-
Dr. Lee
Gross is worried. He has practiced family medicine in North Port, Florida, near
Sarasota, for 14 years. But he and two partners are the last small, independent
practice in the town of 62,000. Everyone else has moved away, joined larger
groups, or become salaried employees of hospitals or health companies
Thursday, August 25, 2016
Is MACRA the Final Blow for Small Independent
Practices?
The following
article is from Kaiser Health News? It raises this fundamental question -
does MACRA(The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act) – which
discourage fee-for-service and encourages ACOs (Accountable Care Organizations and APMs (Alternative Payment Models ) spell
the end of small private practices which depend on Medicare patients for their
existence?
Doctors Raise Concerns For Small Practices In Medicare’s
New Payment System
By Steven
Findlay August 25, 2016
\\
“We’re
struggling to survive,” Gross, 47, said. “Our kind of practice is dying in this
country, and medicine itself is changing so rapidly that doctors everywhere
seem to be burning out.”
Indeed,
in their professional journals, at conferences, on social media and health care
blogs, and in comments to federal regulators, the nation’s doctors are
expressing growing anger and frustration.
The Medicare Access & CHIP Reauthorization Act — is
Congress’ boldest step since the 2010 Affordable Care Act to push the health
care system to reward quality over quantity. It replaces a reimbursement system
that was widely criticized by doctors and regularly ran into budget problems on Capitol Hill.
“This is
a big change, we know,” said Tim Gronniger, deputy chief of staff at the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. But, he added, “the current way
we pay doctors incentivizes them in bad ways — to waste resources, for
example.”
The law
has bipartisan support and does not come with the political tension of the ACA.
Still, the Obamacare battles have shown that broadly reshaping health care is
no easy task.
Poor and
wasteful care accounts for a quarter to a third of all health care spending, according to
the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine.
That
would total between $875 billion to $1.1 trillion of the $3.5 trillion expected
to be spent on health care in the U.S. in 2016.
The law
sets up two payment tracks. All doctors must choose one, except for those who
see too few Medicare patients or whose income from Medicare is too low.)
On one
track, doctors whose performance and quality of care exceeds benchmarks get
bonuses up to 4 percent of their total Medicare reimbursements. Those will
start in 2019, based on evaluations of care delivered in 2017, and will rise a
maximum of 9 percent by 2022. By the same token, physicians who score poorly on
quality benchmarks — which include requirements for the use of electronic
health records — face penalties at the same levels.
The
amount the government spends on the bonuses — estimated at $833 million for
2019 — must be balanced by the penalties, keeping the program “budget neutral.”
However, Congress also authorized an extra $500 million a year bonus pool
through 2024 for doctors judged “exceptional.”
On the
other path, doctors choose to join larger practices or organizations — called
“alternative payment models” — that would be held accountable for the
quality of care delivered by all the doctors in the organization.
Congress’
intent, experts say, was to push doctors to join such larger organizations,
which generally are considered better equipped to manage and coordinate care,
improve quality and lower costs than are solo or small groups of doctors.
Doctors
get a 5 percent annual bonus between 2019 and 2024 if they join an alternative
payment organization, along with any bonuses or penalties the
organization chooses to mete out. Starting in 2026, doctors in such
organizations will continue to get a small annual payment adjustment from
Medicare that’s larger than doctors who don’t choose the alternative path —
0.75 percent versus 0.25 percent.
Physicians’
concern is that the new payment system — laid out in a 962-page proposed regulation in April — will put doctors
in solo or small practices at high risk of incurring payment penalties and will
push thousands into larger practices and alternative payment organizations.
“The
ways it’s structured now, the large practices will do well and the small
practices will do badly,” said Paul Ginsburg, director of the Center for Health
Policy at the Brookings Institution.
During a
public comment period, the American Medical Association and dozens of other
physician trade organizations and every state medical association said the
system needs to be simplified and must “accommodate the needs of physicians in
rural, solo, or small practices in order to enhance their opportunities for
success and avoid unintended consequences.”
One of
those unintended consequences, the AMA says, is that penalized doctors would
limit the number of Medicare patients they see, or drop Medicare.
“I have
no idea what I’m going to do yet,” says Dr. Jean Antonucci, a primary care
physician who has a solo practice in Farmington, Maine. Half her patients are
covered by Medicare. “If I’m going to lose money, I’ll have to see what my
options are. I don’t want to limit how many Medicare patients I see."
“I don’t
want to spend the bulk of my time doing paperwork or collecting data on my
patients,” said Jean Antonucci. (Courtesy of Jean Antonucci)
Antonucci
and Gross say they want to preserve their small practices. “I don’t want to
spend the bulk of my time doing paperwork or collecting data on my patients,”
said Antonucci. “That’s what the doctors in my community who are employed [in
larger groups] seem to spend most of their time doing.”
Some
experts agree that the burden to report quality-of-care to the government is
significant.\
“We
don’t yet have a good system to measure the performance of individual
physicians,” says Robert Berenson, a physician and fellow at the Urban
Institute and former director of Medicare payment policy for the federal
government. “And yet we are going to peg billions of dollars in payment to such
measurement. It’s a little crazy.”
A study published in March in the journal Health Affairs
calculated the scope of that data collection now. It found physicians and their
staffs spend $40,000 per doctor per year — $15.4 billion nationwide —
collecting and reporting information about their care to Medicare, private
insurers and others.
Gronniger
says CMS has, in the proposed rule, scaled back the number of measures doctors
must report. “We are eager to work through the issues doctors’ groups have
raised,” Gronniger said.
Even so,
the AMA and other physician groups are pushing CMS to delay the start for collecting
quality-of-care information from next January until at least July.
Medicare administrators have pledged to issue final regulations by Nov. 1.
“This is
all very complex,” said AMA President Andrew Gurman. “A lot of doctors are very
frustrated … but we are committed to trying to make the new law work.
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