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ShepherdUniversity
The Significance and Functionof
Accountable Care Organizations as a
Vital Component of the Affordable
Care Act and Health Care Reform
A Discussion of the Development,
Performance, and Importance of ACOs
Philip McCarley
2/23/2015
1
Introduction
During the past century attempts to reform the basic structure, financing and delivery of
health care in the United States met with great resistance from political and business
stakeholders. Berkowitz provided a thorough historical review and analysis of “the
transformation of the idea behind national insurance during the period from 1900 to 1965”
(Berkowitz, 2008). Since the historic passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965 the complexity
and the cost of providing care has grown steadily and rapidly. With the increasing costs and
strain on the system, particularly with the demographic fact of the aging of the baby boom
generation, the necessity of addressing and reforming the health care system was not in dispute
by most political, economic and public policy observers. Despite the recognition that there
needed to be changes in the health care system, there was passionate, ideological and partisan
disagreement about what actions and changes were acceptable.
An analysis of the recurring historical pattern of attempts to reform health care and
insurance coverage showed that the issue came to the forefront of political and legislative debate
in a cyclical pattern across the entire 20th century (Berkowitz, 2008). The most recent chapter of
this repeated push for health care reform, prompted by ever increasing numbers of uninsured
Americans and ever increasing cost of health care and health insurance, culminated in the
successful passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010. In face of strong and persistent
opposition, the ACA continues to survive legal and political challenges and continues to move
forward with implementation of reforms.
With so much contentious debate about some of the other provisions of the ACA, there
has been relatively little focus by media and politicians on the sections of the ACA that
mandated the creation and development of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). Simply
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stated “the key idea is that the ACO has financial incentives to improve quality based on
predefined criteria and keep overall costs within a target budget” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, &
Fisher, 2014, p. 1884). Summarizing the intent inherent in the inclusion of ACOs as an integral
part of reform, Devore & Champion observe that “the Affordable Care Act embraced ACOs as
one way to foster the transition from a disjointed, siloed health care system to one that is better
coordinated and aligned to provide far more value to patients, providers, and payers” (DeVore &
Champion, 2011). This paper will review the history and aims of the concept of ACOs, discuss
the provisions of the ACA related to ACOs, and consider development, significance and
performance of ACOs since the passage of the ACA in 2010.
History and aims of the ACO concept
The framework for the concept of accountable care organizations has precedents in
previous attempts to control costs through efforts such as health maintenance organizations
(HMOs) and through previous attempts to improve and integrate care such as integrated delivery
systems (IDSs).
Although similar in many respects, the function, structure, incentives and aims of these
precedents are not the same as the proposed function, structure, incentives and aims of ACOs.
In fact, the current manifestation of the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
reforms under the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) mandated by the ACA, ACOs
have more kinship and direct relationship to the Physician Group Practice Demonstration Project
(PGP). The PGP was mandated by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement
and Protection Act of 2000, was conducted between 2005 and 2010, and was extended for two
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additional years through 2012. The final report on the PGP, published September 2013,
discusses the lessons learned from this project related to pay for performance and quality
improvement initiatives of CMS (RTI International, 2012). The timely 2012 overlap of the
ending of the PGP with the initiation of the MSSP allowed for a continuity and flow of programs
with nearly identical aims and philosophy with regard to the evolving pay models for Medicare
reimbursement.
Prior to the passage of the ACA and the implementation by CMS of the provisions
related to ACOs Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington contended:
Improving the U.S. health care system requires simultaneous pursuit of three
aims: improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, and
reducing per capita costs of health care. Preconditions for this include the
enrollment of an identified population, a commitment to universality for its
members, and the existence of an organization (an ‘integrator’) that accepts
responsibility for all three aims for that population. The integrator’s role includes
at least five components: partnership with individuals and families, redesign of
primary care, population health management, financial management, and macro
system integration (Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington, 2008).
The treatment these three aims as interdependent and pursued as a whole and unified strategic
purpose is essential (Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington, 2008). Furthermore, Donald Berwick, the
lead author of the above referenced article, served as Administrator of the Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services (CMS) from July 2010 to December 2011 through a recess appointment
by President Obama. His expressed ideas regarding the aims, intent, and potential significant
role of ACOs match the intent of the law and reveal alignment with the way that CMS and the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) are implementing the ACA with regard to
ACOs. Berwick noted that “the creation of ACOs is one of the first delivery-reform initiatives
that will be implemented under the [Affordable Care Act]. Its purpose is to foster change in
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patient care so as to accelerate progress toward a three-part aim: better care for individuals, better
health for populations, and slower growth in costs through improvements in care” (Berwick D.
M., 2011).
Also prior to the passage of the ACA, the proposal for Medicare to move toward this type
of “payment reform model” was expressed clearly by Elliot Fisher, director of the Center for
Health Policy Research at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, joined
by other scholars and experts:
To succeed, health care reform must slow spending growth while improving
quality. We propose a new approach to help achieve more integrated and efficient
care by fostering local organizational accountability for quality and costs through
performance measurement and “shared savings” payment reform. The approach is
practical and feasible: it is voluntary for providers, builds on current referral
patterns, requires no change in benefits or lock-in for beneficiaries, and offers the
possibility of sustained provider incomes even as total costs are constrained. We
simulate the potential expenditure impact and show that significant Medicare
savings are possible. (Fisher, et al., 2009).
In fact they cite the use of the term “accountable care systems” by Shortell & Casalino to refer to
delivery systems that simultaneously organize “processes for improving quality” and are “held
accountable for quality and costs” (Shortell & Casalino, 2008). Over the course of just a few
years the concept of accountable care has grown dramatically in acceptance, use, and application.
Devore & Champion describe the goals and potential of ACOs in this way:
Overall, the goals of an ACO are to empower people to take charge of their health
and engage in shared decision making with providers; eliminate waste and
unnecessary spending while also meeting patients’ preferences for care; increase
preventive care and other strategies that could help keep people well; and increase
overall satisfaction with care. ACOs could also provide incentives for clinical
integration by offering financial rewards to caregivers who work cooperatively to
provide a continuum of care and achieve agreed-upon measures of success
(DeVore & Champion, 2011).
