With CMS’ recent announcement of its Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CCJR) payment model and its plan to implement in seventy-five geographic areas, hospitals must be prepared to manage the entire episode of care from the time of surgery through ninety days after discharge. CCJR presents both opportunities and challenges for hospitals. In order to achieve success, organizations must manage their system of care delivery, ensure they are aligned with their physicians and post acute providers, and master the analytics necessary for driving high quality, low cost care.
MedAssets has worked with numerous providers to implement alignment models that bring hospitals and their physicians together, evaluate, identify, and implement changes to the care delivery system to improve quality and decrease cost across the continuum, and employ meaningful analytics for managing an episode of care.
Kevin Lieb, Senior Director for MedAssets’ Physician Alignment Solutions division, will share examples demonstrating how organizations have successfully implemented Episodes of Care. Mr. Lieb will also share examples from both hospital led and specialist led programs and provide lessons learned from these experiences.
This webinar will enable attendees to do the following:
• Identify alignment models within bundled payments and understand their applicability to your organization
• Understand the analytic capabilities necessary for success in a bundled payment environment
• Identify opportunities and strategies for cost reduction and quality improvement
About the Speaker:
Mr. Lieb has more than 20 years of healthcare-related experience focusing on quality improvement, market development and cost reduction initiatives for the hospital provider market. Mr. Lieb has worked for a number of well-known healthcare companies including GE Medical Systems, HCIA and LBA in Denver, Colorado. His responsibilities included healthcare consulting with a focus on process improvement and quality initiatives.
Making CJR Work for You: A Roadmap for Successful Implementation of Medicare ...Wellbe
This presentation will describe a structured approach to successfully launching a program for the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) Model. Based on years of experience with bundled programs, this roadmap provides the basis for developing a targeted plan for your organization as the April 1, 2016 deadline for CJR rapidly approaches.
Key topics to be addressed include:
• Overview of CJR rules and program requirements
• CJR implications for your organization
• Bundle evaluation – financial and clinical issues
• Gainsharing considerations with program collaborators
• Designing an effective post-acute care network
• Using analytics to develop and monitor your program
• Key “must-dos” for an April 1, 2016 launch
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the rules and requirements of CJR
2. Assess the key success drivers in bundle performance
3. Evaluate where and why organizations fail in bundles
4. Develop strategies and tactics to create a post-acute partnership
5. Illustrate risk stratification factors in bundle design
About the Speaker:
Sheldon Hamburger is an Alternative Payment Model advisor for hospitals and healthcare firms nationally. With a focus on program implementation, he brings extensive knowledge and experience gained from more than 25 years of healthcare financial consulting, technology design and development, and sales & marketing strategy for Fortune 1000 clients. He is a frequently sought-after speaker and writer on regulatory and technology trends affecting hospital operations, provider reimbursement issues, BPCI / CJR, programs and regulations, medical expense strategies and payer-provider dynamics. Residing in Raleigh, he is an active member of HIMSS, HFMA, & ACHE. He earned his B.S.E. in Computer Engineering from the University of Michigan.
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted an open door forum covering financial methodology for the 2017 Next Generation Accountable Care Organization Model. The open door forum was held on Tuesday, April 5 from 4:00pm – 5:30pm EDT.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted an open door forum covering the application process for the 2017 Next Generation Accountable Care Organization Model on Tuesday, March 8, 2016 from 4:00 - 5:00pm EST.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
MIPS APM for ACOs: A Hybrid Reimbursement ModelCitiusTech
CMS announced the Quality Payment Program (QPP) final rule in October 2017, stating how it plans to implement the clinician payment changes to QPP, mandated under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization (MACRA) act. The implementation of the MACRA act impacts different type of organizations, one such being the Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). ACOs are evaluated for payments on the basis of quality care and the cost factors associated in achieving their quality goals. Post MACRA implementation, all clinicians will receive payments as per the MIPS (Merit based incentive payments) and Advanced APMs (Advanced alternative payment models). ACO’s can register as APM entities and are eligible to receive payments under Advanced APMs. There is a third category of APM entities which participate in Advanced APMs models but do not meet the threshold of payments and patients set by CMS. Such entities fall into a category that is straddling the line between APM and the MIPS track, called MIPS APM (partially qualifying APM participants). This document discusses about the reporting, scoring and payments for the MIPS APM entities
CMS held a stakeholder call on Wednesday, February 26, 2020 at 2:00 P.M. Eastern Standard Time to discuss the CY 2021 Hospice Capitation Payment Rate Actuarial Methodology for the Hospice Benefit Component of the Value-Based Insurance Design (VBID) Model. During the session, CMS presented on key aspects of the hospice capitation payment rate development, such as how Fee-For-Service paid hospice experience was incorporated, as well as its payment structure, including use of a hospice-specific average geographic adjustment. The forum also provided an opportunity for potential applicants to ask CMS questions regarding these topics.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
The Medicare Aaccess and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 establishes two Quality Payment Programs to transition the U.S. Healthcare System from a Fee-For-Service reimbursement methodology to a Fee-For-Value model. MACRA fundamentally adjusts the Medicare Fee Schedule, forcing healthcare providers to utilize HIT, population health management, and care coordination to receive financial rewards.
The Medicare-Medicaid Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Model team hosted a webinar on Thursday, June 8, 2017 that covered the high-level processes for assigning beneficiaries to Medicare-Medicaid ACOs and calculating savings/losses generated by Medicare-Medicaid ACOs. The webinar also covered the role of participating states in designing the details of these methodologies.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
Making CJR Work for You: A Roadmap for Successful Implementation of Medicare ...Wellbe
This presentation will describe a structured approach to successfully launching a program for the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) Model. Based on years of experience with bundled programs, this roadmap provides the basis for developing a targeted plan for your organization as the April 1, 2016 deadline for CJR rapidly approaches.
Key topics to be addressed include:
• Overview of CJR rules and program requirements
• CJR implications for your organization
• Bundle evaluation – financial and clinical issues
• Gainsharing considerations with program collaborators
• Designing an effective post-acute care network
• Using analytics to develop and monitor your program
• Key “must-dos” for an April 1, 2016 launch
Learning Objectives:
1. Describe the rules and requirements of CJR
2. Assess the key success drivers in bundle performance
3. Evaluate where and why organizations fail in bundles
4. Develop strategies and tactics to create a post-acute partnership
5. Illustrate risk stratification factors in bundle design
About the Speaker:
Sheldon Hamburger is an Alternative Payment Model advisor for hospitals and healthcare firms nationally. With a focus on program implementation, he brings extensive knowledge and experience gained from more than 25 years of healthcare financial consulting, technology design and development, and sales & marketing strategy for Fortune 1000 clients. He is a frequently sought-after speaker and writer on regulatory and technology trends affecting hospital operations, provider reimbursement issues, BPCI / CJR, programs and regulations, medical expense strategies and payer-provider dynamics. Residing in Raleigh, he is an active member of HIMSS, HFMA, & ACHE. He earned his B.S.E. in Computer Engineering from the University of Michigan.
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted an open door forum covering financial methodology for the 2017 Next Generation Accountable Care Organization Model. The open door forum was held on Tuesday, April 5 from 4:00pm – 5:30pm EDT.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted an open door forum covering the application process for the 2017 Next Generation Accountable Care Organization Model on Tuesday, March 8, 2016 from 4:00 - 5:00pm EST.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
MIPS APM for ACOs: A Hybrid Reimbursement ModelCitiusTech
CMS announced the Quality Payment Program (QPP) final rule in October 2017, stating how it plans to implement the clinician payment changes to QPP, mandated under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization (MACRA) act. The implementation of the MACRA act impacts different type of organizations, one such being the Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). ACOs are evaluated for payments on the basis of quality care and the cost factors associated in achieving their quality goals. Post MACRA implementation, all clinicians will receive payments as per the MIPS (Merit based incentive payments) and Advanced APMs (Advanced alternative payment models). ACO’s can register as APM entities and are eligible to receive payments under Advanced APMs. There is a third category of APM entities which participate in Advanced APMs models but do not meet the threshold of payments and patients set by CMS. Such entities fall into a category that is straddling the line between APM and the MIPS track, called MIPS APM (partially qualifying APM participants). This document discusses about the reporting, scoring and payments for the MIPS APM entities
CMS held a stakeholder call on Wednesday, February 26, 2020 at 2:00 P.M. Eastern Standard Time to discuss the CY 2021 Hospice Capitation Payment Rate Actuarial Methodology for the Hospice Benefit Component of the Value-Based Insurance Design (VBID) Model. During the session, CMS presented on key aspects of the hospice capitation payment rate development, such as how Fee-For-Service paid hospice experience was incorporated, as well as its payment structure, including use of a hospice-specific average geographic adjustment. The forum also provided an opportunity for potential applicants to ask CMS questions regarding these topics.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
The Medicare Aaccess and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 establishes two Quality Payment Programs to transition the U.S. Healthcare System from a Fee-For-Service reimbursement methodology to a Fee-For-Value model. MACRA fundamentally adjusts the Medicare Fee Schedule, forcing healthcare providers to utilize HIT, population health management, and care coordination to receive financial rewards.
The Medicare-Medicaid Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Model team hosted a webinar on Thursday, June 8, 2017 that covered the high-level processes for assigning beneficiaries to Medicare-Medicaid ACOs and calculating savings/losses generated by Medicare-Medicaid ACOs. The webinar also covered the role of participating states in designing the details of these methodologies.
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
The Changing Healthcare System and Impact of MACRAPYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Lori Foley and Consulting Senior Aaron Elias co-presented “The Changing Healthcare System and Impact of MACRA” at the Physician Insurers Association of America’s CEO/COO Meeting.
The Medicare Access & CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) dramatically affected Medicare reimbursements to healthcare providers, as well as provided a new framework for rewarding quality care and reporting on quality measurements. This incentive-based system has the potential not only to change how medicine is practiced, but influence patient perception of care. The presentation will provide the latest information on MACRA implementation, and will detail how the aforementioned changes will impact miscellaneous professional liability insurers.
Revenue at Risk: Understanding Financial Impacts of Quality ReportingBill Presley
Jodi Frei, Northwestern Medical Center Vermont, and I co-presented at the MUSE Executive Institute on Revenue at Risk: Understanding Financial Impacts of Quality Reporting. The Executive Institute featured many amazing CXO's discussing the changing landscape of revenue cycle management and how finance, quality, and IT departments are converging on revenue cycle.
Though pay for performance is the common theme, the logistics of programs including Value Based Purchasing (VBP), Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR), Hospital Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program, Readmission Reduction, MACRA, MIPS and APMs, are very different. In this session, the specifics of each Quality Program including reporting requirements, scoring methodologies, and associated incentives and penalties will be covered. In addition, tools to track performance and quantify financial risk will be shared.
Reimbursement in this era of health care reform is challenging. We all seek success under this new normal in health care. Optimizing revenue capture in a quality reimbursement model requires acquisition of new knowledge and the use of new tools and strategies. Join us in the conversation; share your strategies; learn from others.
