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Medicares QIO Program: Maximizing Potential, Making a Difference

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Title: Medicares QIO Program: Maximizing Potential, Making a Difference


1
Medicares QIO ProgramMaximizing
Potential,Making a Difference
  • Barry M. Straube, M.D.
  • Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
  • AHQA 2007 Annual Meeting
  • February 13, 2007

2
IOM Pathways to Quality Health Care
  • Performance Measurement
  • Accelerating Improvement
  • (December 1, 2005)
  • Medicares Quality Improvement Organization
    Program
  • Maximizing Potential
  • (March 9, 2006)
  • Rewarding Provider Performance
  • Aligning Incentives in Medicare
  • (September 21, 2006)

3
Medicares QIO ProgramKey Conclusions
  • The quality of health care received by Medicare
    beneficiaries has improved over time
  • Existing evidence is inadequate to determine to
    determine the extent to which QIO Program has
    contributed to those improvements
  • The QIO Program provides a potentially valuable
    nationwide infrastructure dedicated to promoting
    quality healthcare

4
Medicares QIO ProgramKey Conclusions
  • The value of the Program could be enhanced
    through use of strategies to
  • Focus QIOs on provision of technical assistance
    in support of quality improvement
  • Broaden QIO governance structure and base
  • Improve CMSs management of related data systems
    and program evaluations

5
Technical Assistance
  • Studies have been inadequate to attribute QIO
    activities to improvements in quality of care in
    Medicare
  • Not limited to QIO Program
  • Regardless, scrutiny is on the QIO Program to
    lead in demonstrating attribution
  • There appears to be some evidence that some QIOs
    perform better than others
  • CMS performance evaluation doesnt address
  • Individual QIOs dont set/publish their own
    metrics

6
Technical Assistance
  • Technical assistance will be imperative as
  • A national performance measurement system
    proceeds
  • Payments increasingly reward quality improvement
  • Strong focus on TA and more vigorous evaluation
    of current future program efforts needed for
    future decisions about the QIO Program
  • Similar evaluations needed for other quality
    organizations that might be considered for QIO
    Program activities

7
Structural Issues
  • QIO Board Composition, Functions and Structure
  • Most boards have only 1 (mandated) consumer
    member
  • Inadequate representation of individuals with
    required expertise, beyond physicians, or
    individuals beyond the healthcare field
  • Insufficient tools for evaluation of board
    members and the Board as a whole
  • Lack of committees for finance, auditing, and
    strategic planning
  • Adequate transparency

8
Structural Issues
  • Physician-Access or Physician-Sponsored
    Organizations
  • Requirements for local physician involvement is
    outmoded
  • Focuses on outliers rather than raising all
    boats
  • Conflicts of interest
  • Restriction from doing business with healthcare
    stakeholders in same state should be re-evaluated
  • Confidentiality restrictions
  • Reflect protective attitudes of predecessor
    programs and provider interests should reflect
    transparency trends

9
Structural Issues
  • 7th 8th SOW primary functions
  • Technical assistance through collaboratives or
    other interventions
  • Process redesign
  • Data collection interpretation for internal QI
  • Dissemination activities related to publicly
    available comparative quality data
  • Provide education and communication for
    beneficiaries
  • Protect beneficiaries and Trust Fund by reviewing
    complaints and appeals, reviewing other case
    reviews to estimate payment error rates and
    address other billing concerns

10
Structural Issues
  • A variety of conundrums exist
  • Hostile provider attitudes and a reluctance to
    participate in QIO activities
  • Possible conflicts of interest that could limit
    QIOs aggressive pursuit of complaints, appeals
    and problematic cases
  • Inefficient operations concerning staffing,
    particularly physicians and nurses who are needed
    24/7 to respond to urgent appeals review

11
Structural Issues
  • QIOs would have greater value if they
    concentrated their limited resources on the
    provision of technical assistance to support
    performance measurement and quality
    improvement.The regulatory functions of the
    various case reviews should not remain in the
    core SOW for every QIO and should devolve to
    other appropriate organizations.
  • IOM Committee