5
With these ideas and proposals giving context and providing guidance to both the
formation and the implementation of the ACA, CMS summarized the three objectives of MSSP-
ACOs with the following specific description:
 Better overall care in a safe environment, equitable to all who seek it, and always
available when needed.
 Improved health accomplished through the practice of proactive, preventive
medicine and chronic care coordination.
 Lower per capita cost aimed at reducing the trending of medical costs associated
with the Original Medicare population (often referred to as "Medicare Fee-for-
Service") (Triple Aim Objectives, 2012).
Within this broader framework of objectives CMS has focused on four key areas of emphasis for
quality standards: patient satisfaction, care coordination, preventive health, and care for chronic
illness.
The role of ACOs in the reforms of the ACA
Title III of the ACA carries the heading and contains provisions related to “Improving the
Quality and Efficiency of Health Care.” Section 3022 of Title III directed the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to “establish a shared savings program that
promotes accountability for a patient population…and encourages investment in infrastructure
and redesigned care processes for high quality and efficient service delivery” (Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act, 2010). Through the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP)
created by HHS, eligible health care providers and suppliers serving Medicare beneficiaries who
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meet specified requirements and who agree to participate in the program must agree to be
“accountable for the quality, cost, and overall care of the Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries
assigned to it” (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 2010). A participating ACO is
required to “define processes to promote evidence-based medicine and patient engagement,
report on quality and cost measures, and coordinate care, such as through the use of telehealth,
remote patient monitoring, and other such enabling technologies” (Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, 2010). In addition to receiving the payments of the original fee-for-service
program, participating MSSP-ACOs become eligible to receive additional shared payments for a
portion of demonstrated savings. Once savings reach designated, benchmarked levels, the
created performance and practice savings are essentially “shared” by the MSSP-ACO and the
Medicare program. CMS reported the following update on the status and participation of ACO
established as part of the Medicare Shared Savings Program since the inception of this mandated
ACA program:
“Since passage of the Affordable Care Act, more than 360 Medicare ACOs have
been established, serving over 5.6 million Americans with Medicare. Medicare
ACOs are groups of providers and suppliers of services that work together to
coordinate care for the Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries they serve
and achieve program goals; Medicare ACOs choose a level of performance risk
and receive financial incentives based on that choice and their quality
performance” (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014).
It is important to note that there is not simply one type or one model of ACO. In fact,
ACOs are formed and operate under different categories, use different models, and serve
different and distinct groups and populations of patients. Broadly speaking ACOs may be
formed in response to public policy and payer reforms such as has been described with MSSP.
Many are focused on primary care services, care of specialty populations, care of populations
with specific chronic diseases, Medicaid, underserved, and safety-net populations. There has
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also been observed some movement in state, commercial, and private payer programs toward
ACOs and principles intended to shift toward new health care payer models that reflect and
incorporate the goals of improved quality, better coordination of care and service, greater
engagement with patients in treatment planning and support, increased efficiency, and reduced
costs.
Although most attention has been focused on the ACOs related to the MSSP provision,
the CMS identifies other types of ACOs which are a part of the efforts and strategy of CMS.
In addition to MSSP-ACOs CMS also is working with the Pioneer ACO Model (designed for
selected integrated early participants in coordinated care models) and an Advance Payment ACO
Model (a supplementary incentive program for selected primary care, smaller, or rural providers
to provide support toward developing a model of accountable care). CMS has shown particular
focus on primary care service, prevention, management of chronic illness, specialty populations,
as well as at-risk and underserved populations. Title II Section 2706 of the ACA mandated a
Pediatric Accountable Care Organization Demonstration Project focusing on studying and
improving care for children with special medical needs. This particular project is scheduled to
run for a five year period that is set to end at the end of 2016.
Among the many types of ACOs that have developed over the past few years some are
focused on primary care, some on serving Medicare and/or Medicaid patients, some are focused
on serving specialty populations of patients with specific chronic health conditions, some are
focused on serving larger, general groups of patients and communities providing integrated
health care services across the care continuum. In addition to recently developing ACOs that are
formed around contracting with public payers such as Medicare and Medicaid programs
administered through CMS, ACOs are also developing which have established contractual
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relationship with private, commercial payers. Recent research reports indicate that
approximately half of existing ACOs had a contract with a private payer. Contracts with private
payers were usually set up as shared savings models, and most private contracts included
downside risk. This study also reported that ACOs with private contracts tended to be larger and
more complex organizations overall than the typical ACOs that did not have private contracts
(Lewis, Colla, Schpero, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014). The Accountable Care Implementation
Collaborative is a private project of the Premier healthcare alliance. Formed in 2010, this
collaborative “consists of health systems that seek to pursue accountability by forming
partnerships with private payers to evolve from fee-for-service payment models to new, value-
driven models” and to develop “best practices that can inform the implementation of accountable
care organizations as well as public policies” (DeVore & Champion, 2011).
Characteristics and taxonomies of ACOs
In attempting to understand the nature, distinctiveness, and effectives of ACOs,
researchers are beginning to classify ACOs according to particular characteristics. Following the
passage of the ACA, early observations about the development of ACOs noted the following 5
patterns:
1. Dispersion of ACOs varies by market.
2. Specific regions of the U.S. are lacking in ACOs.
3. Hospitals and hospital systems are the main backers of ACOs.
4. Investments in the ACO model exist independently of the Medicare Shared
Savings Program.
5. The success of different ACO models is still unproven.
(McNickle, 2011).
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Several research groups have conceptualized and developed specific “taxonomies” that will
allow for more precise discussion, research, and analysis regarding the organization and
performance of ACOs (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012; Shortell, Wu,
Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014; Colla, Lewis, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014; Muhlestein, Gardner,
Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014). Recognizing early the rapidly shifting landscape caused by this
alternate care delivery and payment model, Fisher et al. discussed the need for a framework for
understanding, tracking, and monitoring the formation, development and performance of ACOs
(Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012). As they tracked course of early
ACOs, they identified “the major factors—such as contract characteristics; structure, capabilities,
and activities; and local context—that would be likely to influence ACO formation,
implementation, and performance” (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012).