Riding the Rapids of Payment Reform: Downstream Effects of Quality Reporting ...Bill Presley
In this presentation, we highlighted how quality measurement programs impact reimbursement affecting your revenue. The revenue at risk in your organization. We focused on quality programs like Value-Based Purchasing (VBP), Merit-Based Incentive Program (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APM) and their impact on Part A and Part B reimbursements.
It’s no surprise that reimbursement tied to quality performance is quickly becoming a reality for hospitals and physicians. CMS’ aggressive goals aimed at increasing the percentage of Medicare payments associated with quality versus quantity can be achieved through such programs as Value-based Purchasing and MACRA. This session will cover scoring methodologies, reporting requirements, reimbursement impact, infrastructure (and other resource needs), EMR tools and tactics, and workflow modifications.
The Alphabet Soup of Clinical Quality Measures ReportingBill Presley
CMS is transitioning to what the they call "a new and more responsive regulatory framework" for quality reporting and reimbursement. CMS goals are "…electronic health records helping physicians, clinicians, and hospitals to deliver better care, smarter spending, and healthier people". Over the next couple years, we will see a transformation of fee for service into value-based care models driven by the VBP, Quality Payment Program, MACRA, Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APM). Healthcare organizations will no longer be motivated by implementing and meeting Meaningful Use, but instead will be driven by value-based care and risk-based payment models that focus on quality outcomes for reimbursements.
In this Education Session we will review:
• How CMS is aligning clinical quality measures (CQMs) to reduce the reporting burden for healthcare organizations and providers. We will cover the vision and goals for achieving quality alignment for CMS.
• We will dive into the following CMS reporting programs and how they interact with each other: Value-Based Purchasing (VBP), Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), Merit-based Incentive Payments (MIPS), Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR), The Joint Commission (ORYX), Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR), and Alternative Payment Models (APM).
The CMS Innovation Center held the fifth in a series of webinars for potential applicants interested in applying to Health Care Innovation Awards Round Two. The webinar held on Wednesday, June 26, 2013 from 1:00–2:00pm EDT, focused on measuring project success and developing an operational plan.
- - -
CMS Innovations
http://innovations.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
Deployment of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization ActPYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Martie Ross and Senior Manager Graham Fox presented, “Mastering MIPS" at the American College of Healthcare Executives’ Congress on Healthcare Leadership.
Learning objectives included:
Gaining an understanding of MIPS—why it was implemented and how it will impact reimbursement, governance, and strategic planning for healthcare organizations.
Identifying questions organizations must consider during MIPS implementation that will lead to financial and operational success.
Quality and Outcome Framework (QOF) is a voluntary annual incentive programme for GPs in England, detailing practice achievement results. The primary objective of QOF is to drive the quality of primary care and reduce variations in the quality of care amongst GPs
The Vicissitudes of Valuing Value--Legal and Valuation Issues Associated with...PYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Carol Carden co-presented “The Vicissitudes of Valuing Value--Legal and Valuation Issues Associated with Value-Based Payment Models” at the 2017 American Health Lawyers Association Physician and Hospitals Law Institute, February 1-3, 2017, in Orlando, Florida.
The presentation addressed:
Emerging alternative payment models (APMs)
The application of fraud and abuse laws and IRS rules to provider network payments
Existing market data and regulatory guidance
Considerations in determining fair market value and commercial reasonableness
PYA Principal Carol Carden and Senior Manager Angie Caldwell presented “Hot Topics in Physician Compensation” at the Kentucky Society of CPAs (KY CPA) Health Care Conference, May 18, 2016. The presentation explored the latest developments in physician compensation structure, as well as considerations related to stacking compensation elements, the role and impact of quality incentives, the latest in affiliation models, and population health initiatives.
PYA Principal Martie Ross presented the keynote address, “The March to MIPS: The Merit-Based Payment System,” at the Kansas Medical Group Management Association 2016 Fall Conference, September 21-23, 2016, at the Overland Park Marriott in Overland Park, Kansas.
The presentation will include:
An introduction to the Medicare Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS).
A discussion of the four components of the MIPS composite score.
An exploration of the penalties and bonuses associated with the MIPS composite score, as well as the reputational impact of the publicly reported MIPS composite score.
The Next Generation ACO Model team hosted an open door forum on Tuesday, January 31, 2017. During this open door forum Model team members provided an overview of the Model, along with information pertaining to the Letter of Intent (LOI).
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
Healthcare Consumerism and Cost: Dispelling the Myth of Price TransparencyHealth Catalyst
The world of healthcare costs is confusing and messy for both patients and providers. Many providers don’t fully understand their costs and therefore struggle to meet the increasing pressure for greater price transparency for consumers. With price transparency rules finalized and implementation looming, many providers are racing against the clock to adapt business practices to meet regulations and communicate the implications to consumers. And each organization’s financial health depends on transparency, as uncertainty about costs keeps many patients from seeking care.
Deb Gordon, seasoned healthcare executive and author of the book, “The Health Care Consumer’s Manifesto: How to Get the Most for Your Money,” and Pat Rocap, Director of Cost Management Services at Health Catalyst, examine the relationship between cost and pricing as the path to transparency for consumers. Deb and Pat provide expert analysis and practical advice to help you become a savvier provider and consumer when it comes to healthcare pricing and spending.
- The implications of federal price transparency regulations.
- The connection between healthcare costing and pricing.
- How to start your organization’s journey to understand costs and why it matters.
- Why price transparency is important to both patients and providers.
In order to best prepare our clients for CMS' transition from Fee-For-Service to Fee-For-Value physician reimbursement, we have prepared a summary of the Merit Incentive-Based Payment System (MIPS). The MIPS program will consolidate PQRS, Meaningful Use, and the Value-Based Modifier into a single reporting program in which CMS affecting ≈95% of physicians beginning in 2017.
Addressing Medical Necessity Denials and RecoupmentsPYA, P.C.
With increased denials and recoupments related to medical necessity at the forefront of discussions at this year’s American Health Lawyers Association Institute on Medicare and Medicaid Payment Issues, PYA was prepared to inform and assist providers instituting best practices to address medical necessity denials. PYA Principal Denise Hall-Gaulin co-presented “Medical Status-Current Status/Key Best Practices in Prevention of Medical Necessity Denials and Recoupments” with Michael Spake, VP of External Affairs and Chief Compliance and Integrity Officer at Lakeland Regional Health.
The presentation included:
A discussion of medical necessity—what it means and what it affects
Information regarding medical necessity determinations and criteria for determination
Definitions for categorically excluded services
Criteria for admission (skilled nursing facilities and inpatient rehabilitation facilities included)
Current Trends in Data Protection for Integrated Health, Centralized Peer Rev...PYA, P.C.
A webinar hosted by PYA and the Alliance for Quality Improvement (AQIPS) explored “Current Trends in Data Protection for Integrated Health, Centralized Peer Review Systems, and Other Innovative Programs.” PYA Principal Martie Ross participated in the webinar, which focused on how patient safety organization (PSO) protections can bring value to accountable care organizations and other integrated health systems.
In addition, the webinar provided instruction for using:
Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (PSQIA) protections in Medicare Shared Savings Programs, centralized peer review programs, and other collaboratives.
PSQIA protections for new types of clinical analysis, clinical quality reports, and performance tools that contain information that may not be protected under existing state peer review privilege or are shared among an integrated network.
In follow-up to the March 10, 2015 announcement of the Next Generation Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Model of payment and care delivery, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted the fourth in a series of open door forums on Tuesday, April 7, 2015. This open door forum focused on benefit enhancements and beneficiary care coordination reward.
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CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
CMS Innovation Center, Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services staff will be hosting a webinar that will discuss how applicants can work with States and the role of States in the Strong Start funding opportunity. A series of follow up webinars will provide more in-depth information about other aspects of this initiative.
More at: http://innovations.cms.gov/resources/Strong-Start-Webinar-State-Partnerships.html
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CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
PYA Principal Martie Ross joined University of Kansas Medical Center’s Robert Moser, MD, and CIO Chris Hansen for the keynote presentation at the joint symposium by Heart of America Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society and Missouri Health Information Management Association, September 14, 2016, at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas. They discussed insights related to the role of advanced analytics and technology in transforming and transitioning to new payment models.
NCQA’s Accreditation process provides payers with a comprehensive framework to improve quality of care and services. It allows members and employers to compare health plan performance across various plans and against industry benchmarks. NCQA accreditation has 3 parts – HEDIS, Patient experience CAHPS measures and NCQA standards
NYU Langone Medical Center’s TJA BPCI Experience: Lessons in How to Maximize ...Wellbe
The Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) Initiative began generating data in January of 2013. Dr. Iorio will outline the challenges and benefits of implementing BPCI for Total Joint Arthroplasty at an urban, tertiary, academic medical center with a hybrid compensation model. Early results from the implementation of a Medicare BPCI Model 2 primary TJA program demonstrate cost-savings with an improvement in quality of care metrics and continued cost savings through year 3 of our experience. Changes in patient optimization, care coordination, clinical care pathways, and evidence-based protocols are the key to improving the quality metrics and cost effectiveness within the implementation of the Bundled Payment for Care Initiative, thus bringing increased value to our TJA patients.
Maximizing Value in a Bundled Environment – Keys to Success:
• Evidence based, cost effectiveness analysis
• Standardized protocol adoption
• Transparent data
• Perioperative Patient Optimization
• Care management
• Physician-hospital alignment with Gain sharing
• Enhanced pain relief and rehabilitation protocols
• Blood management and rational VTED prophylaxis
About the Speaker:
Richard Iorio, MD, is the William and Susan Jaffe Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at New York University Langone Medical Center Hospital for Joint Diseases and Chief of Adult Reconstruction at NYU Langone HJD. He co-founded Labrador Healthcare Consulting Services, Responsive Risk Solutions, and the Value Based Healthcare Consortium in 2015. He is a member of the Board of Directors for LIMA, the Lifetime Initiative for the Management of Arthritis. Dr. Iorio is a national expert in physician and hospital quality and safety and a leader in the implementation of alternate payment paradigms in orthopaedic surgery.
The Changing Healthcare System and Impact of MACRAPYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Lori Foley and Consulting Senior Aaron Elias co-presented “The Changing Healthcare System and Impact of MACRA” at the Physician Insurers Association of America’s CEO/COO Meeting.
The Medicare Access & CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) dramatically affected Medicare reimbursements to healthcare providers, as well as provided a new framework for rewarding quality care and reporting on quality measurements. This incentive-based system has the potential not only to change how medicine is practiced, but influence patient perception of care. The presentation will provide the latest information on MACRA implementation, and will detail how the aforementioned changes will impact miscellaneous professional liability insurers.
Revenue at Risk: Understanding Financial Impacts of Quality ReportingBill Presley
Jodi Frei, Northwestern Medical Center Vermont, and I co-presented at the MUSE Executive Institute on Revenue at Risk: Understanding Financial Impacts of Quality Reporting. The Executive Institute featured many amazing CXO's discussing the changing landscape of revenue cycle management and how finance, quality, and IT departments are converging on revenue cycle.
Though pay for performance is the common theme, the logistics of programs including Value Based Purchasing (VBP), Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR), Hospital Acquired Condition (HAC) Reduction Program, Readmission Reduction, MACRA, MIPS and APMs, are very different. In this session, the specifics of each Quality Program including reporting requirements, scoring methodologies, and associated incentives and penalties will be covered. In addition, tools to track performance and quantify financial risk will be shared.
