02/28/13

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Complete Medicare Attestation by Tomorrow


Complete Medicare Attestation by Tomorrow

Posted: 27 Feb 2013 11:02 AM PST

Tomorrow is the Last Day to Complete Medicare Attestation and Submit Pending Medicare Part B Claims February 28 DeadlineEligible professionals (EPs) who participated in the Medicare Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Program in 2012 must complete attestation for the 2012 program year by tomorrow,  February 28, 2013.CMS has several resources located on the Educational Resources page of the EHR Incentive Programs website to help you properly meet meaningful use and attest. Register and attest today. Medicare Part B Claims DeadlineTomorrow is also the deadline for EPs to submit any pending Medicare Part B claims from calendar year (CY) 2012, as CMS allows 60 days after December 31, 2012, for all pending claims to be processed. Medicare EHR incentive payments to EPs are based on 75% of the Part B allowed charges for covered professional services furnished by the EP during the entire payment year. If the EP did not meet the $24,000 threshold in Part B allowed charges by the...

CMS News: LOWER COSTS, BETTER CARE: REFORMING OUR HEALTH CARE DELIVERY SYSTEM


Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

 

 

Fixing America's health care system means more than just guaranteeing that everyone has coverage.  To address the rising costs of health care, we must improve the way that health care is delivered, including coordinating care better and improving the safety of care.

The Affordable Care Act includes steps to improve the quality of health care and, in so doing, lowers costs for taxpayers and patients.  This means avoiding costly mistakes and readmissions, keeping patients healthy, rewarding quality instead of quantity, and creating the health information technology infrastructure that enables new payment and delivery models to work.   These reforms and investments will build a health care system that will ensure quality care for generations to come. 

Already we have made significant progress:

Health care spending is slowing

According to the annual Report of National Health Expenditures, total U.S. health spending grew 3.9 percent in 2011.  That's the same rate of growth as in 2009 and 2010, and in all three years spending grew more slowly than in any other year in the 51-year history of the report.  Medicare spending per beneficiary grew just 0.4 percent per capita in fiscal year 2012, continuing the pattern of very low growth in 2010 and 2011.  Medicaid spending per beneficiary also decreased 0.9 percent in 2011, compared to 0.6 percent growth in 2010. Average annual increases in family premiums for employer-sponsored insurance was 6.2 percent from 2004-2008, 5.6 percent from 2009-2012, and 4.5 percent in 2012 alone.  In 2011, the Affordable Care Act's 80 / 20 rule (medical loss ratio policy) and strengthened rate review program resulted in an estimated $2.1 billion in savings to consumers of private health insurance.

Health outcomes are improving and adverse events are falling

This past year, we finalized several programs that tie Medicare reimbursement for hospitals to their readmission rates, when patients have to come back into the hospital within 30 days of being discharged. The 30-day, all-cause readmission rate is estimated to have dropped in the last half of 2012, to 17.8 percent, after averaging 19 percent for the past five years.  This translates to about 70,000 fewer readmissions in 2012. Additionally, as part of a new Affordable Care Act initiative, clinicians at some hospitals have reduced their early elective deliveries to close to zero, meaning fewer at-risk newborns and fewer admissions to the NICU.  Among 135 hospitals reporting common measures, early elective delivery rates have fallen (improved) by 48 percent.

Providers are engaged

In 2012, we debuted the Medicare Shared Savings Program and the Pioneer Accountable Care Organization Model.  These programs encourage providers to invest in redesigning care for higher quality and more efficient service delivery, without restricting patients' freedom to go to the Medicare provider of their choice. 

Over 250 organizations are participating in the Medicare Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), serving approximately 4 million (eight percent of) Medicare beneficiaries.  As existing ACOs choose to add providers and more organizations join the program, participation in ACOs is expected to grow. ACOs are estimated to save up to $940 million in the first four years.

Medicare beneficiaries are shopping for coverage according to quality

The Affordable Care Act tied payment to private Medicare Advantage plans to the quality of coverage they offer.  Since those payment changes have been in effect, more seniors are able to choose from a broader range of higher quality Medicare Advantage plans, and more seniors have enrolled in these higher quality plans as well.  Since the health care law passed, enrollment has increased by 30 percent and premiums have fallen by 10 percent in Medicare Advantage.