Through devising a framework for evaluating these pioneer organizations, they hoped to be able
to provide contextual information and guidance to decision-makers and policy makers that would
contribute to the success and effectiveness of succedent ACOs (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van
Citters, & Larson, 2012).
The work of analysis and study of ACOs has continued to advance along with the rapid
increase in the number and diversification in variety of ACOs. One way that ACOs can be
differentiated is by role of physicians in the administrative leadership of the organization:
physician-led versus non-physician led ACOs (Colla, Lewis, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014). In a
recent detailed study that analyzed current numbers, structures, characteristics and functions of
ACOs, Shortell et. al. used resource dependence theory and institutional theory combined with
analysis of the following eight specific measures:
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the ACO’s size, number of different types of participating provider organizations
within the ACO (including nursing or postacute care facilities), the scope of
services offered, whether the ACO belongs to an integrated delivery system
(IDS), the percent of primary care clinicians, their institutional leadership model,
the performance management system used for accountability, and the ACO’s
prior experience with payment models other than fee-for-service (Shortell, Wu,
Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014).
From their extensive research and analysis they identified “a reliable and internally valid three-
cluster” taxonomy consisting of three broad categories of ACOs: “integrated delivery system
ACOs,” “smaller, physician-led ACOs,” and “hybrid ACOs” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, &
Fisher, 2014). Most typically integrated delivery system ACOs “offer a broad scope of services
and frequently include one or more postacute facilities;” smaller, physician-led ACOs
generally were focused on primary care service delivery and were characterized by “a relatively
high degree of physician performance management;” and hybrid ACOs tended to be a mixture or
combination of “moderate sized, joint hospital-physician and coalition-led groups that offer a
moderately broad scope of services with some involvement of postacute facilities” (Shortell, Wu,
Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). They assert that this taxonomy can serve as a valuable tool “to
describe and understand early ACO development and to provide a basis for technical assistance
and future evaluation of performance” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014).
Furthermore, they suggest that the taxonomy may be useful to payers and to “provider
organizations considering ACO formation by accessing how their attributes match those of the
three clusters with regard to potential strengths and weaknesses for meeting the challenges
involved” with becoming an ACO (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014).
Leavitt Partners also published a white paper proposing a taxonomy of accountable care
organizations. This report identifies six core types of ACOs: Independent Hospital and Hospital
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Alliance ACOs (both led by hospitals), Independent Physician Group, Physician Group Alliance,
and Expanded Physician Group ACOs (led by physician groups), and Full Spectrum Integrated
ACOs (led by integrated delivery systems) (Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014).
They also identified two additional attributes can overlap with these six types: decentralized
decision maker ACOs which involves multiple organizations being involved in the ACO and
contributing to the decision-making structure and processes or previously unaffiliated
organizations joining to establish a new ACO and specialty ACOs that focus on a particular type
or group of patients such as a set of patients with a particular condition, illness, or disease
(Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014, p. 6). They further advocated the value of
this type of information and analysis to ACOs, providers contemplating becoming an ACO,
suppliers who serve ACOs, and payers and policy makers that study and manage ACO contracts
(Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014, p. 8).
Early expectations and early indicators of performance of ACOs
In the initial period after the passage of the ACA, opinions about the likely success of
ACOs in the context of health care reform ranged across a wide spectrum from strong negativity
to skepticism, to cautious optimism, to strong enthusiasm. The provisions of the ACA dealing
with ACOs did not escape a certain share of criticism and negative commentary. Certain
analysts with a critical bias have lamented the inadequacies of the concept of ACOs and
predicted their failure to accomplish their goals. Some critics doubted the model, some doubted
the government’s capacity to manage such a shift in care delivery with positive effect, and some
doubted that the concept could produce progress in cost reductions without concurrently
sacrificing quality and patient satisfaction. Early evidence suggests that this particular concern
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may not be supported based on surveys of the initial experience and perception of patients. One
initial study of patient satisfaction comparing baseline and comparative control data found that
“patients’ experiences were improved or preserved in provider organizations participating in
ACO programs despite incentives to limit health care use” (McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky,
2014).
Some critics have argued that ACOs will face the same obstacles and the same fate as
these precedent attempts to change healthcare delivery and financing in the U.S. Shi & Singh
expressed the sentiment that ACOs “may well turn out to be nothing more than ‘old wine in new
bottles’” (Shi & Singh, 2015, p. 367). By this they suggest that ACOs may simply be another
manifestation of earlier failed attempts to control costs including through development of
integrated delivery systems (Burns & Pauly, 2012). Countering the premise of this criticism and
prediction of ACOs sharing the same fate as earlier attempts of managed care, Berwick contends
“the core of the ACO idea is coordinated care with free choice for beneficiaries. I think it’s a
brilliant idea… because it pulls one of the two fangs out of managed care: loss of choice. The
other fang is skimping, and that’s going to require strong monitoring of ACOs’ performance”
(Berwick, 2012, p. 722). Although the use of ACOs to transform the payment model of
Medicare and Medicaid is not a simple, easily implemented reform attempt and is not a panacea
for our serious health care financing challenges, they do hold promise for bringing about
significant savings and simultaneous improvement in quality of care and services provided
(Berwick D. , 2012). While the longer-term success of ACOs may still be uncertain, early
evidence and indicators show promising and hopeful results regarding the experience of patients
and the costs (Greene, 2015; McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky, 2014).