12
CMS Management
  • Lack of Program priorities
  • Individual tasks specified in great detail, no
    overall priorities
  • Evaluation formulas complex and of little help
    to QIOs
  • Strategic planning
  • Need more emphasis on integrated care
  • Quality and efficiency measures should address
    care in multiple settings
  • Alignment of measures, QIO Program, P4P
    transparency

13
CMS Management
  • Lack of an overall Program evaluation
  • Overly complex contract performance evaluations
  • Lack of evaluation of the QIOSCs and other
    contracts
  • Slow data processing
  • Late issuance of the 8th SOW
  • Three-Year Contract Length

14
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 1 QIO Program should become an
    integral part of strategies for future
    performance measurement and improvement in the US
    healthcare system.
  • Congress, HHS, CMS, etc., should strengthen and
    reform key elements of the Program
  • Emphasis of QIOs should be on TA
  • Patient-centered care across the continuum

15
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 2 QIOs should encourage all
    providers to pursue quality improvement
  • Assist all who request assistance
  • Prioritize to those who need assistance most or
    who face significant challenges
  • Recommendation 3 Congress and CMS should reform
    the organizational structure and governance of
    QIOs

16
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 4 Congress and CMS should
    develop other mechanisms to handle beneficiary
    complaints and appeals, as well as other case
    reviews
  • Recommendation 5 HHS and CMS should revise QIO
    data-handling processes to be more timely,
    efficient and useful

17
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 6 CMS should set clear goals and
    strategic priorities for the QIO Program and
    implement core contract changes
  • Coherent and feasible scope of work
  • Incentives for broader dissemination of rapid QI
    interventions
  • At least one local quality intitiative on basis
    of demonstrated need

18
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 6 (cont)
  • Strong incentives and penalties for QIO
    performance
  • Extension of contracts from 3-5 years
  • Greater competition for each new contract
  • Consistent performance periods
  • Timetable for goal setting, program planning, and
    funding processes
  • QIOSC, Special Studies, support services should
    reflect specific goals/priorities of the Program
  • Greater collaboration between CMS AHRQ
  • Greater communication between CMS components
    QIOs

19
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 7 CMS should develop four types
    of evaluation to assess the Program
  • The Program as a whole
  • Individual QIOs with respect to the core contract
  • Selected quality improvement interventions
    implemented by QIOs
  • An independent, external evaluation of the QIO
    Programs effectiveness contributions

20
IOM Recommendations
  • Recommendation 8 Congress and Secretary of HHS
    should focus the QIO apportionment on supporting
    quality measurement and improvement, separating
    out case review, appeals complaints. Remaining
    funds should be re-examined for effects of
    inflation, increase in work, etc.
  • Ease conflict of interest restrictions, as well
    as increase competition opportunities

21
But Its Not Just About IOM
  • New leadership at CMS
  • Management, process, metrics, evaluations,
    accountability have been sorely lacking
  • Senate Finance Committee
  • Has a more critical view of governance, conflict
    of interest, travel, conferences, etc.
  • Comes from the vantage point of wanting to assure
    that Medicare Trust Fund dollars are not being
    wasted or used for purposes other than improving
    quality for Medicare beneficiaries
  • The Congress as a whole, in tight budget times
  • Healthcare Expenditures increasing, quality is not

22
But Its Not Just About IOM
  • Office of Management Budget
  • Priority of cutting waste in expenditures,
    promoting competition
  • Value of dollars spent
  • Accountability in real-time, metrics and
    performance evaluation
  • DHHS
  • Multiple priorities of the Secretary and other
    HHS components need to be reflected and
    considered in the QIO Program
  • The print and broadcast media
  • Multiple outside healthcare organizations who
    participate in the quality arena They need
    resources, think they can do as well or better

23
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Integral Part of healthcare quality movement
  • Broad, yet tentative and expectant, support
  • Administration, the Secretary CMS Administrator
    see QIOs as such a vehicle and foundation to
    support Transparency and Value-driven healthcare
  • Availability of quality information
  • Availability of cost/price information
  • Promotion/adoption of HIT
  • Creation of incentives for high-quality,
    efficient healthcare