Below are specific examples of the reforms and investments that we are making to build a health care delivery system that will better serve all Americans.

PAYING FOR VALUE:

Hospitals.  Two important programs that reward hospitals based on the quality of care they provide to patients began last fall.  On October 1, 2012, the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program began, linking a portion of hospitals' Medicare payments to performance on important quality measures.  Examples of measures include whether a patient received an antibiotic before surgery, or how well doctors and nurses communicate with patients.  The Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program reduces Medicare payments to hospitals with relatively high rates of potentially preventable readmissions, to financially encourage them to focus on this key indicator of patient safety and care quality. 

Medicare Advantage Plans.  CMS strengthened the quality bonus incentives provided by the Affordable Care Act by providing additional payments for plans that improve the quality of care.  As a result, in 2013, the 14 million Medicare beneficiaries currently enrolled in Medicare Advantage have access to 127 five and four-star plans, which is 21 more high-quality plans than were available in the previous year.

Dialysis Facilities.  An End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Quality Incentive Program, started in 2012, ties CMS payments directly to facility performance on quality measures, resulting in better care at lower cost for nearly 500,000 Americans with kidney disease.  In addition, a new comprehensive care model announced in January 2013 tests a new payment and service delivery approach to improve care for ESRD beneficiaries, by coordinating primary care with care for their special health needs.

PROMOTING BETTER CARE AND PROTECTING PATIENT SAFETY:

Electronic Health Records (EHRs).  Adoption of electronic health records is making it easier for physicians, hospitals, and others serving Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to evaluate patients' medical status, coordinate care, eliminate redundant procedures, and provide high-quality care.  Approximately 36 percent of health care professionals, and as many as 70 percent of hospitals, have already qualified for incentive payments for EHR systems that meet the standards and objectives established by the program. Electronic health records will help speed the adoption of many other delivery system reforms, by making it easier for hospitals and doctors to better coordinate care and achieve improvements in quality.

Partnership for Patients.  The nationwide Partnership for Patients initiative aims to save 60,000 lives by averting millions of hospital acquired conditions over three years, and save up to $35 billion in health care costs by reducing complications and readmissions, and improving the transition from one care setting to another.  At the core of this initiative are 26 Hospital Engagement Networks, which work with 3,700 hospitals, working with healthcare providers and institutions, to identify best practices and solutions to reducing hospital acquired conditions and readmissions.  These Hospital Engagement Networks have been actively involved in the effort to reduce the rate of early elective deliveries, in conjunction with the   Strong Start for Mothers and Newborns Initiative (described later). 

Healthy infants.  The Strong Start for Mothers and Newborns initiative aims to reduce early elective deliveries as well as test models to decrease preterm births among high-risk pregnant women in Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). The Strong Start initiative builds on the work of the Partnership for Patients, testing test ways to support providers in reducing early elective deliveries.  It also offers funds to states to test models lowering the risk of preterm birth among pregnant women with Medicaid or CHIP.

Hospital-acquired conditions.  Along with other data available on Hospital Compare, beneficiaries can now find information on the incidence of serious hospital-acquired conditions (HACs) in individual hospitals.  In FY 2015, hospitals with high rates of HACs will see their payments reduced. 

Community-Based Care. As part of the Partnership for Patients, the Community-Based Care Transition Program supports 82 community-based organizations, many of them partnered with multiple hospitals in 35 states to help patients make more successful transitions from hospital to home or to another post-hospital setting. $500 million in total funding has been appropriated for the program for 2011 through 2015.  

ENSURING ALL AMERICANS GET THE RIGHT CARE WHEN THEY NEED IT:

Integrating care for patients enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid.  Many of the nine million Medicare-Medicaid enrollees suffer from multiple or severe chronic conditions.  Total annual spending for their care exceeds $300 billion. Four states (Massachusetts, Ohio, Washington and Illinois) have received approval for demonstrations using managed care or health homes to coordinate care for Medicare-Medicaid beneficiaries.  Coordination strategies include more flexibility for home and community-based services and improving health IT systems.