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With the backdrop of these predictions and in the context of passionate ideological,
political, and legal confrontation, the experience and success of ACOs have varied over the past
two years. Casalino assesses “the performance of ACOs to date has been promising but not
overwhelming” (Casalino L. , 2014). Still he acknowledges that ACOs “represent the best
attempt to date to move away from business as usual toward health care that will improve
patients’ health and will not bankrupt the country” (Casalino L. , 2014). Despite the contention
and uncertainty surrounding health care reform and the effects of these particular reforms for the
long-term, broadly and fairly considered ACOs have demonstrated some early measured positive
results in patient satisfaction, health outcomes, and cost savings. In particular, one important
population of patients, medically complex patients, “reported significantly better overall care
after the start of ACO contracts” in one study (McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky, 2014). In
discussing how ACOs have performed with regard to cost savings, Perez provides a detail
specific analysis of cost savings already achieved by ACOs. As demonstrated by the results of
Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) ACOs, Pioneer ACOs, Medicaid ACOs, and
Commercial ACOs, results varied for individual ACOs related to cost savings while at a macro
level results broadly showed return on investment for ACOs as providers of care and significant
cost savings for payers. Once cost savings have reached specified goals, ACOs generally benefit
financially through revenue returned form shared-savings incentives (Perez, 2014).
Specific performance results of ACOs that are part of CMS programs, including the
MSSP, are publicized regularly. In late 2014 CMS reported:
Last year, many ACOs had higher quality and better patient experience than
published benchmarks. This year, compared to previous year performance, the
ACOs improved significantly for almost all of the quality and patient experience
measures demonstrating that these organizations improve care. ACOs in the
Pioneer ACO Model and Medicare Shared Shavings Program (Shared Savings
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Program) also generated over $417 million in savings for Medicare. At the same
time, ACOs qualified for shared savings payments of $460 million. (Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014).
The process of reform and of changing the mechanisms, financing, and culture of health care
delivery and service will be slow to change. Even if criticism comes that the reforms and
changes in the system are not enough and even if it is too early to tell what the impact and import
of broader ACA and more precise ACO reform initiative will be, there is no question that the
demonstration projects and the activity around new ACOs, both commercial and public payer
related, are cause for innovation and hope. HHS, CMS, and the recently formed Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, have demonstrated skill at assessing, listening, adapting, and
revising policies, guidelines and regulations during the development and implantation of these
reforms and projects. In efforts to continue to nurture and encourage the development of ACOs
as a part of reforms to transform health care delivery and payment models, CMS announced and
sought public comment on several proposed adjustments intended to improve the Medicare
Shared Savings Program. The categories of these proposed adjustments were “providing more
flexibility for ACOs seeking to renew their participation in the program,” “encouraging ACOs to
take on greater performance-based risk and reward,” “emphasis on primary care,” “alternative
methodologies for benchmarks,” and “streamlining data sharing and reducing administrative
burden” (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014). These proposed adjustments are a
positive sign of a allowing for nimbleness, flexibility and setting a tone to signal current and
future ACOs that there can be an open dynamic process for negotiating and adjusting the
payment and incentive models and sensitivity to the burden of the administrative and reporting
requirements of participating ACOs.
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Despite a climate of caution and uncertainty across much of the health care system over
the past several years, the growth in number of ACOs over the past several years has been
significant. According to one monitor of ACO growth and development the number of ACOs
increased from 82 in 2011 to 626 in the summer of 2014. This report breaks down this total in
the following way: “Of these 626 ACOs, 329 have government contracts, 210 have commercial
contracts, and 74 have both government and commercial contracts. The remaining 13 ACOs
have not made specific announcements about the nature of their accountable care contracts or are
in the process of finalizing contracts that are not yet active” (Petersen, Gardner, Tu, &
Muhlestein, 2014). This report notes that this growth in ACOs means that the total number of
“ACO-covered lives” as of June 2014 was approximately 20 million (Petersen, Gardner, Tu, &
Muhlestein, 2014).
Discussion of the potential and promise of ACOs
Analyzing the current state of health care reform implementation and the likely impact of
reforms on the healthcare system, a recent Robert Wood Johnson Foundation report asserts that
“more than any other policy change in the ACA, nothing has more potential to influence the
future of nearly every health care sector than Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)” (2015
Accountable Care Organization Outlook: Implications for Suppliers and Providers, 2014).
From a broader analysis of the potential of ACOs to have a significant and positive role
in making progress toward the triple aims of increased quality, improved health outcomes, and
reduced costs, Perez concludes that “ACOs are an aggressive, innovative means of shifting the
business of health care from the well-entrenched fee-for-service model to a fee-for-value
16
approach. They are an example of practicing the art of the possible, effecting fundamental
change in a large, capitalist society where the healthcare system is a complex web of public-and
private-sector involvement” (Perez, 2014). “If ACOs succeed, they will be a critical and lasting
legacy of the Affordable Care Act” (Casalino L. P., 2014).
Conclusion
Although there is still much uncertainty about the long-term meaning and significance of
the advent of accountable care organizations as alternate way of delivering and financing health
care, there is ample evidence that this phenomenon is growing and showing signs of sustainable
viability. Describing the promise and prospects of ACOs altering the framework and landscape
of health care delivery in the United States, DeVore & Champion made the following
observation several years ago:
ACOs represent a dramatic departure from the status quo of health care delivery.
They have the potential to overcome the fragmentation and volume orientation of
the fee-for-service system so that the right incentives are in place to foster health
and wellness, instead of payment for treating illness. Unlike previous efforts
under the “managed care” rubric that were mainly designed to reduce costs, a
properly designed ACO would balance that need against the need to improve
outcomes and improve the care experience. (DeVore & Champion, 2011).
Even with all the uncertainty and stress confronting health care providers over the past few years
with the implementation of the ACA, the hope and expectations of many health policy observers
regarding ACOs has remained high. Hopefully all the stakeholders involved in providing health
care in the U.S. can go forward with a spirit of cooperation and openness to working together to
improve the efficiency and the quality of health care in the U.S.
17
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Experiences in Medicare ACOs. New England Journal of Medicine, 1715-1724.
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Accountable Care Organizations: Different Approaches to Achieve the Triple Aim.
