Various payment innovations have been testing ways to support primary care innovation and PCMH for many years. Depending on the region and the provider arrangement (e.g., a solo or small practice, an Independent Practice Association or Accountable Care Organization (ACO), or an employed provider as part of a health system), some practices that were once paid fee-for-service only, are now receiving additional per member per month payments (PMPM). Others are receiving payment incentives tied to performance metrics that measure quality, cost, or patient engagement. Medicare has been piloting various types of payment reform — ranging from pay-for-reporting to bundled payment — but the scale and spread of delivery models that tie payment to quality for all Medicare benefi ciaries is more recent.
As part of the Affordable Care Act, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) is spearheading one of the most aggressive efforts in recent history to address delivery system reform. Recent passage of MACRA can help bring these efforts to scale across the entire Medicare program, and subsequently impact the broader commercial marketplace.
Because fee-for-service does not reimburse for key PCMH features — such as facilitating information sharing and care coordination with sub-specialists and hospitals, managing web-portals and personal health records, email communication and telephone visits, developing connections to community-based organizations, and integrating behavioral health — it often fails to compensate for the complete scope of services offered by a PCMH. Smaller practices with little reserve capacity are especially challenged in offering PCMH-level care without adequate financial support.
Numerous alternative payment models (APMs) are poised to support PCMH implementation and sustainability. Significant experimentation and testing of alternative payment arrangements is well underway, ranging from accountable care, to episode-based payment initiatives, to up-front payments that support primary care practice transformation, to initiatives that focus on specific populations, such as Medicaid, CHIP, or individuals dually eligible for Medicaid and Medicare.
For more information, please access our 2014-2015 PCMH evidence report.
Titolo | Source | Date |
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To Curb Rising Health Insurance Costs, Some States Try 'Reinsurance Pools' | Pew Charitable Trusts | April 9, 2018 |
Leveraging PCMH Evidence to Make the Case for Greater Investment in Primary Care | March 31, 2018 | |
Disinvesting In Primary Care? | Health Affairs | March 14, 2018 |
A Health Plan ‘Down Payment’ Is One Way States Try Retooling Individual Mandate | Kaiser Health News | March 9, 2018 |
PCDC Urges NYS Legislators to Protect PCMH Incentive Program | PCDC | March 5, 2018 |
How one US state saved $240 million in health care spending | Quartz | March 1, 2018 |
Healthcare Coalition Calls on CMS to Maintain Leadership on Value-Based Payment | November 22, 2017 | |
States Build on Primary Care Models to Expand Access | AAFP News | October 17, 2017 |
9 major takeaways from the 2018 MACRA proposed rule | Healthcare Dive | June 26, 2017 |
CMS Proposes Quality Payment Program updates to increase flexibility and reduce burdens | CMS | June 20, 2017 |