Reimbursement in this era of health care reform is challenging. We all seek success under this new normal in health care. Optimizing revenue capture in a quality reimbursement model requires acquisition of new knowledge and the use of new tools and strategies. Join us in the conversation; share your strategies; learn from others.
Riding the Rapids of Payment Reform: Downstream Effects of Quality Reporting ...Bill Presley
In this presentation, we highlighted how quality measurement programs impact reimbursement affecting your revenue. The revenue at risk in your organization. We focused on quality programs like Value-Based Purchasing (VBP), Merit-Based Incentive Program (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APM) and their impact on Part A and Part B reimbursements.
It’s no surprise that reimbursement tied to quality performance is quickly becoming a reality for hospitals and physicians. CMS’ aggressive goals aimed at increasing the percentage of Medicare payments associated with quality versus quantity can be achieved through such programs as Value-based Purchasing and MACRA. This session will cover scoring methodologies, reporting requirements, reimbursement impact, infrastructure (and other resource needs), EMR tools and tactics, and workflow modifications.
The Alphabet Soup of Clinical Quality Measures ReportingBill Presley
CMS is transitioning to what the they call "a new and more responsive regulatory framework" for quality reporting and reimbursement. CMS goals are "…electronic health records helping physicians, clinicians, and hospitals to deliver better care, smarter spending, and healthier people". Over the next couple years, we will see a transformation of fee for service into value-based care models driven by the VBP, Quality Payment Program, MACRA, Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APM). Healthcare organizations will no longer be motivated by implementing and meeting Meaningful Use, but instead will be driven by value-based care and risk-based payment models that focus on quality outcomes for reimbursements.
In this Education Session we will review:
• How CMS is aligning clinical quality measures (CQMs) to reduce the reporting burden for healthcare organizations and providers. We will cover the vision and goals for achieving quality alignment for CMS.
• We will dive into the following CMS reporting programs and how they interact with each other: Value-Based Purchasing (VBP), Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), Merit-based Incentive Payments (MIPS), Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR), The Joint Commission (ORYX), Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR), and Alternative Payment Models (APM).
The CMS Innovation Center held the fifth in a series of webinars for potential applicants interested in applying to Health Care Innovation Awards Round Two. The webinar held on Wednesday, June 26, 2013 from 1:00–2:00pm EDT, focused on measuring project success and developing an operational plan.
- - -
CMS Innovations
http://innovations.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
CMS Privacy Policy
http://cms.gov/About-CMS/Agency-Information/Aboutwebsite/Privacy-Policy.html
Deployment of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization ActPYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Martie Ross and Senior Manager Graham Fox presented, “Mastering MIPS" at the American College of Healthcare Executives’ Congress on Healthcare Leadership.
Learning objectives included:
Gaining an understanding of MIPS—why it was implemented and how it will impact reimbursement, governance, and strategic planning for healthcare organizations.
Identifying questions organizations must consider during MIPS implementation that will lead to financial and operational success.
Quality and Outcome Framework (QOF) is a voluntary annual incentive programme for GPs in England, detailing practice achievement results. The primary objective of QOF is to drive the quality of primary care and reduce variations in the quality of care amongst GPs
The Vicissitudes of Valuing Value--Legal and Valuation Issues Associated with...PYA, P.C.
PYA Principal Carol Carden co-presented “The Vicissitudes of Valuing Value--Legal and Valuation Issues Associated with Value-Based Payment Models” at the 2017 American Health Lawyers Association Physician and Hospitals Law Institute, February 1-3, 2017, in Orlando, Florida.
The presentation addressed:
Emerging alternative payment models (APMs)
The application of fraud and abuse laws and IRS rules to provider network payments
Existing market data and regulatory guidance
Considerations in determining fair market value and commercial reasonableness
PYA Principal Carol Carden and Senior Manager Angie Caldwell presented “Hot Topics in Physician Compensation” at the Kentucky Society of CPAs (KY CPA) Health Care Conference, May 18, 2016. The presentation explored the latest developments in physician compensation structure, as well as considerations related to stacking compensation elements, the role and impact of quality incentives, the latest in affiliation models, and population health initiatives.
PYA Principal Martie Ross presented the keynote address, “The March to MIPS: The Merit-Based Payment System,” at the Kansas Medical Group Management Association 2016 Fall Conference, September 21-23, 2016, at the Overland Park Marriott in Overland Park, Kansas.
The presentation will include:
An introduction to the Medicare Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS).
A discussion of the four components of the MIPS composite score.
An exploration of the penalties and bonuses associated with the MIPS composite score, as well as the reputational impact of the publicly reported MIPS composite score.
The Next Generation ACO Model team hosted an open door forum on Tuesday, January 31, 2017. During this open door forum Model team members provided an overview of the Model, along with information pertaining to the Letter of Intent (LOI).
- - -
CMS Innovation Center
http://innovation.cms.gov
We accept comments in the spirit of our comment policy:
http://newmedia.hhs.gov/standards/comment_policy.html
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Healthcare Consumerism and Cost: Dispelling the Myth of Price TransparencyHealth Catalyst
The world of healthcare costs is confusing and messy for both patients and providers. Many providers don’t fully understand their costs and therefore struggle to meet the increasing pressure for greater price transparency for consumers. With price transparency rules finalized and implementation looming, many providers are racing against the clock to adapt business practices to meet regulations and communicate the implications to consumers. And each organization’s financial health depends on transparency, as uncertainty about costs keeps many patients from seeking care.
Deb Gordon, seasoned healthcare executive and author of the book, “The Health Care Consumer’s Manifesto: How to Get the Most for Your Money,” and Pat Rocap, Director of Cost Management Services at Health Catalyst, examine the relationship between cost and pricing as the path to transparency for consumers. Deb and Pat provide expert analysis and practical advice to help you become a savvier provider and consumer when it comes to healthcare pricing and spending.
- The implications of federal price transparency regulations.
- The connection between healthcare costing and pricing.
- How to start your organization’s journey to understand costs and why it matters.
- Why price transparency is important to both patients and providers.
In order to best prepare our clients for CMS' transition from Fee-For-Service to Fee-For-Value physician reimbursement, we have prepared a summary of the Merit Incentive-Based Payment System (MIPS). The MIPS program will consolidate PQRS, Meaningful Use, and the Value-Based Modifier into a single reporting program in which CMS affecting ≈95% of physicians beginning in 2017.
Addressing Medical Necessity Denials and RecoupmentsPYA, P.C.
With increased denials and recoupments related to medical necessity at the forefront of discussions at this year’s American Health Lawyers Association Institute on Medicare and Medicaid Payment Issues, PYA was prepared to inform and assist providers instituting best practices to address medical necessity denials. PYA Principal Denise Hall-Gaulin co-presented “Medical Status-Current Status/Key Best Practices in Prevention of Medical Necessity Denials and Recoupments” with Michael Spake, VP of External Affairs and Chief Compliance and Integrity Officer at Lakeland Regional Health.
The presentation included:
A discussion of medical necessity—what it means and what it affects
Information regarding medical necessity determinations and criteria for determination
Definitions for categorically excluded services
Criteria for admission (skilled nursing facilities and inpatient rehabilitation facilities included)
Current Trends in Data Protection for Integrated Health, Centralized Peer Rev...PYA, P.C.
A webinar hosted by PYA and the Alliance for Quality Improvement (AQIPS) explored “Current Trends in Data Protection for Integrated Health, Centralized Peer Review Systems, and Other Innovative Programs.” PYA Principal Martie Ross participated in the webinar, which focused on how patient safety organization (PSO) protections can bring value to accountable care organizations and other integrated health systems.
In addition, the webinar provided instruction for using:
Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (PSQIA) protections in Medicare Shared Savings Programs, centralized peer review programs, and other collaboratives.
PSQIA protections for new types of clinical analysis, clinical quality reports, and performance tools that contain information that may not be protected under existing state peer review privilege or are shared among an integrated network.
In follow-up to the March 10, 2015 announcement of the Next Generation Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Model of payment and care delivery, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMS Innovation Center) hosted the fourth in a series of open door forums on Tuesday, April 7, 2015. This open door forum focused on benefit enhancements and beneficiary care coordination reward.
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CMS Innovation Center, Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services staff will be hosting a webinar that will discuss how applicants can work with States and the role of States in the Strong Start funding opportunity. A series of follow up webinars will provide more in-depth information about other aspects of this initiative.
More at: http://innovations.cms.gov/resources/Strong-Start-Webinar-State-Partnerships.html
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PYA Principal Martie Ross joined University of Kansas Medical Center’s Robert Moser, MD, and CIO Chris Hansen for the keynote presentation at the joint symposium by Heart of America Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society and Missouri Health Information Management Association, September 14, 2016, at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas. They discussed insights related to the role of advanced analytics and technology in transforming and transitioning to new payment models.
NCQA’s Accreditation process provides payers with a comprehensive framework to improve quality of care and services. It allows members and employers to compare health plan performance across various plans and against industry benchmarks. NCQA accreditation has 3 parts – HEDIS, Patient experience CAHPS measures and NCQA standards
NYU Langone Medical Center’s TJA BPCI Experience: Lessons in How to Maximize ...Wellbe
The Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) Initiative began generating data in January of 2013. Dr. Iorio will outline the challenges and benefits of implementing BPCI for Total Joint Arthroplasty at an urban, tertiary, academic medical center with a hybrid compensation model. Early results from the implementation of a Medicare BPCI Model 2 primary TJA program demonstrate cost-savings with an improvement in quality of care metrics and continued cost savings through year 3 of our experience. Changes in patient optimization, care coordination, clinical care pathways, and evidence-based protocols are the key to improving the quality metrics and cost effectiveness within the implementation of the Bundled Payment for Care Initiative, thus bringing increased value to our TJA patients.
Maximizing Value in a Bundled Environment – Keys to Success:
• Evidence based, cost effectiveness analysis
• Standardized protocol adoption
• Transparent data
• Perioperative Patient Optimization
• Care management
• Physician-hospital alignment with Gain sharing
• Enhanced pain relief and rehabilitation protocols
• Blood management and rational VTED prophylaxis
About the Speaker:
Richard Iorio, MD, is the William and Susan Jaffe Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at New York University Langone Medical Center Hospital for Joint Diseases and Chief of Adult Reconstruction at NYU Langone HJD. He co-founded Labrador Healthcare Consulting Services, Responsive Risk Solutions, and the Value Based Healthcare Consortium in 2015. He is a member of the Board of Directors for LIMA, the Lifetime Initiative for the Management of Arthritis. Dr. Iorio is a national expert in physician and hospital quality and safety and a leader in the implementation of alternate payment paradigms in orthopaedic surgery.
The CMS Innovation Center hosted a special webinar featuring Dr. Patrick Conway, CMS Deputy Administrator for Innovation and Quality and CMS Chief Medical Officer, on Monday, November 10, 2014 from 10:30am – 11:30 am ET. Dr. Conway will provided an update about the work of the CMS Innovation Center and the models being tested to improve better care for patients, better health for our communities, and lower costs through improvement for our health care system. Opportunities for questions were provided.