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Perez, K. (2014, September). ACOs and the quest to reduce costs. Healthcare Financial
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Petersen, M., Gardner, P., Tu, T., & Muhlestein, D. (2014, June). Growth and Dispersion of
Accountable Care Organizations: June 2014 Update. Retrieved February 24, 2015, from
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of-Accountable-Care-Organizations-June-2014-Update.pdf
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19, 2015, from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: http://www.rwjf.org/en/research-
publications/find-rwjf-research/2015/02/accountable-care-organizations.html
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Final Report. Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services. Research Triangle Park, North Carolina: RTI International. Retrieved
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Projects/DemoProjectsEvalRpts/Downloads/PhysicianGroupPracticeFinalReport.pdf
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Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning .
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Accountable Care Organizations for Policy and Practice. Health Services Research,
49(6), 1883-1899.
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Jourrnal of American Medical Assoication, 300(1), 95-97.
Triple Aim Objectives. (2012, May 15). Retrieved February 19, 2015, from Collaborative Health
Systems: http://www.collaborativehealthsystems.com/opportunity/triple-aim-
objectives.aspx

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The Significance and Function of Accountable Care Organizations

  • 1. ShepherdUniversity The Significance and Functionof Accountable Care Organizations as a Vital Component of the Affordable Care Act and Health Care Reform A Discussion of the Development, Performance, and Importance of ACOs Philip McCarley 2/23/2015
  • 2. 1 Introduction During the past century attempts to reform the basic structure, financing and delivery of health care in the United States met with great resistance from political and business stakeholders. Berkowitz provided a thorough historical review and analysis of “the transformation of the idea behind national insurance during the period from 1900 to 1965” (Berkowitz, 2008). Since the historic passage of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965 the complexity and the cost of providing care has grown steadily and rapidly. With the increasing costs and strain on the system, particularly with the demographic fact of the aging of the baby boom generation, the necessity of addressing and reforming the health care system was not in dispute by most political, economic and public policy observers. Despite the recognition that there needed to be changes in the health care system, there was passionate, ideological and partisan disagreement about what actions and changes were acceptable. An analysis of the recurring historical pattern of attempts to reform health care and insurance coverage showed that the issue came to the forefront of political and legislative debate in a cyclical pattern across the entire 20th century (Berkowitz, 2008). The most recent chapter of this repeated push for health care reform, prompted by ever increasing numbers of uninsured Americans and ever increasing cost of health care and health insurance, culminated in the successful passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010. In face of strong and persistent opposition, the ACA continues to survive legal and political challenges and continues to move forward with implementation of reforms. With so much contentious debate about some of the other provisions of the ACA, there has been relatively little focus by media and politicians on the sections of the ACA that mandated the creation and development of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). Simply
  • 3. 2 stated “the key idea is that the ACO has financial incentives to improve quality based on predefined criteria and keep overall costs within a target budget” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014, p. 1884). Summarizing the intent inherent in the inclusion of ACOs as an integral part of reform, Devore & Champion observe that “the Affordable Care Act embraced ACOs as one way to foster the transition from a disjointed, siloed health care system to one that is better coordinated and aligned to provide far more value to patients, providers, and payers” (DeVore & Champion, 2011). This paper will review the history and aims of the concept of ACOs, discuss the provisions of the ACA related to ACOs, and consider development, significance and performance of ACOs since the passage of the ACA in 2010. History and aims of the ACO concept The framework for the concept of accountable care organizations has precedents in previous attempts to control costs through efforts such as health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and through previous attempts to improve and integrate care such as integrated delivery systems (IDSs). Although similar in many respects, the function, structure, incentives and aims of these precedents are not the same as the proposed function, structure, incentives and aims of ACOs. In fact, the current manifestation of the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) reforms under the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) mandated by the ACA, ACOs have more kinship and direct relationship to the Physician Group Practice Demonstration Project (PGP). The PGP was mandated by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000, was conducted between 2005 and 2010, and was extended for two
  • 4. 3 additional years through 2012. The final report on the PGP, published September 2013, discusses the lessons learned from this project related to pay for performance and quality improvement initiatives of CMS (RTI International, 2012). The timely 2012 overlap of the ending of the PGP with the initiation of the MSSP allowed for a continuity and flow of programs with nearly identical aims and philosophy with regard to the evolving pay models for Medicare reimbursement. Prior to the passage of the ACA and the implementation by CMS of the provisions related to ACOs Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington contended: Improving the U.S. health care system requires simultaneous pursuit of three aims: improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, and reducing per capita costs of health care. Preconditions for this include the enrollment of an identified population, a commitment to universality for its members, and the existence of an organization (an ‘integrator’) that accepts responsibility for all three aims for that population. The integrator’s role includes at least five components: partnership with individuals and families, redesign of primary care, population health management, financial management, and macro system integration (Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington, 2008). The treatment these three aims as interdependent and pursued as a whole and unified strategic purpose is essential (Berwick, Nolan, & Whittington, 2008). Furthermore, Donald Berwick, the lead author of the above referenced article, served as Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) from July 2010 to December 2011 through a recess appointment by President Obama. His expressed ideas regarding the aims, intent, and potential significant role of ACOs match the intent of the law and reveal alignment with the way that CMS and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) are implementing the ACA with regard to ACOs. Berwick noted that “the creation of ACOs is one of the first delivery-reform initiatives that will be implemented under the [Affordable Care Act]. Its purpose is to foster change in
  • 5. 4 patient care so as to accelerate progress toward a three-part aim: better care for individuals, better health for populations, and slower growth in costs through improvements in care” (Berwick D. M., 2011). Also prior to the passage of the ACA, the proposal for Medicare to move toward this type of “payment reform model” was expressed clearly by Elliot Fisher, director of the Center for Health Policy Research at the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, joined by other scholars and experts: To succeed, health care reform must slow spending growth while improving quality. We propose a new approach to help achieve more integrated and efficient care by fostering local organizational accountability for quality and costs through performance measurement and “shared savings” payment reform. The approach is practical and feasible: it is voluntary for providers, builds on current referral patterns, requires no change in benefits or lock-in for beneficiaries, and offers the possibility of sustained provider incomes even as total costs are constrained. We simulate the potential expenditure impact and show that significant Medicare savings are possible. (Fisher, et al., 2009). In fact they cite the use of the term “accountable care systems” by Shortell & Casalino to refer to delivery systems that simultaneously organize “processes for improving quality” and are “held accountable for quality and costs” (Shortell & Casalino, 2008). Over the course of just a few years the concept of accountable care has grown dramatically in acceptance, use, and application. Devore & Champion describe the goals and potential of ACOs in this way: Overall, the goals of an ACO are to empower people to take charge of their health and engage in shared decision making with providers; eliminate waste and unnecessary spending while also meeting patients’ preferences for care; increase preventive care and other strategies that could help keep people well; and increase overall satisfaction with care. ACOs could also provide incentives for clinical integration by offering financial rewards to caregivers who work cooperatively to provide a continuum of care and achieve agreed-upon measures of success (DeVore & Champion, 2011).
