CMS PROPOSES TO EXPAND QUALITY PROGRAM FOR HOSPITAL INPATIENT
SERVICES IN FY 2009
April 14, 2008
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) today proposed
additional steps to strengthen the tie between the quality of
care provided to Medicare beneficiaries and payment for the services
provided when they are in the hospital.
CMS is proposing to expand the list of conditions which are
reasonably preventable through proper care and for which Medicare
will no longer pay at a higher rate if the patient acquires them
during a hospital stay. In addition, CMS is adding 43 new quality
measures for which hospitals will have to report data in order
to receive the full annual payment update for their services.
"CMS is taking aggressive actions to ensure that beneficiaries
get safe, high quality, and efficient care from their health care
providers, and the actions we are announcing today build on our
efforts," said CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems. "The
status of the Medicare Hospital Insurance Trust Fund requires
us to find the best solutions to ensure that Medicare stays strong
while paying providers appropriately for the care they deliver.
The reforms we are proposing in this rule should lead to greater
value for Medicare beneficiaries and the Medicare program."
The proposed regulation builds on efforts across Medicare to
transform the program to a prudent purchaser of health care services,
paying based on quality of care, not just quantity of services.
CMS is also making hospital quality and cost information available
to help consumers make more informed choices. On March 28, CMS
posted updated pricing and quality information at www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov,
along with the results of surveys of patients about their experience
with the care they received while in the hospital.
The proposed rule would apply to services provided to patients
who are discharged from the hospital during fiscal year (FY) 2009,
which begins on October 1, 2008.
Numerous studies have documented the detrimental effects on
patients and their loved ones and the increased costs of health
care services resulting from a preventable patient’s injury or
condition acquired due to hospital errors. These can include "Never
Events," those events that never should occur, like amputation
of the wrong limb or transfusing patients with the wrong blood
type. CMS is working with the National Quality Forum (NQF), a
national organization working to promote patient safety and improve
hospital care, on ways to reduce or eliminate 28 Never Events
identified by NQF.
In its 1999 report, To Err is Human: Building a Safer Health
System, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) concluded that medical
errors, particularly hospital-acquired conditions (HACs), may
be responsible for as many as 98,000 deaths annually, at costs
of up to $29 billion. In 2000, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC), estimated that hospital-acquired infections
added nearly $5 billion to hospital costs. At the same time, a
2007 survey by the Leapfrog Group of more than 1,200 hospitals
found that 87 percent did not follow recommendations to prevent
many of the most common hospital-acquired conditions.
"When these conditions occur during a hospital stay, the patient
and his or her family suffer needlessly. To make matters worse,
these conditions are likely to result in higher medical bills
for the family to pay for additional services for physician care,
prescription drugs, and other items and services that would not
have been necessary if proper care had been provided,” said Weems.
“Medicare can and should take the lead in encouraging hospitals
to improve the safety and quality of care and make better practices
a routine part of the care they provide not just to people with
Medicare, but to every patient they treat."
The rules proposed by CMS expand two key initiatives that begin
to link payments for health care services to quality of care –
the Hospital-Acquired Conditions and the Hospital Quality Measure
Reporting initiatives. Under the HAC initiative, beginning October
1, 2008, Medicare will no longer pay hospitals at a higher rate
for the increased costs of care that result when a patient is
harmed by one of several conditions they didn’t have when they
were first admitted to the hospital and that have been determined
to be reasonably preventable by following generally accepted guidelines.
The HAC provisions in Medicare regulations required hospitals
to begin reporting on their Medicare claims on October 1, 2007,
whether certain specified diagnoses were present when the patient
was admitted. The first eight conditions, which were selected
last year because they greatly complicate the treatment of the
illness or injury that caused the hospitalization, resulting in
higher payments to the hospital for the patient’s care by both
Medicare and the patient, were:
- Object inadvertently left in after surgery
- Air embolism
- Blood incompatibility
- Catheter associated urinary tract infection
- Pressure ulcer (decubitus ulcer)
- Vascular catheter associated infection
- Surgical site infection- Mediastinitis (infection in the chest)
after coronary artery bypass graft surgery
- Certain types of falls and trauma
CMS is proposing to expand the list of conditions that need to
be reported if present when a patient is first admitted and is
seeking public comment on whether they should be added to the
list in the final rule to be announced later this year. The list
in the proposed rule includes:
- Surgical site infections following certain elective procedures
- Legionnaires’ disease (a type of pneumonia caused by a specific
bacterium)
- Extreme blood sugar derangement
- Iatrogenic pneumothorax (collapse of the lung)
- Delirium
- Ventilator-associated pneumonia
- Deep vein thrombosis/Pulmonary Embolism (formation/movement
of a blood clot)
- Staphylococcus aureus septicemia (bloodstream infection)
- Clostridium difficile associated disease (a bacterium that
causes severe diarrhea and more serious intestinal conditions
such as colitis)
Beginning October 1, 2008, Medicare will no longer pay the hospital
at a higher rate for the original eight conditions or any conditions
added to the list in the final rule, if they were acquired during
the hospital stay.
The second initiative CMS is proposing is the expansion of the
hospital quality measure reporting program, which reduces the
amount a hospital is paid if it does not participate in the voluntary
reporting of standardized quality measures. These are measures
that are publicly reported on Hospital Compare. Hospitals are
currently required to report 30 quality measures on their claims
for Medicare inpatient services to qualify for a full update to
their FY 2009 payment rates. CMS is proposing to add 43 quality
measures to the list in order to get the full inflation update
for FY 2010, bringing the total number of measures in FY 2009
to 73. The proposed additions include the measures of the following
types:
- Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) – 1 new measure
- Hospital readmissions – 3
- Nursing care – 4
- Patient Safety Indicators developed by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) – 5
- Inpatient Quality Indicators developed by the AHRQ – 4
- Venous thromboembolism measures (VTEs) - 6
- Stroke measures (STK) – 5
- Cardiac surgery measures –15
In proposing to require hospitals to report on readmissions,
CMS notes that almost 18 percent of Medicare patients are readmitted
to the hospital within 30 days of discharge, potentially exposing
the patients and their families to significant additional suffering.
Taken together with the patient satisfaction information recently
reported on Hospital Compare web site that shows the effectiveness
of nurse and physician communication with the patient, including
discharge planning, the building blocks for monitoring and improving
the entire episode of care will be available. The impact on taxpayers
is also significant. According to the Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC), readmissions cost the program $15 billion
annually, with $12 billion of those costs potentially preventable.
The proposed rule would apply to more than 3,500 acute care
hospitals paid under the Inpatient Prospective Payment System
(IPPS). The IPPS was intended to reward hospitals for being efficient
by making a single payment to the hospital based on the average
costs of treating a patient with a particular diagnosis, rather
than paying for the actual costs of each case. However, until
recently, Medicare did not have the legal authority to use its
payment system to encourage hospitals to improve the quality of
care they furnish.
The proposed rule also includes proposals to update Medicare
payment rates and policies for inpatient hospitals for FY 2009.
Overall, the proposed rule is estimated to increase Medicare payments
to acute care hospitals by nearly $4.0 billion.
Comments on the proposed rule will be accepted through June
13. CMS will respond to comments in a final rule to be issued
on or before August 1, 2008.
For more information, please see the CMS Website at:
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/