24
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Integral Part of healthcare quality movement
  • BQI Pilot roles, Value Exchanges, Community
    Leaders Programs
  • Quality Alliances AQA, HQA, QASC
  • Other federal agencies
  • Leading healthcare quality organizations IHI,
    NQF, NCQA, etc.
  • There are other viewpoints, questioning the value
  • Need to demonstrate value in areas of obvious
    vulnerability

25
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Offering TA to all providers
  • Have met/exceeded recruitment goals on many of
    subtasks
  • Doesnt address
  • Reluctant audience
  • Audience that doesnt see value, rightly or
    wrongly
  • Audience with greatest need, whether
    resource-driven or poor-performance-driven
  • Resource use questions
  • Variation in resources expended by QIO-why?
  • Efficiency evaluation and monitoring needed
  • Clear-cut goals, objectives, metrics, evaluation

26
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Reform of QIO organizational structure and
    governance
  • CMS site visits performed in CA, FL, NJ
  • AHQA voluntary guidelines Dont go far enough to
    address all governance issues
  • CMS has pursued administrative, regulatory and
    legislative processes and issues involved with
    changing structure and governance
  • Individual QIOs and their Boards have and can
    independently implement reform
  • Broader Board representation, including consumers

27
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Individual QIOs and their Boards have and can
    independently implement reform
  • Expansion of areas of expertise multiple health
    disciplines, group purchasers, IT professionals,
    etc.
  • Greater inclusion of QI experts from outside
    healthcare and from the local community
  • Committee structure strengthening, development
    plans for individual members, annual performance
    evaluations, annual assessments of Board
    performance as well as improvement plans
  • Public posting of Board membership along with
    compensation paid to members and the CEO

28
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Alternate models of handling complaints, appeals
    and case review functions
  • State-by-state process inheritantly inefficient
    and potentially inconsistent
  • Current volumes seem low, knowledge of the
    process not widespread
  • Focus should be on identifying system
    improvement, not primarily addressing individual
    cases
  • CMS has begun initial analysis of volume,
    quality, costs and efficiency, legal, and
    outcomes of these functions
  • Wide variations in expenditures to process cases
    needs evaluation
  • QIOs have independently combined efforts for
    handling BIPA/Grijalva appeals with shared staff
  • CMS is exploring issues concerning sharing of
    more information at conclusion of investigations

29
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Data Handling
  • Woefully inadequate, for QIOs and CMS
  • Timeliness issues
  • Security, privacy, and quality of process issues
  • Validation issues
  • Customer-service focus needs to be embraced
  • CMS has begun an evaluation of all aspects of the
    data systems process, both at CMS Central Office,
    as well as at the contractor level
  • Related issues to Quality Alliances, Hospital and
    other provider reporting initiatives, providing
    Medicare data (as statute allows) to the larger
    healthcare community, etc.

30
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Program Management
  • Complete reassessment performed prior to IOM
    Report, the latter aligning and complementing, in
    many instances
  • Departmental involvement in response to IOM
    report
  • Initial changes to some major flaws in incipient
    8th SOW, ongoing discussions for additional
    changes
  • CMS Central Office staffing changes
  • Recruiting for QIG Director and other individuals
    to focus on managing the QIO Program effectively

31
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Program Management
  • Broadening of management oversight at the level
    of the Director Deputy Director of OCSQ, as
    well as to the level of the Administrator of CMS
    at CMS Quality Council
  • Formation of the Business Operations Support
    Group (BOS) in OCSQ
  • Budget oversight
  • Contracting
  • Communications now centralized and staffed
    appropriately
  • Inclusion of other OCSQ Groups, CMS components,
    CMS Regional Offices, other HHS OPDIVS in the
    overall QIO Program management structure

32
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Program Management
  • Initial development of performance metrics and
    processes for CMS staff in program management
  • Training of Project Officers, GTLs, Contract
    Officers, and others in basic oversight and QIO
    assistance tasks
  • CMS Deputy Director led administrative oversight
    mentoring visits to CA, FL, NJ with resulting
    best practices identified
  • Senior management dialogue initiated with AHQA
    leadership

