The Tulsa area is one of seven regions selected for the Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative (CPC), which is an effort by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to improve primary care in the country. The Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative is a multi-payer initiative fostering collaboration between public and private health care payers to strengthen primary care. Medicare will work with commercial and State health insurance plans and offer bonus payments to primary care doctors who better coordinate care for their patients.
Primary care practices that participate in this initiative will be given resources to better coordinate primary care for their Medicare patients. Three Oklahoma payers are involved in this initiative: Blue Cross Blue Shield of Oklahoma, CommunityCare, and Oklahoma Health Care Authority (OHCA). MyHealth Access Network, an extensive coalition of health care organizations throughout Oklahoma, is serving as the convener of the CPC initiative by supporting implementation and data management for the primary care practices selected to participate.
Under the Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative, CMS will pay primary care providers for improved and comprehensive care management, and after two years offer them the chance to share in any savings they generate. CMS will look to collaborate with other payers in local markets who will commit to similar changes to how they engage primary care practices.
Mathematica Evaluation (January 2015) Independent evaluation of first program year prepared for CMS
"Among all patients in Oklahoma, there were three statistically significant declines per 1,000 patients in utilization:"
"Among high-risk patients in Oklahoma, for the CPC group relative to the comparison group, there was a statistically significant decline in four measures per 1,000 patients:"
CMS Blog (October 2015) results from first shared savings performance year
Mathematica Evaluation (January 2015) Independent evaluation of first program year prepared for CMS
"Among all patients in Oklahoma, there were several statistically significant findings, and most of them were unfavorable. Specifically, the CPC group relative to the comparison group, the likelihood of:"
"Among high-risk patients in Oklahoma, for the CPC group relative to the comparison group, the likelihood of:"