  • 6. 5 With these ideas and proposals giving context and providing guidance to both the formation and the implementation of the ACA, CMS summarized the three objectives of MSSP- ACOs with the following specific description:  Better overall care in a safe environment, equitable to all who seek it, and always available when needed.  Improved health accomplished through the practice of proactive, preventive medicine and chronic care coordination.  Lower per capita cost aimed at reducing the trending of medical costs associated with the Original Medicare population (often referred to as "Medicare Fee-for- Service") (Triple Aim Objectives, 2012). Within this broader framework of objectives CMS has focused on four key areas of emphasis for quality standards: patient satisfaction, care coordination, preventive health, and care for chronic illness. The role of ACOs in the reforms of the ACA Title III of the ACA carries the heading and contains provisions related to “Improving the Quality and Efficiency of Health Care.” Section 3022 of Title III directed the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to “establish a shared savings program that promotes accountability for a patient population…and encourages investment in infrastructure and redesigned care processes for high quality and efficient service delivery” (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 2010). Through the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) created by HHS, eligible health care providers and suppliers serving Medicare beneficiaries who
  • 7. 6 meet specified requirements and who agree to participate in the program must agree to be “accountable for the quality, cost, and overall care of the Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries assigned to it” (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 2010). A participating ACO is required to “define processes to promote evidence-based medicine and patient engagement, report on quality and cost measures, and coordinate care, such as through the use of telehealth, remote patient monitoring, and other such enabling technologies” (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 2010). In addition to receiving the payments of the original fee-for-service program, participating MSSP-ACOs become eligible to receive additional shared payments for a portion of demonstrated savings. Once savings reach designated, benchmarked levels, the created performance and practice savings are essentially “shared” by the MSSP-ACO and the Medicare program. CMS reported the following update on the status and participation of ACO established as part of the Medicare Shared Savings Program since the inception of this mandated ACA program: “Since passage of the Affordable Care Act, more than 360 Medicare ACOs have been established, serving over 5.6 million Americans with Medicare. Medicare ACOs are groups of providers and suppliers of services that work together to coordinate care for the Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries they serve and achieve program goals; Medicare ACOs choose a level of performance risk and receive financial incentives based on that choice and their quality performance” (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014). It is important to note that there is not simply one type or one model of ACO. In fact, ACOs are formed and operate under different categories, use different models, and serve different and distinct groups and populations of patients. Broadly speaking ACOs may be formed in response to public policy and payer reforms such as has been described with MSSP. Many are focused on primary care services, care of specialty populations, care of populations with specific chronic diseases, Medicaid, underserved, and safety-net populations. There has
  • 8. 7 also been observed some movement in state, commercial, and private payer programs toward ACOs and principles intended to shift toward new health care payer models that reflect and incorporate the goals of improved quality, better coordination of care and service, greater engagement with patients in treatment planning and support, increased efficiency, and reduced costs. Although most attention has been focused on the ACOs related to the MSSP provision, the CMS identifies other types of ACOs which are a part of the efforts and strategy of CMS. In addition to MSSP-ACOs CMS also is working with the Pioneer ACO Model (designed for selected integrated early participants in coordinated care models) and an Advance Payment ACO Model (a supplementary incentive program for selected primary care, smaller, or rural providers to provide support toward developing a model of accountable care). CMS has shown particular focus on primary care service, prevention, management of chronic illness, specialty populations, as well as at-risk and underserved populations. Title II Section 2706 of the ACA mandated a Pediatric Accountable Care Organization Demonstration Project focusing on studying and improving care for children with special medical needs. This particular project is scheduled to run for a five year period that is set to end at the end of 2016. Among the many types of ACOs that have developed over the past few years some are focused on primary care, some on serving Medicare and/or Medicaid patients, some are focused on serving specialty populations of patients with specific chronic health conditions, some are focused on serving larger, general groups of patients and communities providing integrated health care services across the care continuum. In addition to recently developing ACOs that are formed around contracting with public payers such as Medicare and Medicaid programs administered through CMS, ACOs are also developing which have established contractual
  • 9. 8 relationship with private, commercial payers. Recent research reports indicate that approximately half of existing ACOs had a contract with a private payer. Contracts with private payers were usually set up as shared savings models, and most private contracts included downside risk. This study also reported that ACOs with private contracts tended to be larger and more complex organizations overall than the typical ACOs that did not have private contracts (Lewis, Colla, Schpero, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014). The Accountable Care Implementation Collaborative is a private project of the Premier healthcare alliance. Formed in 2010, this collaborative “consists of health systems that seek to pursue accountability by forming partnerships with private payers to evolve from fee-for-service payment models to new, value- driven models” and to develop “best practices that can inform the implementation of accountable care organizations as well as public policies” (DeVore & Champion, 2011). Characteristics and taxonomies of ACOs In attempting to understand the nature, distinctiveness, and effectives of ACOs, researchers are beginning to classify ACOs according to particular characteristics. Following the passage of the ACA, early observations about the development of ACOs noted the following 5 patterns: 1. Dispersion of ACOs varies by market. 2. Specific regions of the U.S. are lacking in ACOs. 3. Hospitals and hospital systems are the main backers of ACOs. 4. Investments in the ACO model exist independently of the Medicare Shared Savings Program. 5. The success of different ACO models is still unproven. (McNickle, 2011).