Greater independence for Americans with disabilities and long-term care needs.  The Affordable Care Act includes a number of policies to promote non-institutional long-term care programs that will help keep people at home and out of institutions:
o Twelve additional states have joined the Money Follows the Person Program to help rebalance their long-term care systems to transition Medicaid beneficiaries from institutions to the community.  Forty-three states are now participating in Money Follows the Person.
o Nine states are participating in the Balancing Incentive Program, which gives states incentives to increase access to non-institutional long-term services and supports and provides new ways to serve more Medicaid beneficiaries in home and community-based settings.
o Ten states have approved Health Home State Plan Amendments to integrate and coordinate primary, acute, behavioral health, and long term services and supports for Medicaid beneficiaries.

Promoting care at home. A new Affordable Care Act demonstration, Independence at Home, tests whether providing chronically ill beneficiaries with primary care in the home will help them stay healthy and out of the hospital.  Fifteen physician practices and three consortia of physician practices, including the Cleveland Clinic, are participating in the Independence at Home Demonstration.

CONTINUOUS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT:

Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation. The Innovation Center is charged with testing innovative payment and service delivery models to reduce expenditures in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP, and at the same time, preserving and enhancing quality of care.  Already the Innovation Center is engaged in projects with more than 50,000 health care providers to improve care.

System-wide reforms going on now.  Critical reforms already underway include reducing adverse drug events; improving cardiac care and outcomes; reducing health disparities; using health IT and data analytics to improve population health, and engaging patients in decisions about their care.

REDUCING HEALTH COSTS:

Lower cost health care equipment and supplies. In 100 metropolitan areas, a stronger Medicare Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) competitive bidding program is setting new, lower payment rates for medical equipment and supplies.  Because of this program, CMS estimates that Medicare beneficiaries will save an average of 45 percent on certain equipment and supplies in the 91 MSAs launching this year.  Overall, the initiative is expected to save the Medicare program an estimated $25.7 billion, and beneficiaries an estimated $17.1 billion, over the next 10 years.

Fighting fraud. The Affordable Care Act's landmark steps to improve and enhance the Administration's ongoing efforts to prevent and detect fraud and crack down on individuals who attempt to defraud Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP has resulted in a record level of recoveries—$4.2 billion in fiscal year 2012—and a record return on investment— $7.90 for every dollar invested.  Total recoveries over the past four years were $14.9 billion compared to $6.7 billion over the prior four years. Efforts include tough new rules and sentences for criminals; enhanced screening and enrollment requirements; increased coordination of fraud-fighting efforts; sharing data across federal agencies to fight fraud; and new tools to target high-risk providers and suppliers.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has sent this update. To contact Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) go to our contact us page.

 

NIH develops improved mouse model of alcoholic liver disease


NIH develops improved mouse model of alcoholic liver disease

02/28/2013 11:28 AM EST

 

Scientists may be better able to study how heavy drinking damages the liver using a new mouse model of alcohol drinking and disease developed by researchers from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), part of the National Institutes of Health. The model incorporates chronic and binge drinking patterns to more closely approximate alcoholic liver disease in humans than any existing method. A report of the new model appears in the March issue of the journal Nature Protocols.

 

CDC Press Release: Innovative policy to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV shows positive impact


Innovative policy to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV shows positive impact

New approach in Malawi dramatically increases the number of mothers on treatment

The number of pregnant and breastfeeding women in Malawi with HIV who started life-saving antiretroviral treatment increased by more than 700 percent in one year, according to a study in CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. The new treatment option, called Option B+, offers all pregnant or breastfeeding women infected with HIV lifelong antiretroviral treatment (ART), regardless of the stage of their HIV infection.

 

CDC Press Release: About one in five U.S. adult cigarette smokers have tried an electronic cigarette


About one in five U.S. adult cigarette smokers have tried an electronic cigarette

In 2011, about 21 percent of adults who smoke traditional cigarettes had used electronic cigarettes, also known as e-cigarettes, up from about 10 percent in 2010, according to a study released today by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.  Overall, about six percent of all adults have tried e-cigarettes, with estimates nearly doubling from 2010.  This study is the first to report changes in awareness and use of e-cigarettes between 2010 and 2011.