33
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Program Management
  • Bi-monthly meetings with QIO CEOs and staff via
    videoconference initiated
  • QualNet 2006 Conference broadened to include
    senior leadership participation and outside
    healthcare stakeholder participation
  • CMS Annual Report to Congress on QIO Program
    separated out from CMS CFO RTC
  • CMS Deputy Director initiated QIOSC review with
    site visits to IA, WA, PA
  • Review of Special Studies and support budgets
    initiated

34
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Program Evaluations
  • Internal performance metrics delineated for
    program management
  • Analysis of 6th 8th SOW evaluations performed
  • Confirm IOM Report
  • CMS working with ASPE, ASRT, ASL, and other HHS
    agencies to develop a rigorous set of evaluation
    processes for all aspects of the Program
  • Have been seeking input and informal
    recommendations via existing quality alliance and
    other healthcare stakeholder activities in the
    QIO Program

35
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • QIO Program Funding
  • Currently 10 per beneficiary per year for all
    QIO activities
  • 0.1 of Medicare expenditures on healthcare
  • Private sector spends an estimated1-2 on quality
    improvement activities
  • There are definitely inefficiencies in the
    current Program that need to be addressed
  • There is also a question of value (or lack
    thereof) for current expenditures
  • Departmental OMB approval of ongoing budget
    funds will rest on demonstrating improving
    outcomes of defined goals and objectives,
    attribution to QIO interventions, value and
    efficiency, and responsible use of Medicare Trust
    Funds.

36
State of the QIO Program 2007
  • Overall Conclusions
  • We have begun to address many of the IOM
    Recommendations already and made a significant
    start
  • In spite of structural weaknesses in the Program,
    progress is being made on all sutasks, albeit
    with some degree of variability by subtask and by
    QIO
  • 9th SOW planning has begun with all of the
    aforementioned being considered, and theres
    lots to be done yet

37
9th SOW Planning
  • Has been ongoing since the beginning of the 8th
    SOW, now increasing
  • Goal is to address, as appropriate and as
    possible, all of the various critiques of and
    recommendations to the Program
  • The federal clearance process, the public nature
    of the Program, the seriousness of issues were
    facing, make the process more deliberative than a
    private-sector corporate process

38
9th SOW Planning
  • Rough concept framework development
  • Ongoing
  • Recently presented to the CMS Administrator
  • Taken to Departmental leadership earlier than in
    past to collaborate and revise the concept
  • August 1, 2008 is statute-mandated start date
  • Paramount is need to
  • Implement needed reforms
  • Have structure, content and support processes in
    place prior to contract start date

39
9th SOW Planning
  • Leadership Group within HHS providing guidance to
    the framework and reform
  • Structure Work Group
  • Content Work Group
  • New timeline being devised
  • Appropriate briefings and clearance points being
    delineated
  • Problems of implementing needed reforms and
    achieving start date being assessed

40
Secretarial Priorities 2007-2008
  • Value-Driven Healthcare
  • Health Information Technology
  • Medicare Prescription Drugs
  • Medicaid Modernization
  • Louisiana Health Care System
  • Personalized Health Care
  • Prevention
  • Pandemic Preparedness
  • Emergency Response Commissioned Corps Renewal

41
Potential Themes for 9th SOW
  • Need to incorporate the Secretarys priorities
    and CMS Administrators priorities, as well as
    aligning with other national healthcare
    priorities
  • Prevention
  • Patient Safety
  • Patient Pathways
  • Avoidable hospitalizations and re-hospitalizations
  • Transitions across settings of care
  • Hospice and palliative care
  • All heavily dependent on Transparency,
    Value-Driven Healthcare, P4P and HIT
  • Also can incorporate health disparities,
    geographic variations, etc.

42
Contact Information
  • Barry M. Straube, M.D.
  • CMS Chief Medical Officer
  • Director, Office of Clinical Standards Quality
  • Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services
  • 7500 Security Boulevard
  • Baltimore, MD 21244
  • Email Barry.Straube_at_cms.hhs.gov
  • Phone (410) 786-6841
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