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A Clinically Integrated Network (CIN) is a selective partnership of physicians collaborating with
hospital(s) and other providers to deliver evidence-based care, improve quality and efficiency,
manage populations and demonstrate value to the market. Once these objectives are met, the network may contract on behalf of participants
Edifecs CJR: don't fumble with your bundle ssEdifecs Inc
Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) opens the door to opportunity for improved joint replacement patient care delivery. With full accountability for both cost and quality for the joint replacement episode, hospitals must share critical data in near real time to align and coordinate the full continuum of post-acute providers. The top complexities Jay Sultan addressed include:
The top complexities Jay Sultan addressed include:
Considerations for entering into contracts with your orthopedic surgeons and other collaborating episode providers
Episode bundle administration and monitoring; gain sharing administration
Real-time data acquisition from collaborating providers
Analytics and reporting, focused care delivery management, and preparation for CMS audits
Whatever burning issues and questions are on your mind
The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 is fundamentally transitioning the U.S. Healthcare System from a Fee-For-Service model to a Fee-For-Value reimbursement model. MACRA encourages healthcare providers to utilize HIT, population health management, and care coordination in pursuit of The Triple Aim (Improving individual healthcare quality, improving population health , and reducing cost).
Due to popular demand, the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) team hosted a repeat of the webinar that was originally held on Wednesday, April 27, 2016. During this webinar Model team members provided an overview of the model specifically for interested payers.
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Clinical Integration: The Foundation for Accountable Care - Presentation delivered by Keynote Speaker Marvin O’Quinn, Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, Dignity Health at the National Healthcare CXO Summit held in Las Vegas Oct 19-21, 2014.
Webinar: “While You Were Sleeping…Proposed Rule Positioned to Significantly I...PYA, P.C.
You likely know from the headlines that the 2021 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Proposed Rule slashes payments for surgical specialists. But the impact of the Proposed Rule is far broader, reflecting a fundamental realignment driven by the transition to value-based payments. In our webinar, “While You Were Sleeping…Proposed Rule Positioned to Significantly Impact Physician Compensation,” PYA experts addressed these proposals, helping you understand and prepare for the changes ahead.
Following this presentation, attendees were able to:
Understand how a handful of wRVU changes would alter Medicare reimbursement for nearly all physicians.
Appreciate the operational impact of these changes.
Recognize the challenges to existing physician compensation models.
Identify strategies and tactics to prepare for and manage these impacts.
Presenters include PYA Principals Angie Caldwell, Martie Ross, and Valerie Rock. The webinar took place Thursday, September 10 and was hosted in conjunction with the Florida Hospital Association.
If you have additional questions about the MPFS Proposed Rule and its impact on physician compensation or need assistance with any matter involving physician compensation, valuation, strategy and integration, or compliance, contact a PYA executive below at (800) 270-9629.
ACOs and CINs — Where Did They Start, How Have They Evolved, and Where Are Th...Health Catalyst
As the types and structures of Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) and Clinically Integrated Networks (CINs) continue to evolve, organizations moving into value-based care face an ever-changing landscape. Alternative payment model arrangements have driven provider organizations to hone in on specific tactics to meet their contractual and strategic objectives.
Please join Health Catalyst Senior Vice President Dr. Amy Flaster and Population Health Management Consultant Jonas Varnum as they discuss the evolution of the ACO and CIN models, what new tools ACOs employ today to promote success, and lessons learned from organizations that have succeeded in alternative payment models. They will dive deep into lessons learned in addition to providing a primer on what has always been and continues to be vitally important to success in value based care. Specifics they will cover include:
- Approaches to simplify quality metric reporting
- Enhanced methodology that zeroes in on identifying high-value opportunities to improve patient populations
- Key tips to expand your business with new contracts
Dr. Flaster and Mr. Varnum’s combined experience make them uniquely qualified to guide you in your ACO or CIN journey. Dr. Flaster comes from a clinical background where she worked as Associate Medical Director at Partners HealthCare - one of the largest ACOs in the country. Mr. Varnum is a professional services strategy leader with demonstrated expertise delivering payment model transformation and helping providers and payers to strategically adjust their operations.
The alphabet soup of clinical quality measures reporting and reimbursement 2...Bill Presley
CMS is transitioning to what the they call "a new and more responsive regulatory framework" for quality reporting and reimbursement. CMS goals are "…electronic health records helping physicians, clinicians, and hospitals to deliver better care, smarter spending, and healthier people". Over the next couple years, we will see a transformation of fee for service into value-based care models driven by the VBP, Quality Payment Program, MACRA, Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) and Alternative Payment Models (APM). Healthcare organizations will no longer be motivated by implementing and meeting Meaningful Use, but instead will be driven by value-based care and risk-based payment models that focus on quality outcomes for reimbursements.
In this Education Session we will review:
• How CMS is aligning clinical quality measures (CQMs) to reduce the reporting burden for healthcare organizations and providers. We will cover the vision and goals for achieving quality alignment for CMS.
• We will dive into the following CMS reporting programs and how they interact with each other: Value-Based Purchasing (VBP), Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), Merit-based Incentive Payments (MIPS), Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR), The Joint Commission (ORYX), Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR), and Alternative Payment Models (APM).
• How the Eligible Hospital and Eligible Professional reimbursement models will change in 2017 and going forward.
• Compare and contrast the requirements for quality measure reporting and identify strategies to ensure compliance.
• The potential impact to hospital reimbursement of current and proposed programs that will affect quality reporting for hospitals and providers.
• How to improve efficiency and quality by aligning measures across initiatives.
• Where to find current information (and breaking news) on each of these Quality Initiatives.
In the past, organizations participating in quality reporting initiatives involved abstractors sifting through a small sample set of unstructured data in paper charts to then manually convert their findings to discrete reportable data. This approach is time consuming and requires extensive amount of resources from both IT and Quality staff. Aligning quality initiatives can improve efficiencies and processes, and contribute to population health management efforts, both locally and nationally.
At the conclusion of this presentation, attendees will be able to apply what they’ve learned about aligning Clinical Quality Measures across initiatives specific to their organization to improve reimbursements, reduce their reporting burden, increase efficiencies, and realize the benefits of Population Health Management.
If you are responsible for hospital quality, IT, clinical quality measure initiatives or have a vested interest in making sure your organization is aligning quality measures reporting, this informational session is a must.
Presentation by Rich Pollack, VP and Chief Information Officer, VCU Health, at the marcus evans National Healthcare CIO Summit held in Pasadena, CA March 13-14 2017
Modern Relationships Between Physicians, Hospitals, and Long-Term Care Provid...PYA, P.C.
PYA Consulting Manager Aaron Elias co-presented “Modern Relationships Between Physicians, Hospitals, and Long-Term Care Providers in a Time of Risk-Based Contracting,” along with Jeanna Palmer Gunville, a shareholder at Polsinelli.
Healthcare Reform and Physician Compensation— Presentation Examines What’s in...PYA, P.C.
Among the many questions facing physicians in the wake of healthcare reform—how will they get paid? PYA Principal David McMillan recently addressed this question at the PKF Healthcare Fly-In with “Current Reform Initiatives and Their Impact on Physician Compensation.”
How to Engage Physicians in Quality/Safety Improvement Using MetricsWellbe
The unsustainable rising cost of medical care is creating financial pressures that will critically alter the way that health care is both paid for and delivered. Limited resources dictate that we become more efficient at providing high quality care. In an effort to provide financial incentive for delivering quality care the Federal government instituted Value Based Purchasing (VBP) and Bundled Payments. In order to maximize reimbursement under these programs, providers of health care must follow to the basic tenants of the quality principles.
Lorraine Hutzler, Associate Director of the Center for Quality and Patient Safety at NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases at the NYU Langone Medical Center, will discuss:
• How to build a quality infrastructure for your orthopedic program
• What quality metrics to measure and how to engage surgeons using them
• Lean and Six Sigma principles to use to accelerate improvement
About the Speaker:
Lorraine100Lorraine Hutzler is the Associate Director of the Center for Quality and Patient Safety at NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases at the NYU Langone Medical Center and a Principal of Labrador Healthcare Consulting. She designed, built and maintains a robust quality infrastructure for the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. Lorraine has extensive expertise in quality metrics management and reporting as well as Lean and Six Sigma Certification.
Similar to Prepping for CCJR: Lessons Learned in Physician Alignment and Bundled Payments (20)
Using Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) to Enhance Postoperative OutcomesWellbe
Speaker: Francesco Carli, MD, MPhil, senior staff anesthesiologist at the McGill University Health Centre
Cost: Complimentary, sponsored by Wellbe
There is strong evidence that many of aspects of surgical care have little evidence, and therefore the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) program has been set up to accelerate the recovery process and decrease the rate of postoperative complications. There is an opportunity to improve outcomes by using team approach and revision of the standard procedures.
Learn about:
– The elements of ERAS protocols
– How to structure the Team approach
– The role of the patient in ERAS
– How to perform an audit of your program
About the Speaker:
Francesco Carli, MD, MPhil, is Professor of Anesthesia at McGill University and Associate Professor in the School of Dietetics and Human Nutrition at McGill University and a senior staff anesthesiologist at the McGill University Health Centre. He is currently an Elected Member of the American Academy of Anesthesia and a Board Member of the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) Society. Dr. Carli completed his medical training and anesthesia training in Turin, Italy, Paris, France, and London, England. He completed a Master’s Degree in surgical metabolism at the University of London, England.
His research interests are: metabolic changes associated with surgery and the impact of perioperative interventions (regional analgesia, nutrition, hormones, exercise) on postoperative recovery; evaluation of functional outcome measures during the surgical recovery process; prehabilitation of surgical patients. He is the author of over 250 peer-review scientific articles and has been a recipient of over 50 peer and non peer-review grants.
10-Year Orthopedics and Spine Forecast: Factors Impacting DemandWellbe
Advances in technology and surgical techniques, fluctuations in population, ever-increasing demand for outpatient procedures combined with an array of economic and policy factors will shape our opportunity for growth in Orthopedics and Spine over the next decade. What’s in store for the next 10 years of orthopedics and spine service lines? Mike Graham of Sg2 will review future inpatient and outpatient forecasts for orthopedics and spine services, the key factors impacting their growth, and opportunities to differentiate your orthopedics and spine services to capture additional market share.
About the Speaker:
Mike Graham supports Sg2’s intelligence and analytics in both orthopedics and spine and contributes to the orthopedic and spine forecasts. As an Sg2 thought leader, he writes extensively on the development of orthopedic and spine service line strategy. He also works directly with health care executives and physicians to apply knowledge and strategy to their unique circumstances and environment.
With 20 years of experience in health care management and information systems, Mike has devoted much of his career to sharing best practices in service line development, physician engagement, care redesign and payment reform through publications, webinars, conference presentations and consulting engagements.
Immediately prior to joining Sg2, Mike engaged with hospitals and providers to grow their orthopedic service lines, improve patient outcomes and transition to value-based models of care. Earlier in his career he participated in the creation of groundbreaking approaches in comprehensive spine center development, focusing on innovative methods to improve patient access and employ nurse navigation and outcomes collection throughout the continuum of care.
