CMS Announces 32 Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation has announced its selection of 32 Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations. These organizations from Continue reading
Experimenting with Payment Reform
One of the most interesting concepts which is being promoted in the national health care reform legislation are “accountable care organizations” (ACO) – new or existing health care organizations which would assume responsibility (“accountability”) for improving the health outcomes of a defined number of patients (at least 5,000) in a specific geographic area. The ACO would be required to engage a sufficient percentage of the local providers (hospitals, physicians, community health centers, etc.) so that it could establish appropriate goals for quality outcomes and then take the cost savings from that quality improvement (for example, reduced number of avoidable hospitalizations) and distribute those savings among all the providers.
What is somewhat surprising about the degree of support and interest in the concept is that this is still largely an idea based on cost analyses and savings projections from Medicare claims data, with little practical evidence that it actually works to sufficiently change the current cost and payment incentives in our health care system. Moreover, while not excluding the ability of a hospital/health system, independent practice association or health plan to be a local ACO, the model contemplates a new type of administrative organization solely focused on these issues of quality improvement and shared cost savings. Finally, there are many actuarial, measurement and legal issues to overcome to make this concept viable.
The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Innovation has announced its selection of 32 Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations. These organizations from Continue reading
The National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) has announced its new Accountable Care Organization (ACO) Accreditation. This first-of-its-kind program builds Continue reading
Davis Wright Tremaine has issued an advisory on the three final legal guidances on accountable care organizations (ACOs) issued in Continue reading
What a difference a year makes… At last year’s (first-ever) National Accountable Care Organization Congress, there was a palpable “buzz” Continue reading
This Urban Institute policy paper, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, provides an update on the Medicare Shared Savings Continue reading
The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice and the Engleberg Center for Health Care Reform at the Brookings Continue reading
Along with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)’ publication of its final rule for the Medicare Shared Savings Continue reading
In an open access commentary published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services Continue reading