During 2010–2011, adults who have used e-cigarettes increased among both sexes, non-Hispanic Whites, those aged 45–54 years, those living in the South, and current and former smokers and current and former smokers.  In both 2010 and 2011, e-cigarette use was significantly higher among current smokers compared to both former and never smokers.  Awareness of e-cigarettes rose from about four in 10 adults in 2010 to six in 10 adults in 2011.

"E-cigarette use is growing rapidly," said CDC Director Tom Frieden, MD, MPH. "There is still a lot we don't know about these products, including whether they will decrease or increase use of traditional cigarettes."

Although e-cigarettes appear to have far fewer of the toxins found in smoke compared to traditional cigarettes, the impact of e-cigarettes on long-term health must be studied.  Research is needed to assess how e-cigarette marketing could impact initiation and use of traditional cigarettes, particularly among young people. Read More.

 

Low Income Health Access Open Door Forum Update


Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/OpenDoorForums/ODF_lowincomehealthaccess.html

 

 

 

The next CMS Low Income Health Access Open Door Forum is scheduled for:

 

Date:  Tuesday, March 5, 2013;

Start Time: 2:00 PM Eastern Time (ET);

Please dial-in at least 15 minutes prior to call start time.

 

 

**This Agenda is Subject to Change**

 

I. Opening Remarks

Chair – John Rigg, HRSA, Office of Policy Analysis

Moderator – Matthew Brown, CMS, Office of Public Engagement

 

II. Announcements & Updates

 

  • State Innovation Model
  • RHC/FQHC Benefit Policy Manual
  • Burden Reduction Regulation

 

III. Open Q&A

 

**Next ODF: Wednesday, June 5, 2013**

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Open Door Forum Participation Instructions:

This call will be Conference Call Only.

 

1. To participate by phone:

Dial: 1-800-837-1935 & Reference Conference ID: 78867260.

Persons participating by phone are not required to RSVP. TTY Communications Relay Services are available for the Hearing Impaired.  For TTY services dial 7-1-1 or 1-800-855-2880. A Relay Communications Assistant will help.

 

Encore:  1-855-859-2056; Conference ID: 78867260.

Encore is an audio recording of this call that can be accessed by dialing 1-855-859-2056 and entering the Conference ID, beginning 2 hours after the call has ended. The recording expires after 3 business days.

 

For ODF schedule updates and E-Mailing List registration, visit our website at http://www.cms.gov/OpenDoorForums/.

Thank you.

 

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has sent this Cms.hhs.gov- Low Income Health Access Open Door Forum Update. To contact Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) go to our contact us page.

 

Rural Health Open Door Forum Update


Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/OpenDoorForums/ODF_ruralhealth.html

 

 

 

The next CMS Rural Health Open Door Forum is scheduled for:

 

Date:  Thursday, March 7, 2013;

Start Time: 2:00pm Eastern Time (ET); 

Please dial in at least 15 minutes prior to call start time.

 

Conference Leaders: Carol Blackford, John Hammarlund and Matthew Brown.

 

**This Agenda is Subject to Change**

 

I. Opening Remarks

Chair – Carol Blackford, Deputy Director, Chronic Care Policy Group, Center for Medicare

Co-Chair – John Hammarlund, Regional Administrator, Seattle Regional Office

Moderator – Matthew Brown, Office of Public Engagement

 

II. Announcements & Updates

 

  1. Ordering & Referring
  2. RHC Billing Manual
  3. Low Volume & Medicare Dependent Hospitals
  4. CAHs & Therapy Caps

 

III. Open Q&A

 

**Next ODF: Wednesday, April 17, 2013**

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Open Door Forum Participation Instructions:

This call will be Conference Call Only.

 

1. To participate by phone:

Dial: 1-800-837-1935 & Reference Conference ID: 91724524.

Persons participating by phone are not required to RSVP. TTY Communications Relay Services are available for the Hearing Impaired.  For TTY services dial 7-1-1 or 1-800-855-2880. A Relay Communications Assistant will help.

 

Encore:  1-855-859-2056; Conference ID: 91724524.

Encore is an audio recording of this call that can be accessed by dialing 1-855-859-2056 and entering the Conference ID. Encores for Open Door Forums held on Thursdays will be available for 3 business days beginning the following Monday.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has sent this Cms.hhs.gov- Rural Health Open Door Forum Update. To contact Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) go to our contact us page.