Mike earned a master in health care administration from Xavier University in Cincinnati and an undergraduate degree in management information systems from the University of Dayton (OH).
Performance and Reimbursement under MIPS for OrthopedicsWellbe
The 2015 MACRA legislation fundamentally changed the way in which providers are paid for their services. It also provides some relief from the “all or nothing” approach used by Meaningful Use.
This session, a review of the Final Rule published on Oct 14, 2016, conveys a practical approach to maximizing reimbursement under MIPS while reducing burden on clinical staff.
After this session, attendees will have a firm grasp of:
– the major components of the Quality Payment Program
– operational strategies for measure selection
– orthopedic-specific quality measures
About the Speaker:
karenclarkKaren R. Clark is chief information officer for OrthoTennessee, where she has worked since 1998. In that role, she serves on national committees for the Healthcare Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS.) A HIMSS Fellow and Certified Professional in Healthcare Information and Management Systems, her current HIMSS committee is the HIT User Experience, which focuses on clinician experience with health information technology.
She has spoken at the AAOE, AAOS and OrthoForum conferences on both information security and the 2015 MACRA legislation, specifically on the Merit Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS.). She is a member of the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) as well as the CIO/CMIO Council with the American Medical Group Association.
After graduating from American University with a degree in marketing in 1979, she joined Brooks Brothers in New York, where she was a buyer. She earned her MBA in finance from Fordham University in 1984. She moved to Knoxville in 1988 and joined Watson’s as director of planning and distribution when her husband, Brooks, was recruited from Sports Illustrated to Whittle Communications. They have two adult daughters, Isabel, and Olivia.
Managing Total Joint Replacement Bundled Payment Models: Keys to SuccessWellbe
Speaker: Andrew Duncan, Executive Director for Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation at University of Florida Health
This webinar will describe bundled payments and episode of care based patient management strategies. Attendees can learn to successfully manage total joint replacement bundled payment programs and what clinical service delivery strategies to use to be positioned for success. The importance of collecting and using data to understand costs for the episode of care and to negotiate will also be a focus.
About the Speaker:
Andrew Duncan has been a licensed physical therapist since 1991, when he graduated from the State University of New York at Buffalo with his Bachelor of Science in Physical Therapy. Upon completion of entry-level training, he worked as a physical therapist for two years and then completed his post professional Master’s degree in Human Movement Science and became certified in Athletic Training at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He then underwent board certification by the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties and became a Sports Certified Specialist in 2002. While working as a manager at rehabilitation corporations and later at an academic health care center, he developed a passion for the business of health care and went on to complete his MBA from the Simon School of Business at the University of Rochester and has also earned his DPT from Boston University. Since 2012, Duncan serves as the Executive Director for Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation at the University of Florida College of Medicine, Co-Director of the UF Health Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Institute, and also serves as the Executive Director for Rehabilitation and Radiology Services at UF Health Shands Hospitals. He holds an adjunct clinical lecturer appointment in the University of Florida Department of Physical Therapy providing instruction in the Patient and Families First and Professional Issues courses of the DPT curriculum.
Regional Anesthesia and Bundled Payments – Opioid-sparing Pain Management for...Wellbe
Speaker: Sonia Szlyk, MD, Director of Regional Anesthesia, Mid-Atlantic Division, North American Partners in Anesthesia
This webinar will:
-Discuss Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) protocols for joint replacement
-Review the positive impact of regional anesthesia throughout the episode of care
-Spotlight the key components of successful value-based orthopedic care – length of stay, discharge to home, patient and surgeon satisfaction
About the Speaker:
Sonia Szlyk, MD, is the Director of Regional Anesthesia for North American Partners in Anesthesia’s Mid-Atlantic division. Dr. Szlyk orchestrates an outcomes-based regional anesthesia service focused on patient and surgeon satisfaction, safety, and efficiency. She oversees regional anesthesia quality metrics, billing compliance, strategic growth, and education. Dr. Szlyk specializes in opioid-sparing ERAS protocols for joint replacement, sports medicine, colorectal, general, and cosmetic surgery. Her initiatives highlight the value of regional anesthesia in the evolving era of bundled payments.
Dr. Szlyk served as the Director of Regional Anesthesia at the Ambulatory Surgery Center of Bethesda, MD where she oversaw the design and implementation of anesthesia services as well as AAAHC accreditation. The center’s comprehensive pain management program included ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve blocks and catheters for outpatient knee and hip replacements, and sports medicine procedures.
Dr. Szlyk is a board-certified anesthesiologist. She completed medical school and anesthesia residency at the George Washington University School of Medicine and was a Clinical Instructor in regional anesthesia at Stanford University Hospital.
The process, people, and tools required to bring total joint replacements to the ambulatory surgery center setting will be presented by members of the team from the Orthopedic & Sports Institute of the Fox Valley (OSI). OSI has been performing total knee & hip replacements in their ASC since 2009.
The Orthopedic & Sports Institute of the Fox Valley (OSI) was created by its independent physician-owners to offer a full spectrum of patient services under one roof. Their unique care model encompasses sports medicine, total joint replacement, spine surgery, and work-related rehabilitation. OSI’s flagship facility in Appleton includes a surgery center, MRI, physical therapy, pain management, orthotics, and a skilled nursing facility. OSI’s commitment to providing industry-leading results has spawned innovations in Direct Contracting, bundled pricing, Work Comp rehabilitation, and recovery facility design.
About the Speakers:
Curt Kubiak, CEO, OSI: Curt has been the guiding force at OSI, an innovative provider of accessible and affordable patient care since 2006. Comprehensive offerings at OSI include orthopedic & spine surgery, imaging/MRI, bundled payments, work comp rehabilitation, physical therapy, and skilled nursing.
Kim Jablonski, Joint Program Director, OSI: Kim coordinates and oversees the entire carepath experience for patients undergoing total joint replacement at the Orthopedic & Sports Surgery Center.
Aaron Bleier, Director of Finance, OSI: A member of the OSI team since its inception, Aaron has been instrumental in the development of OSI’s cost-saving surgical price bundles.
Learn about a model that is applicable to all service lines as healthcare transitions from volume to value. The model concentrates on transforming from services & procedures, to formalized programs, to centers of excellence, while focusing on the four pillars of service line management: Quality/Outcomes; Service/Satisfaction; Volume/Market share Growth; and Cost Containment. Quality and outcomes are particularly stressed as the key to program differentiation and value. Positioning as a regional destination center for managed care and industry is also discussed.
Presentation to cover:
Learn about a model applicable to all service lines
Learn how to transition from performing procedures to becoming a center of excellence
Learn how to transition from volume to value
Learn how to differentiate your centers of excellence
Learn how to create dashboards to maximize quality
Learn some marketing strategies for your service line
Learn how to position yourself as a regional referral destination
About the Speaker:
Bill Munley is a 30-year veteran of the healthcare system and a recognized leader and strategist in Orthopedics, Service Line Development, and Rehabilitation. He currently serves as Vice President of Orthopaedics, General Surgery, and Professional Services at Bon Secours St. Francis Health System in Greenville, SC, where he has served for 27 years. He is responsible for all inpatient and outpatient Orthopedic, General Surgery, and Rehabilitation programs across three campuses. During his tenure there, he has served as a consultant to other healthcare systems, on editorial advisory boards of professional magazines, as a charter board member and officer of multiple state and local organizations, and has developed numerous programs in his specialty areas. Bill has also appeared as a guest speaker at multiple local, state, and national symposiums, presentations and webinars. Bill holds a BA in General Science from the University of Rochester and a MHSA from George Washington University.
Improving Trust Between Physicians and AdministrationWellbe
MidMichigan Health is a four hospital health system located in the Central portion of the Lower Peninsula. I am responsible for operations of both Neuroscience and Surgical Services. As such, I am accountable for the overall contribution of the service lines to the organization. Prior to taking on my current role, I was a Physician Liaison for the Gamma Knife center, which is one of three within the entire State. I was able to increase the referrals from 9 per month to 20 per month. I spent 15 years in the Pharmaceutical Industry in various roles. My entire career has been one requiring the ability to communicate well with physicians as well as with administration. Within our health system, it has been a challenge to move the Neuro and Surgical Service programs forward. This is due to a clear disconnect between Administration and the Providers. Recently, I have begun a process of working with both sides of this equation with some great success. My goal is to share with everyone the ideas that have worked to bring both sides to common ground and ultimately grow the programs.
At the end of this presentation, participants will be able to:
• Identify the key issues that need to be addressed from Administration as well as from the Providers
• Develop a communication strategy that will open discussion
• Begin to build trust through example
• Understand the difference between a “smoke screen” and a true issue
• Become the conduit to facilitate change within the system.
Using the Perioperative Surgical Home as a Model to Implement CJRWellbe
Watch the webinar on youtube: https://youtu.be/rNaU_P2mHXE
The transition to value-based care models has increased pressure to deliver high quality and cost effective care. The medical home concept has gained traction in the primary care setting, and now, the perioperative surgical home has the potential to improve patient satisfaction, outcomes, and cost-effectiveness in the acute setting.
Dr. Zeev Kain, Chancellor’s Professor of Anesthesiology and former Associate Dean of Clinical Operations at University of California at Irvine Health, will share challenges and lessons learned implementing their Joint Replacement Surgical Home to provide more coordinated, standardized care.
What you’ll learn:
– An overview of the Perioperative Surgical Home model, and how it can improve outcomes while reducing cost
– Lessons learned from UC Irvine’s implementation of a Joint Replacement Surgical Home
– Considerations for implementing a Perioperative Surgical Home in your organization
About the Speaker:
Zeev N. Kain is a Chancellor’s Professor of Anesthesiology & Pediatrics & Psychiatry and the Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Care at UC Irvine Health. Dr. Kain completed residency training in Pediatrics and Anesthesiology, a fellowship in Pediatric Anesthesia and was received an MBA from Columbia University. After 19 years at Yale University he joined UC Irvine Health in 2008. Dr. Kain has had continuous NIH funding since 1996 and had published over 200 publications in the peer-reviewed literature. His main research focus was stress in children undergoing surgery and invasive procedures.
Dr. Kain established the annual summit on the Perioperative Surgical Home and is a member of the steering committee of a 43 hospital collaborative on this topic. His training in Lean Six Sigma and his MBA and his management background have enabled him to embark on the quest to make the Perioperative Surgical Home ubiquitous at UC Irvine Health and to help bring this care model to institutions nationally.
Registry Participation 101: A Step-by-Step Guide to What You Really Need to K...Wellbe
– Is your hospital contemplating joining a registry but you don’t know where to begin?
– Do the acronyms CJR, QCDR, and PROMs cause you angst?
– Have you heard that registry participation can count towards quality programs but you don’t understand the connection?
– Are you a surgeon needing a registry to meet Meaningful Use requirements?
– Are you in one of the 67 geographical areas mandated by the CMS’s Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) program?
– Is your hospital considering a patient-reported outcome measure (PROMs) program and you want to know more about what that entails?