  • 10. 9 Several research groups have conceptualized and developed specific “taxonomies” that will allow for more precise discussion, research, and analysis regarding the organization and performance of ACOs (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012; Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014; Colla, Lewis, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014; Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014). Recognizing early the rapidly shifting landscape caused by this alternate care delivery and payment model, Fisher et al. discussed the need for a framework for understanding, tracking, and monitoring the formation, development and performance of ACOs (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012). As they tracked course of early ACOs, they identified “the major factors—such as contract characteristics; structure, capabilities, and activities; and local context—that would be likely to influence ACO formation, implementation, and performance” (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012). Through devising a framework for evaluating these pioneer organizations, they hoped to be able to provide contextual information and guidance to decision-makers and policy makers that would contribute to the success and effectiveness of succedent ACOs (Fisher, Shortell, Kreindler, Van Citters, & Larson, 2012). The work of analysis and study of ACOs has continued to advance along with the rapid increase in the number and diversification in variety of ACOs. One way that ACOs can be differentiated is by role of physicians in the administrative leadership of the organization: physician-led versus non-physician led ACOs (Colla, Lewis, Shortell, & Fisher, 2014). In a recent detailed study that analyzed current numbers, structures, characteristics and functions of ACOs, Shortell et. al. used resource dependence theory and institutional theory combined with analysis of the following eight specific measures:
  • 11. 10 the ACO’s size, number of different types of participating provider organizations within the ACO (including nursing or postacute care facilities), the scope of services offered, whether the ACO belongs to an integrated delivery system (IDS), the percent of primary care clinicians, their institutional leadership model, the performance management system used for accountability, and the ACO’s prior experience with payment models other than fee-for-service (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). From their extensive research and analysis they identified “a reliable and internally valid three- cluster” taxonomy consisting of three broad categories of ACOs: “integrated delivery system ACOs,” “smaller, physician-led ACOs,” and “hybrid ACOs” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). Most typically integrated delivery system ACOs “offer a broad scope of services and frequently include one or more postacute facilities;” smaller, physician-led ACOs generally were focused on primary care service delivery and were characterized by “a relatively high degree of physician performance management;” and hybrid ACOs tended to be a mixture or combination of “moderate sized, joint hospital-physician and coalition-led groups that offer a moderately broad scope of services with some involvement of postacute facilities” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). They assert that this taxonomy can serve as a valuable tool “to describe and understand early ACO development and to provide a basis for technical assistance and future evaluation of performance” (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). Furthermore, they suggest that the taxonomy may be useful to payers and to “provider organizations considering ACO formation by accessing how their attributes match those of the three clusters with regard to potential strengths and weaknesses for meeting the challenges involved” with becoming an ACO (Shortell, Wu, Lewis, Colla, & Fisher, 2014). Leavitt Partners also published a white paper proposing a taxonomy of accountable care organizations. This report identifies six core types of ACOs: Independent Hospital and Hospital
  • 12. 11 Alliance ACOs (both led by hospitals), Independent Physician Group, Physician Group Alliance, and Expanded Physician Group ACOs (led by physician groups), and Full Spectrum Integrated ACOs (led by integrated delivery systems) (Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014). They also identified two additional attributes can overlap with these six types: decentralized decision maker ACOs which involves multiple organizations being involved in the ACO and contributing to the decision-making structure and processes or previously unaffiliated organizations joining to establish a new ACO and specialty ACOs that focus on a particular type or group of patients such as a set of patients with a particular condition, illness, or disease (Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014, p. 6). They further advocated the value of this type of information and analysis to ACOs, providers contemplating becoming an ACO, suppliers who serve ACOs, and payers and policy makers that study and manage ACO contracts (Muhlestein, Gardner, Merrill, Petersen, & Tu, 2014, p. 8). Early expectations and early indicators of performance of ACOs In the initial period after the passage of the ACA, opinions about the likely success of ACOs in the context of health care reform ranged across a wide spectrum from strong negativity to skepticism, to cautious optimism, to strong enthusiasm. The provisions of the ACA dealing with ACOs did not escape a certain share of criticism and negative commentary. Certain analysts with a critical bias have lamented the inadequacies of the concept of ACOs and predicted their failure to accomplish their goals. Some critics doubted the model, some doubted the government’s capacity to manage such a shift in care delivery with positive effect, and some doubted that the concept could produce progress in cost reductions without concurrently sacrificing quality and patient satisfaction. Early evidence suggests that this particular concern
  • 13. 12 may not be supported based on surveys of the initial experience and perception of patients. One initial study of patient satisfaction comparing baseline and comparative control data found that “patients’ experiences were improved or preserved in provider organizations participating in ACO programs despite incentives to limit health care use” (McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky, 2014). Some critics have argued that ACOs will face the same obstacles and the same fate as these precedent attempts to change healthcare delivery and financing in the U.S. Shi & Singh expressed the sentiment that ACOs “may well turn out to be nothing more than ‘old wine in new bottles’” (Shi & Singh, 2015, p. 367). By this they suggest that ACOs may simply be another manifestation of earlier failed attempts to control costs including through development of integrated delivery systems (Burns & Pauly, 2012). Countering the premise of this criticism and prediction of ACOs sharing the same fate as earlier attempts of managed care, Berwick contends “the core of the ACO idea is coordinated care with free choice for beneficiaries. I think it’s a brilliant idea… because it pulls one of the two fangs out of managed care: loss of choice. The other fang is skimping, and that’s going to require strong monitoring of ACOs’ performance” (Berwick, 2012, p. 722). Although the use of ACOs to transform the payment model of Medicare and Medicaid is not a simple, easily implemented reform attempt and is not a panacea for our serious health care financing challenges, they do hold promise for bringing about significant savings and simultaneous improvement in quality of care and services provided (Berwick D. , 2012). While the longer-term success of ACOs may still be uncertain, early evidence and indicators show promising and hopeful results regarding the experience of patients and the costs (Greene, 2015; McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky, 2014).
