Monday, June 6, 2016
A
MACRA-scopic View of Federal Acronyms
The federal government has a fetish for acronyms.
This fetish began in 1933 when Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(FDR) unleashed a series of government programs that helped lift America out of
the depression:
--Emergency Banking Act (EBA)
--Economy Act (EA)
--Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
--Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA)
--Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
--Emergency Farm Mortgage Act (EFMA)
--Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
--Truth-in Securities Act (TISA)
--Home Owners’ Loan Act (HOLA)
--National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
--Glass-Steagall Banking Act (GSBA)
--Farm Credit Act (FCA)
4,298
Federal Acronyms
At last count, the federal government has 4,298 acronyms for God- knows-how-many federal agencies
(GKHMFA).
CMS
Acronyms
At Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) acronym-making
has become an art form. Among other
health care acronyms are these – Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA),
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMSMI), Patient-Centered Medical Homes (PCMH), Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs),
Alternative Payment Model (APM),
Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), Pay-for-Performance (P4P), Fee-for-Service (FFS), and that mind-stretching acronym MACRA (Medical
Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015).
Basic
MACRA Idea
The basic idea behind MACRA is to drive physicians who use
FFS into coordinated care models in which physicians assume the risk of caring
for Medicare patients using a fixed budget.
CMS is hell-bent for rewarding and punished physicians in Physician
Group Practices (PGP) for providing Evidence –Based-Medicine (EBM), also known
as Value-Based Medicine (VBM), for Medicare patients who belong to PGPs.
Three
MACRA Problems
There are three problems with MACRA.
One,
Medicare patients do not “belong to” or are owned by physicians or PGP. Patients are free to go to the physician whom
they like or prefer, even if that physician is outside the PGP.
Two, in
short physicians are not “attributable “to any specific physician or PGP. This
goes by the name of the Attribution Problem (AP).
Three, It is
extremely difficult, if not impossible. to measure physician risk or performance when patients seek care outside the PGP in emergency
rooms, urgent care centers, concierge practices, retail clinics, or when the average Medicare patient with
chronic disease seeks or shops for care from 6 different physicians, usually a specialist,
who may not be in a PGP or ACO. This is
called the RAP (Risk Adjustment Problem).
MACRA
Unworkable
Creating acronyms to herd physicians into APMs Alternative
Payment Models (APMs) to facilitate rewarding of punishing physicians is an
exercise in bureaucratic futility. It
may be politically correct (PC), but it does not work, if, for no other reason,
it turns physician off because it raises the cost of physicians to enter data
or to track where patients go outside the physician’s office and sphere of influence.
As Kip Sullivan, a
Minnesota health care analyst , after reading the 962 page MACRA document, explained in “Sloppy Risk Adjustment and Attributable
Guaranteed MACRA Won’t Work” (June 5, The Health Care Blog):
“CMS’s inability to determine accurately which patients ‘belong’
to which doctors (the attribution problem), and CMS’s inability to adjust costs
and quality scores outside physician control(the risk adjustment problem) are a
lethal one-two punch to the fantasy that CMS or anybody else can measure the ‘value’ of the vast majority of
physicians accurately.”
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