If so, the American Joint Replacement Registry (AJRR) will walk you through everything you need to know about participating in a registry. This session will focus on best practices from over 4,500 surgeons and 675+ hospitals who have successfully implemented and engaged with the data from over 400,000 hip and knee replacement procedures. AJRR will help you to debunk the myth that submitting private health information is complicated, time consuming, and that it takes hundreds of man-hours to participate in a registry.
You’ll also learn how:
• Registry participation can support mandated quality programs – including Meaningful Use, CJR, and PQRS
• To implementing a PROM system in your hospital – what to look out for when starting and helpful tips from current users on what they have learned
• Not all data elements are mandatory – what are the different levels, what does the national registry require, and what is optional
About the Speakers:
Joe Greene is currently the Program Manager of Outreach and Development for the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics in the Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation. In this role, Joe coordinates business and philanthropic development activities for the UW Hospital department and University of Wisconsin Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation. He represents the needs of all orthopedic subspecialties and has worked for the UW since 1991 when he initiated his career there as an athletic trainer and clinician. He has worked in management and administration across the Department since 1997.
In addition to his role with the UW Hospital, Joe also is the CEO and Owner of OrthoVise. OrthoVise is an Orthopedic advisory firm that assists orthopedic practices of all types with operational and business development needs. His experiences have allowed him and his advisors the opportunity to consult formally with orthopedic practices since 2010. He has particular areas of interest that include Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Program Business Development, Service Line Development, Health Information Technology and EMR Operational Optimization for Orthopedics, Innovative Service Delivery Implementation, Smart Staffing, and Workflow Enhancement.
Joe will be joined by AJRR staff who are experts in guiding individual surgeons and hospital orthopaedic service line directors through the process.
Using Patient Navigation in an Orthopedic Service Line to Drive Outcomes and ...Wellbe
Preparing for joint replacement surgery can be overwhelming for many patients; they often feel inundated with the number of tasks that need to be completed prior to surgery such as medical appointments, preadmission testing, and preparing for their recovery. Learn how one health system used technology and nurse navigation to guide their patients through the joint replacement journey.
About the Speakers:
KateG100Kate Gillespie is the AVP of the Orthopedic Service Line at Virtua in Southern New Jersey. Kate received her BSN from the College of New Jersey and her MBA in Health Care Administration from Eastern University, she is certified in Nursing Administration. As the Orthopedic service line leader her responsibilities include driving efficiency through standardization, cost containment and quality outcomes. Kate is a certified Six Sigma Black Belt with expertise in operation efficiency and lean methodology. As a Six Sigma Black Belt, Kate has led quality and financial projects, and co-led multiple Kaizen projects. She is also active in New Jersey State Nurse Association and chairwoman for the NJ INPAC.
J Smith100Jennifer Smith is the Director of Clinical Outcomes for the Orthopedic Service at Virtua in Southern NJ. Jennifer received her BSN from Thomas Jefferson University and her MSN in Nursing from Villanova University. As the Director of Clinical Outcomes her responsibilities include driving standardization and quality outcomes for the service line. Jennifer is certified as both a Clinical Nurse Specialist in Adult health and Professional in Health Care Quality.
Developing and Operating Post-Acute Networks in Value-Based ProgramsWellbe
Today’s value-based programs (ACOs, bundled payments, etc.) are shifting the responsibility for total spend from the payer to the provider. As the primary contractor under many of these programs, hospitals take on the responsibility for post-acute spend while generally having little experience in that area. This creates a significant challenge to create a successful and profitable programs.
This session will focus on the design and development of an effective post-acute provider network through implementation and ongoing operation. Specific areas to be covered include:
– The role of post-acute care in value-based programs
– Identifying post-acute opportunity for your partnerships
– Designing a post-acute network
– Developing your network
– Operational issues
– Monitoring performance
Learning Objectives:
1. Establish an effective post-acute network
2. Understand performance drivers for post-acute partners
3. Create incentives for post-acute partners to participate
4. Evaluate partner performance within your program
5. Communicate network value to patients
About the Speaker:
Sheldon Hamburger is an alternative payment model advisor for hospitals and healthcare firms nationally. With a focus on program implementation, he brings extensive knowledge and experience gained from more than 25 years of healthcare financial consulting, technology design and development, and sales & marketing strategy for Fortune 1000 clients. He is a frequent speaker and writer on regulatory and technology trends affecting hospital operations, provider reimbursement issues, BPCI and CJR, programs and regulations, medical expense strategies and payer-provider dynamics.
Residing in Raleigh, he is an Executive-In-Residence at North Carolina State University – Poole School of Management and an investor at RTP Capital Associates. He continues to be an active member of national and regional HIMSS and HFMA.
He holds a degree in Computer Engineering from the University of Michigan.
Fundamentals of Bundles for Joint Replacement – Creating the Competitive EdgeWellbe
Medicare is expected to issue the final rule for the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) initiative soon. As proposed, hospitals in chosen MSAs must be ready to take on this new challenge by January 1, 2016.
The Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute (CJRI) at Saint Francis Hospital has performed more than 20,000 procedures since opening in 2007. CJRI has been on the forefront of bundled payments for joint replacements since implementing their first bundle agreement in 2010. CJRI will share the essential elements to developing a bundle program and the challenges of evolving towards a value-driven, risk bearing model in today’s healthcare environment.
Attendee Takeaways:
– Learn the essential ingredients to develop a successful bundle payment program
– Understand the fundamentals of value-based healthcare
– Learn how to create sustainable bundled payments and maintain a competitive edge in the marketplace
About The Speaker:
Maureen Geary is the Program Director at the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute in Hartford, Connecticut. Maureen been involved with bundle payments since 2009. CJRI signed their first commercial contract in 2010. She leads strategic initiatives and new product development for the company. Maureen also provides consultative services for orthopedic organizations seeking to develop a bundled product or expand their service line.
Implementation of a Perioperative Surgical Home (PSH)Wellbe
The PSH is a patient-centered, physician-led system of coordinated care that guides patients through the entire surgical experience. From the decision for surgery to 30-90 days post discharge from a medical facility, the PSH model of care is re-engineered to improve patient care and outcomes while decreasing total cost. Learn how your physicians can earn financial incentives from both the PSH and the new CMS requirements for Alternative Payment Models (APMs).
What does SGR Reform and PSH have in common? Dr. Mike Schweitzer, a national leader in PSH, will show you how physicians can leverage a PSH to meet the new APM requirements. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) replaces SGR with a new performance-based payment system and financial incentives for participation in alternative payment models. The law requires that major changes occur by January 1, 2017 – the measurement year for penalties and rewards in 2019. Dr. Schweitzer will describe how to develop a PSH program in your organization. He will share strategies to engage physician leaders to prepare for MACRA or Value Based Payments through PSH.
This webinar will enable you to:
- Identify the burning platform for a PSH
- Define the elements of a PSH
- Outline the infrastructure needed to implement a PSH
- Build and sustain the metrics to support a PSH
- Learn how to engage physician champions
About the Speaker:
Dr. Mike Schweitzer is the Vice President of Healthcare Delivery Transformation at VHA Southeast in Tampa, FL. Mike is also the Medical Director guiding the ASA-sponsored Perioperative Surgical Home Collaborative involving 44 healthcare organizations across the nation. Dr. Schweitzer is a nationally recognized speaker and has published many articles on the Perioperative Surgical Home.
Dr. Schweitzer previously served as the Chief Medical Officer for Northeast Baptist Hospital in San Antonio, TX where he was involved in the CMS Pilot for Acute Care Episodes, ACO development, and co-management programs.
Disease-Specific Care Certification for Hip and Knee Replacement ProgramsWellbe
The Joint Commission Disclaimer: This presentation is current as of June 30, 2015. The Joint Commission reserves the right to change the content of the information as appropriate.
The Joint Commission’s Disease-Specific Care (DSC) certification program is designed to evaluate clinical programs across the continuum of care. Orthopedic joint replacement programs (hip, knee and shoulder) are certified under the standards for DSC programs.
Joint replacement programs seek certification because it:
Demonstrates commitment to a higher standard of service
Provides a framework for organizational structure and management
Provides a competitive edge in the marketplace
Enhances staff recruitment and development
Is recognized by insurers and other third parties
In this webinar, David Eickemeyer, MBA, Associate Director of Certification for The Joint Commission, will:
Define the main components of certification
Provide examples of performance measures
Provide tips on assessing readiness and preparation timelines
Discuss how and when to apply
About the Speaker:
David Eickemeyer is Associate Director for The Joint Commission’s certification programs. In this role, he manages all of the marketing efforts for Disease-Specific Care certification, Palliative Care certification and Health Care Staffing certification.
In his 18 years at The Joint Commission, Eickemeyer has conducted marketing efforts for most of The Joint Commission’s various accreditation programs, as well as marketing for publications and educational offerings from Joint Commission Resources.
Before joining The Joint Commission in 1993, Eickemeyer marketed health care consulting services and third-party administrative services for Price Waterhouse and Unum Insurance Company.
Eickemeyer holds a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree in business administration from the University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois.
90 Days to Bundled Payments: Roadmap and Methodology for Implementing Your Bu...Wellbe
CMS’ recent announcement to “double down” on value-based models including bundled payments demonstrates their commitment to this paradigm. Providers need to respond in kind and launch their programs ASAP.
The complexities and time associated with changing focus, care design, and operations can be daunting and this has caused many organizations to delay or reject implementation. But it doesn’t have to be this way.
This session will describe a structured approach that was successfully used to launch a BPCI Model 2 program in 90 days. This particular case study involved an organization that needed to change conveners making the challenge even more difficult. Nevertheless, the program moved along on schedule.
Key topics to be addressed include:
Organization, planning, project management, and priorities
Selecting (or changing) the convener
Bundle selection (even in the absence of data)
Expediting the CMS application process
Keys to establishing/launching an effective post-acute care network
Organizational alignment and change management
Performance metrics – another approach
Leveraging success to expand the program
Learning Objectives
Learn how to prioritize objectives to simplify the bundled payment project plan
Understand the key drivers in bundle selection to avoid analysis paralysis
Learn how to measure real-time progress of the plan and the bundle
Develop strategies and tactics to create a post-acute partnership
Understand the role of change management in a complex project
About the Speaker:
Sheldon Hamburger serves as a Principal of The Aristone Group, a healthcare consulting group. With focus on helping healthcare enterprise organizations address emerging trends, Aristone provides expertise in strategy, process, and technology. With over 30 years of experience in developing and marketing healthcare technology products and services, Mr. Hamburger’s career includes various “firsts” in medical and pharmaceutical financial processing systems.
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Current Pain Management StrategiesWellbe
Pain management of orthopedic surgery patients is being impacted by the changes in health care regulation and reimbursement. There is a need for safer, more effective pain management pathways that can provide opportunities for early discharge without increasing the risk of readmissions or compromising outcomes.
Current pain management strategies for joint replacements, spine surgery and outpatient knee and shoulder procedures will be examined from clinical, safety, satisfaction and cost perspectives. The process of implementing and evaluating these pathways will also be discussed.