  • 14. 13 With the backdrop of these predictions and in the context of passionate ideological, political, and legal confrontation, the experience and success of ACOs have varied over the past two years. Casalino assesses “the performance of ACOs to date has been promising but not overwhelming” (Casalino L. , 2014). Still he acknowledges that ACOs “represent the best attempt to date to move away from business as usual toward health care that will improve patients’ health and will not bankrupt the country” (Casalino L. , 2014). Despite the contention and uncertainty surrounding health care reform and the effects of these particular reforms for the long-term, broadly and fairly considered ACOs have demonstrated some early measured positive results in patient satisfaction, health outcomes, and cost savings. In particular, one important population of patients, medically complex patients, “reported significantly better overall care after the start of ACO contracts” in one study (McWilliams, Landon, & Zaslavsky, 2014). In discussing how ACOs have performed with regard to cost savings, Perez provides a detail specific analysis of cost savings already achieved by ACOs. As demonstrated by the results of Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) ACOs, Pioneer ACOs, Medicaid ACOs, and Commercial ACOs, results varied for individual ACOs related to cost savings while at a macro level results broadly showed return on investment for ACOs as providers of care and significant cost savings for payers. Once cost savings have reached specified goals, ACOs generally benefit financially through revenue returned form shared-savings incentives (Perez, 2014). Specific performance results of ACOs that are part of CMS programs, including the MSSP, are publicized regularly. In late 2014 CMS reported: Last year, many ACOs had higher quality and better patient experience than published benchmarks. This year, compared to previous year performance, the ACOs improved significantly for almost all of the quality and patient experience measures demonstrating that these organizations improve care. ACOs in the Pioneer ACO Model and Medicare Shared Shavings Program (Shared Savings
  • 15. 14 Program) also generated over $417 million in savings for Medicare. At the same time, ACOs qualified for shared savings payments of $460 million. (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014). The process of reform and of changing the mechanisms, financing, and culture of health care delivery and service will be slow to change. Even if criticism comes that the reforms and changes in the system are not enough and even if it is too early to tell what the impact and import of broader ACA and more precise ACO reform initiative will be, there is no question that the demonstration projects and the activity around new ACOs, both commercial and public payer related, are cause for innovation and hope. HHS, CMS, and the recently formed Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, have demonstrated skill at assessing, listening, adapting, and revising policies, guidelines and regulations during the development and implantation of these reforms and projects. In efforts to continue to nurture and encourage the development of ACOs as a part of reforms to transform health care delivery and payment models, CMS announced and sought public comment on several proposed adjustments intended to improve the Medicare Shared Savings Program. The categories of these proposed adjustments were “providing more flexibility for ACOs seeking to renew their participation in the program,” “encouraging ACOs to take on greater performance-based risk and reward,” “emphasis on primary care,” “alternative methodologies for benchmarks,” and “streamlining data sharing and reducing administrative burden” (Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 2014). These proposed adjustments are a positive sign of a allowing for nimbleness, flexibility and setting a tone to signal current and future ACOs that there can be an open dynamic process for negotiating and adjusting the payment and incentive models and sensitivity to the burden of the administrative and reporting requirements of participating ACOs.
  • 16. 15 Despite a climate of caution and uncertainty across much of the health care system over the past several years, the growth in number of ACOs over the past several years has been significant. According to one monitor of ACO growth and development the number of ACOs increased from 82 in 2011 to 626 in the summer of 2014. This report breaks down this total in the following way: “Of these 626 ACOs, 329 have government contracts, 210 have commercial contracts, and 74 have both government and commercial contracts. The remaining 13 ACOs have not made specific announcements about the nature of their accountable care contracts or are in the process of finalizing contracts that are not yet active” (Petersen, Gardner, Tu, & Muhlestein, 2014). This report notes that this growth in ACOs means that the total number of “ACO-covered lives” as of June 2014 was approximately 20 million (Petersen, Gardner, Tu, & Muhlestein, 2014). Discussion of the potential and promise of ACOs Analyzing the current state of health care reform implementation and the likely impact of reforms on the healthcare system, a recent Robert Wood Johnson Foundation report asserts that “more than any other policy change in the ACA, nothing has more potential to influence the future of nearly every health care sector than Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)” (2015 Accountable Care Organization Outlook: Implications for Suppliers and Providers, 2014). From a broader analysis of the potential of ACOs to have a significant and positive role in making progress toward the triple aims of increased quality, improved health outcomes, and reduced costs, Perez concludes that “ACOs are an aggressive, innovative means of shifting the business of health care from the well-entrenched fee-for-service model to a fee-for-value
  • 17. 16 approach. They are an example of practicing the art of the possible, effecting fundamental change in a large, capitalist society where the healthcare system is a complex web of public-and private-sector involvement” (Perez, 2014). “If ACOs succeed, they will be a critical and lasting legacy of the Affordable Care Act” (Casalino L. P., 2014). Conclusion Although there is still much uncertainty about the long-term meaning and significance of the advent of accountable care organizations as alternate way of delivering and financing health care, there is ample evidence that this phenomenon is growing and showing signs of sustainable viability. Describing the promise and prospects of ACOs altering the framework and landscape of health care delivery in the United States, DeVore & Champion made the following observation several years ago: ACOs represent a dramatic departure from the status quo of health care delivery. They have the potential to overcome the fragmentation and volume orientation of the fee-for-service system so that the right incentives are in place to foster health and wellness, instead of payment for treating illness. Unlike previous efforts under the “managed care” rubric that were mainly designed to reduce costs, a properly designed ACO would balance that need against the need to improve outcomes and improve the care experience. (DeVore & Champion, 2011). Even with all the uncertainty and stress confronting health care providers over the past few years with the implementation of the ACA, the hope and expectations of many health policy observers regarding ACOs has remained high. Hopefully all the stakeholders involved in providing health care in the U.S. can go forward with a spirit of cooperation and openness to working together to improve the efficiency and the quality of health care in the U.S.
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