratifying to know that our hard work in educating CMS about the nuances of our care setting has resulted in some movement to ensure that our members won’t be penalized for choosing to work with this ill, vulnerable, complex population,” said he Society’s Public Policy Committee Chair, Karl Steinberg, MD, CMD, of important provisions to members that are highlighted below.
The Society is still reviewing the details of the 962-page rule but of note for Society members include provisions that:
  • Exclude services billed under CPT codes 99304-99318 when the claim includes the POS 31 (SNF, meaning a resident receiving skilled post-acute services) modifier from the definition of primary care services for MIPS under the Resource Use Criteria category.
  • MIPS-eligible clinicians (no longer ‘eligible professionals’) who lack control over the EHR technology in their practice locations (e.g. surgeons using ambulatory surgery centers or a physician treating patients in a nursing home who does not have any other vested interest in the facility, and may have no influence or control over the health IT decisions of that facility) would need to submit an application demonstrating that a majority, 50 percent or more, of their outpatient encounters occur in locations where they have no control over the health IT decision of the facility, and request their advancing care information performance category sore be reweighted to zero.
In its comments on the CMS MACRA Request for Information (RFI) released earlier this year, The Society raised concerns that attributing total cost of SNF patients and comparing those with physicians who see patients in an ambulatory setting creates an unfair system within MIPS and will have unintended consequences that will lead to decreased access to care. Similarly, The Society highlighted concerns with the current meaningful use requirements that potentially penalize physicians who see patients in the SNF although there is very little current infrastructure to help those physicians achieve MU.
“This is a clear signal that CMS is listening to our society’s comments and is a positive step forward for PA/LTC professionals” said Alex Bardakh, Director of Public Policy and Advocacy. The Society will continue to review the rule and inform members of other provisions of interest along with a summary. Comments on the proposed rule are due June 27th.

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Sent on behalf of AMDA - The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine
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