Nina Whalen will demonstrate how she evaluated, developed and improved pain management pathways for patients. These pathways include:
– Multimodal pain management for total joint and spine
– Peripheral nerve block utilization for inpatients and outpatients
– Customized pain pathways for special populations
– The use of intraoperative tissue infiltration with medications as a primary pain management strategy in joint replacement surgery
About The Speaker:
Nina Whalen, RN, APN-C, has over 30 years of experience as a nurse practitioner in orthopedic medicine. She has been involved in every phase of patient care at both the clinic and tertiary care levels. In the 1990’s she created and worked in a nurse practitioner hospital program at Presbyterian St Luke’s hospital that provided 24 hour coverage for the needs of hospitalized orthopedic surgery patients. She has worked in research and has co-authored publications in the areas of sports medicine and total joint. She is currently the manager of clinical outcomes at OrthoIndy Hospital (formerly Indiana Orthopaedic Hospital) which is a 38 bed, physician owned, orthopedic specialty hospital in Indianapolis.
The external healthcare environment is changing rapidly and providers are under increasing pressure to innovate with increasing speed and efficiency.
Be it experimenting with new care delivery models to improve care coordination, redesigning workflows to enhance efficiency, or developing new products that improve clinical outcomes, hospitals and their service lines are looking for effective ways to harness the creative power of physicians and employees to solve problems that matter. However, few organizations innovate in an orderly, reliable way.
Great ideas remain captive in the heads of physicians and employees and one-off attempts to spur innovation through “hack-a-thons” and “pitch days” prove disappointing. As an academic medical center and a world leader in orthopedics, Hospital for Special Surgery has a long history of results-oriented innovation.
In this webinar, we will share:
– HSS’ systematic approach for driving innovation
– strategies for generating new insights and developing novel solutions
– processes for piloting and testing new ideas
– guiding principles for creating a culture of innovation
– advice on how to build your very own innovation infrastructure
About the Speaker:
Mark Angelo is Vice President, Innovation & Business Development for Hospital for Special Surgery. Mark joined HSS in 2009 and has held various senior management positions at the Hospital across operations, strategy and business development. As Vice President, Innovation & Business Development, Mark is responsible for advancing hospital strategic priorities related to quality and efficiency, innovation, growth and diversification. One of his key responsibilities includes leading the Operational Excellence program, a hospital-wide initiative that leverages industrial engineering principles to maximize quality and efficiency. Mark also leads the HSS Innovation Center whose mission is to support the development and commercialization of early-stage technologies and solutions.
Prior to joining HSS, Mark worked as a management consultant for Monitor Group where he specialized in operations strategy and organizational design. Mark holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Biomedical Engineering from the University of Toronto and a Master of Business Administration from Harvard Business School.
Implementing Bundled Payments: A Deeper DiveWellbe
A Bundled Payment can be defined as “a single package price that provides a positive margin for a comprehensive and specific set of healthcare services delivered by multiple providers over a specified period of time.”
There is growing consensus that this payment methodology, and the powerful spillover effect from extensive care redesign associated with its implementation, may be the most effective strategy to reduce spiraling healthcare costs.
The secondary hypothesis is that bundled payment creates sufficient financial incentives to encourage multiple stakeholders to re-align and focus on improving the value of healthcare delivered to the patient.
There is data, including from the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute (CJRI), which supports these hypotheses. Despite growing interest in bundled payment methodology, however, there are numerous upside challenges and downside risks. In this webinar, these issues will be reviewed and a cogent strategy for implementing a bundled payment program presented.
About the Speaker:
Dr. Steven F. Schutzer graduated with Honors from Union College 1974 and then the University of Virginia School Of Medicine in 1978. Dr. Schutzer was a Lieutenant in the Medical Corps of the United States Navy between 1979 and 1981. He did his General Surgical training at the University of Rochester and then completed his Orthopedic Residency at the University of Connecticut in 1985. He was then a Fellow in Adult Hip and Reconstructive Surgery at the Massachusetts General Hospital and entered practice with Orthopedic Associates of Hartford in July 1986.
He is currently on the staff of St. Francis Hospital, Hartford Hospital and the University of Connecticut John Dempsey Hospital. Dr. Schutzer is a Founding Member and the Medical Director of the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute. He is also President of Connecticut Joint Replacement Surgeons, LLC. Dr. Schutzer is a member of AAOS, AAHKS, and the Orthopedic Research Society.
10-Year Orthopedics and Spine Forecast: Factors Impacting DemandWellbe
What’s in store for the next 10 years of orthopedics and spine service lines?
Kristi Crowe, Associate Vice President and Orthopedic service line leader at Sg2 will review future demand for orthopedics and spine services nationally, key factors impacting this demand, and opportunities to build your access channels and differentiate your orthopedics and spine services to capture growth.
About the Speaker:
As a member of Sg2’s Center for Strategic Planning, Kristi Crowe leads Sg2’s intelligence and analytics in orthopedics and works with leadership teams to improve growth and performance across the care continuum. She also leads the development of orthopedics service line–oriented publications and educational offerings and speaks nationally at a variety of physician and health care leadership conferences.
With 18 years of clinical, management, and consulting health care experience, Kristi brings a variety of strategic skills to Sg2, which have included physician alignment strategies, volume growth initiatives, and performance enhancement for orthopedic services.
Before joining Sg2, Kristi worked in orthopedic service line consulting for Accelero Health Partners, a fully owned subsidiary of Zimmer. While at Accelero, Kristi established and executed strategic plans for the musculoskeletal service line and led the organization’s internal spine and outcomes development initiatives. Working as the liaison between hospital administration and physicians, Kristi facilitated completion of higher level physician engagement strategies such as comanagement agreements. Earlier in her career, Kristi worked as a physical therapist in inpatient, outpatient and management positions.
She graduated summa cum laude with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physical therapy from the University of North Dakota.
She is a member of the Healthcare Financial Management Association and American Society for Quality, and maintains her Colorado license to practice physical therapy.
Report Back from SGO 2024: What’s the Latest in Cervical Cancer?bkling
Are you curious about what’s new in cervical cancer research or unsure what the findings mean? Join Dr. Emily Ko, a gynecologic oncologist at Penn Medicine, to learn about the latest updates from the Society of Gynecologic Oncology (SGO) 2024 Annual Meeting on Women’s Cancer. Dr. Ko will discuss what the research presented at the conference means for you and answer your questions about the new developments.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE.pdfAnujkumaranit
Artificial intelligence (AI) refers to the simulation of human intelligence processes by machines, especially computer systems. It encompasses tasks such as learning, reasoning, problem-solving, perception, and language understanding. AI technologies are revolutionizing various fields, from healthcare to finance, by enabling machines to perform tasks that typically require human intelligence.
New Directions in Targeted Therapeutic Approaches for Older Adults With Mantl...i3 Health
i3 Health is pleased to make the speaker slides from this activity available for use as a non-accredited self-study or teaching resource.
This slide deck presented by Dr. Kami Maddocks, Professor-Clinical in the Division of Hematology and
Associate Division Director for Ambulatory Operations
The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, will provide insight into new directions in targeted therapeutic approaches for older adults with mantle cell lymphoma.
STATEMENT OF NEED
Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is a rare, aggressive B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) accounting for 5% to 7% of all lymphomas. Its prognosis ranges from indolent disease that does not require treatment for years to very aggressive disease, which is associated with poor survival (Silkenstedt et al, 2021). Typically, MCL is diagnosed at advanced stage and in older patients who cannot tolerate intensive therapy (NCCN, 2022). Although recent advances have slightly increased remission rates, recurrence and relapse remain very common, leading to a median overall survival between 3 and 6 years (LLS, 2021). Though there are several effective options, progress is still needed towards establishing an accepted frontline approach for MCL (Castellino et al, 2022). Treatment selection and management of MCL are complicated by the heterogeneity of prognosis, advanced age and comorbidities of patients, and lack of an established standard approach for treatment, making it vital that clinicians be familiar with the latest research and advances in this area. In this activity chaired by Michael Wang, MD, Professor in the Department of Lymphoma & Myeloma at MD Anderson Cancer Center, expert faculty will discuss prognostic factors informing treatment, the promising results of recent trials in new therapeutic approaches, and the implications of treatment resistance in therapeutic selection for MCL.
Target Audience
Hematology/oncology fellows, attending faculty, and other health care professionals involved in the treatment of patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL).
Learning Objectives
1.) Identify clinical and biological prognostic factors that can guide treatment decision making for older adults with MCL
2.) Evaluate emerging data on targeted therapeutic approaches for treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory MCL and their applicability to older adults
3.) Assess mechanisms of resistance to targeted therapies for MCL and their implications for treatment selection
Ethanol (CH3CH2OH), or beverage alcohol, is a two-carbon alcohol
that is rapidly distributed in the body and brain. Ethanol alters many
neurochemical systems and has rewarding and addictive properties. It
is the oldest recreational drug and likely contributes to more morbidity,
mortality, and public health costs than all illicit drugs combined. The
5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
(DSM-5) integrates alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence into a single
disorder called alcohol use disorder (AUD), with mild, moderate,
and severe subclassifications (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
In the DSM-5, all types of substance abuse and dependence have been
combined into a single substance use disorder (SUD) on a continuum
from mild to severe. A diagnosis of AUD requires that at least two of
the 11 DSM-5 behaviors be present within a 12-month period (mild
AUD: 2–3 criteria; moderate AUD: 4–5 criteria; severe AUD: 6–11 criteria).
The four main behavioral effects of AUD are impaired control over
drinking, negative social consequences, risky use, and altered physiological
effects (tolerance, withdrawal). This chapter presents an overview
of the prevalence and harmful consequences of AUD in the U.S.,
the systemic nature of the disease, neurocircuitry and stages of AUD,
comorbidities, fetal alcohol spectrum disorders, genetic risk factors, and
pharmacotherapies for AUD.
Flu Vaccine Alert in Bangalore Karnatakaaddon Scans
As flu season approaches, health officials in Bangalore, Karnataka, are urging residents to get their flu vaccinations. The seasonal flu, while common, can lead to severe health complications, particularly for vulnerable populations such as young children, the elderly, and those with underlying health conditions.
Dr. Vidisha Kumari, a leading epidemiologist in Bangalore, emphasizes the importance of getting vaccinated. "The flu vaccine is our best defense against the influenza virus. It not only protects individuals but also helps prevent the spread of the virus in our communities," he says.
This year, the flu season is expected to coincide with a potential increase in other respiratory illnesses. The Karnataka Health Department has launched an awareness campaign highlighting the significance of flu vaccinations. They have set up multiple vaccination centers across Bangalore, making it convenient for residents to receive their shots.
To encourage widespread vaccination, the government is also collaborating with local schools, workplaces, and community centers to facilitate vaccination drives. Special attention is being given to ensuring that the vaccine is accessible to all, including marginalized communities who may have limited access to healthcare.
Residents are reminded that the flu vaccine is safe and effective. Common side effects are mild and may include soreness at the injection site, mild fever, or muscle aches. These side effects are generally short-lived and far less severe than the flu itself.
Healthcare providers are also stressing the importance of continuing COVID-19 precautions. Wearing masks, practicing good hand hygiene, and maintaining social distancing are still crucial, especially in crowded places.
Protect yourself and your loved ones by getting vaccinated. Together, we can help keep Bangalore healthy and safe this flu season. For more information on vaccination centers and schedules, residents can visit the Karnataka Health Department’s official website or follow their social media pages.
Stay informed, stay safe, and get your flu shot today!
Anti ulcer drugs and their Advance pharmacology ||
Anti-ulcer drugs are medications used to prevent and treat ulcers in the stomach and upper part of the small intestine (duodenal ulcers). These ulcers are often caused by an imbalance between stomach acid and the mucosal lining, which protects the stomach lining.
||Scope: Overview of various classes of anti-ulcer drugs, their mechanisms of action, indications, side effects, and clinical considerations.
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a quick overview of physiological basis of a normal electrocardiogram.
Learning objectives:
1. Define an electrocardiogram (ECG) and electrocardiography
2. Describe how dipoles generated by the heart produce the waveforms of the ECG
3. Describe the components of a normal electrocardiogram of a typical bipolar leads (limb II)
4. Differentiate between intervals and segments
5. Enlist some common indications for obtaining an ECG
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 11, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 9, Human Physiology - From Cells to Systems, Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
3. Chapter 29, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
4. Electrocardiogram, StatPearls - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK549803/
5. ECG in Medical Practice by ABM Abdullah, 4th edition
6. ECG Basics, http://www.nataliescasebook.com/tag/e-c-g-basics
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/lK81BzxMqdo
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/Ve4P0COk9OI
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
- Link to NephroTube social media accounts: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/join-nephrotube-on-social-media.html
MANAGEMENT OF ATRIOVENTRICULAR CONDUCTION BLOCK.pdfJim Jacob Roy
Cardiac conduction defects can occur due to various causes.
Atrioventricular conduction blocks ( AV blocks ) are classified into 3 types.
This document describes the acute management of AV block.
Explore natural remedies for syphilis treatment in Singapore. Discover alternative therapies, herbal remedies, and lifestyle changes that may complement conventional treatments. Learn about holistic approaches to managing syphilis symptoms and supporting overall health.
2. 2
Today’s Agenda
• Identify Alignment Models with Bundled Payments
• Understand their Applicability to your Organization
• Analytic Capabilities Required to Succeed in Bundled Payments
• Outline Opportunities and Strategies for Cost Reduction and Quality
Improvement
3. 3
Key Focus is Physician-Hospital Alignment
-Higher Quality
-Lower Cost
-Better Patient Experience and Outcome
Leader
• Employment
• PSA
• Co-Management
• Gainsharing
• Joint Ventures
• Shared Savings
• Fair Market Value Guidance
• Service Line Strategic Planning
• Bundled Payments
• t
• CCJR - CMS
• BPCI - CMS
• Commercial BP
• Informed Analytics
• Bundle Construction
• Care Redesign
• ICS Gainsharing
• Infrastructure Guidance
• Proposal and Payer Sales
I
Physician Alignment Models Bundled Payments
Physician Alignment Solutions OVERVIEW
4. 4
Volume to Value: CMS Announces Goals
Medicare move towards Alternate
Payment Models (ACO and
Bundles)
Year
30% 2016
50% 2018
Medicare payments tied to quality
or value
Year
85% 2016
90% 2018
5. 5
Expansion of CMMI Bundle Activity
ACE = Acute Care Episode; BPCI = Bundled Payment for Care Improvement; CMMI = Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation.
Source: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Innovation Center website. Accessed February 2015.
ACE
BPCI Model 1
BPCI Model 2
BPCI Model 3
BPCI Model 4
CCJR
6. 6
Variation in Mean Episode payment for MS-DRG 470
$19,149 – $31,041
$31,041
$19,149
$0
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$25,000
$30,000
$35,000
$40,000
$45,000
$50,000
Mean Episode Payment (+ SD)
Acute IP (MS-DRG) Acute Physician Post-Acute Max MIN
7. 7
Variation Post Acute Service Types
$0
$2,000
$4,000
$6,000
$8,000
$10,000
$12,000
$14,000
$16,000
Post-acute Payment Breakdown by Service type
Readmission LTCH/ IRF SNF HHA OP ER Physician DME
8. 8
Drivers for Physician Alignment Solutions
Simple Truths:
1. The most expensive piece of healthcare equipment
in a hospital is a Physician’s pen (or Click…)
2. Physicians can influence up to 80% of the nation’s
healthcare spend
3. Majority of physicians (including employed
physicians) are reimbursed fee for service
“Our nation cannot control runaway medical spending
without fundamentally changing how physicians are
paid”
Commission on Payment Reform
March 2013
Chair Bill Frist, MD
Former Senator and Heart Surgeon
10. 10
Who is Impacted?
• Mandatory for hospitals located in
75 geographies
– MSAs – Metropolitan Statistical Areas
across the US.
• Exceptions:
– Providers in the selected geographies
already participating in:
Model 1 or
Phase II of Models 2 or 4 of the BPCI
• Hospitals selected to participate in CCJR may also participate in an ACO
Medicare savings accrued during the CCJR time period will be accrued to
CCJR
11. 11
Key Elements of CCJR – As Currently Proposed
• All providers paid in traditional FFS model – no actual ‘bundling’
• MS-DRGs 469 & 470
• Targets set for acute care +90 days episode of care
• Reconciliation model - target price to beat
• Reconciliation at end of the year, IF:
– Actual price is above target = pay Medicare back
– Actual price is below target = receive payment, meet minimum quality
thresholds
13. 13
Episode Definition
• DRG 469 and 470
– Partial hip replacements are included
• Starts at acute care admission (only IP LEJR included)
• Related Part A and part B services for 90 days
following discharge
– Physicians’ services
– Inpatient hospital services (including readmissions)
– Hospital outpatient services
– Post-acute services
Skilled nursing facility (SNF)
Inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF)
Long-term care hospital (LTCH)
Home health agency (HHA)
Durable medical equipment (DME)
Outpatient therapy services
Clinical laboratory services
Part B drugs
• 2% discount off target price
– 1.7% if submit outcomes measurement tool
14. 14
Timeline for CCJR
July 9, 2015
CMS
announces
CCJR
proposal.
Sept 8, 2015
Public comment
period ends.
CMS releases
historical data
July 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020Sept 2015 Oct 2015
Pilot begins
Jan 1, 2016
Year 2
Phase in of
repayment penalties
Year 3
Year 4
Initiative ends
Dec 31, 2020
Years 1 and 2
Target price =
2/3 hospital-
specific, 1/3
regional
Year 3 Target
price = 1/3
hospital-
specific, 2/3
regional
Years 4 and 5
Target price =
100% regional
16. 16
Signature Medical Group
Challenges
• Care redesign across a 90 day episode
• Creating optimal post acute care plan, resulting in
reduction in Medicare spend
• Implementation of best practices across 60+ Ortho
groups, 2,000+ surgeons, 50,000 TJR
• Performing analytics on CMS claims data
• Internal Costs Savings in Acute Setting
Results
• Post acute care cost reduction resulting in $2,000 –
2,500 per patient; early stages
• 60+ orthopedic groups as of July 1, 2015
• 36 hospital partnerships (Gainsharing) established to
redesign care and lower cost in the hospital – Supply
focus; $1,000 – $1,200 savings/case in Acute Episode
to date
• All groups have adopted standardized report card of
performance metrics
• Early patient feedback exceptionally positive
CLIENT PROFILE
TYPE
For Profit Medical Group with
practice locations in St. Louis
and Kansas City
LOCATION Missouri
ORGANIZATION
SIZE
Over 110 Board Certified
Physicians
Case Study
17. 17
• Availability of Waivers via CCJR
– Hospitals need to Provide Incentive to Physicians
– CCJR Physicians can earn more
Up to 50% of Part B Allowable
Roughly $700/case for Orthopedic Surgeon
• Make the Case to Physicians as to Why
– Better patient outcomes
– Strategic positioning related to commercial market
• Report the Performance to Physicians
– Use Transparent, Relevant Data
– Be Clear About Expectations
• Hospitals Must Engage in Skill Building
– Help Doctors Help You
Critical Success Factors for Alignment
18. 18
Incentive Payments Must be Earned
• In addition to hospitals receiving reconciliation payments
Complication rates
HCAHPS scores
Readmission rates
• Individual physician payments
Capped – 50% Part B Allowable
Tied to individual quality metrics
Expect CCJR will require ‘implementation protocols’ to detail
gainsharing design and money flow
• Different from Co-Management program popular at many hospitals
Pays for time and attendance regardless if goals are met
FMV based typically on service line revenue
Broader than just episode in CCJR
Expect CCJR will require ‘implementation protocols’ to detail
gainsharing design and money flow
19. 19
Internal Cost Savings Program Design
Measure Quality Metrics Achieved at Individual
Physician Level
Calculate Individual Payments and Submit to
Committee for Approval
Payments Made to BPCI Savings Pool
Calculate Phys Cap @ 150% Part B AllowableHospital
Savings
Identified
Hospital ICS for
Targeted
Episodes
0-1 Metric Achieved = No
Gainsharing
2 Metrics Achieved = 25% of
Part B allowable
3 Metrics Achieved = 50% of
Part B allowable
ICS from BPCI
Eligible Patients
ICS Above
Physician Cap &
Non-BPCI Patient
Cost Reduction
Retained
1
4 2
5
6
3
Notes:
• Physician Gainsharers must be on CMS
approved screening list
• Funds must be sent electronically to Savings Pool
20. 20
Sample Gainsharing Reports
1. Establishment of baseline cost
and quality
2. Tracking by month for hospital
3. Tracking by month for physician
1
2
3
29. 29
What Are the Drivers of Success?
Indicators that have been proven to achieve full
savings
DRIVERS
1. Executives engaged in entire process
2. Physicians engaged in the process
3. Physicians incented to participate
4. Full set of clinical, financial and cost data shared with stakeholders
5. Hospital willingness to remove non compliant vendors / make tough decisions
Other contributing factors: adhering to an aggressive timeline, communication with
physicians throughout process, history of project implementation, culture
0%
50%
100%
150%
5 4 3 <3
Drivers Implemented
Savings Achieved
30. 30
Next Steps for Hospitals and Health Systems
Develop gainsharing model and begin design with Orthopedic
surgeons
Understand your costs and key performance metrics for the
episode of care
Maximize efficacy of pre-admission processes and patient
education
Expand quality and financial scorecards
Transparency is Key
Invest in appropriate post-acute care
Ownership
Partnerships
Collaboration
33. 33
Upcoming Live Event
Musculoskeletal Leadership Summit
Sept 10-11, 2015 – Las Vegas, NV
http://www.orthoserviceline.com/summit
Speakers include:
• Jane Keller, CEO of OrthoIndy
• Bill Munley, VP of Professional Services and Orthopedics at Bon Secours St. Francis Health System
• Maureen Geary, Program Director for the Connecticut Joint Replacement Institute
• Dr. Corey Lieber, Orthopedic Surgeon at Newport Orthopedic Institute/Hoag Hospital
• Kimberly Meyers, Executive Director of Neurosciences and Spine at University of Colorado Hospital
• Kevin Cullinan, Executive Director, Orthopedics at Catholic Healthcare Initiatives St. Vincent’s – Little Rock
• …and more!