Posts Tagged PQRS

Medical Association’s 2018 State and Federal Agendas

Medical Association’s 2018 State and Federal Agendas

The Medical Association Board of Censors has met and approved the Association’s 2018 State and Federal Agendas. These agendas were developed with guidance from the House of Delegates and input from individual physicians. As the Alabama Legislature and U.S. Congress begin their work for 2018, additional items affecting physicians, medical practices and patients may be added to this list.

Download the Medical Association’s 2018 State and Federal Agendas (PDF)

 

2018 STATE AGENDA

 

The Medical Association supports:

  • Ensuring legislation “first do[es] no harm”
  • Extending the Medicaid payment bump for primary care to all specialties of medicine
  • Eliminating the health insurance-coverage gap for the working poor
  • Ensuring fair payment for patient care and reducing administrative burdens on physicians and medical practices
  • Strengthening existing tort reforms and ensuring liability system stability
  • Empowering patients and their doctors in making medical decisions
  • Continued physician compounding, dispensing of drugs
  • The same standards and reimbursements for telehealth and face-to-face visits
  • Training, education and licensing transparency of all individuals involved in patient care
  • Continued self-regulation of medicine over all areas of patient care
  • Increased state funding to upgrade the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program to a useful tool for physician monitoring patients at risk for drug interactions and overdose potential
  • Using data analytics to combat the drug abuse epidemic by strengthening research capabilities of pre-approved, de-identified prescription information
  • Maintaining the Alabama Department of Public Health as the repository for PDMP information to ensure continuity for prescribers and dispensers and security for patients
  • Standard opioid education in medical school so the physicians of tomorrow are prepared to face the realities and responsibilities of opioid prescribing

 

The Medical Association opposes:

  • The radical Patient Compensation System legislation
  • Legislation/initiatives increasing lawsuits against physicians
  • Non-physicians setting standards for medical care delivery
  • Tax increases disproportionately affecting physicians
  • Expanding access to the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP) for law enforcement
  • Statutory requirements for mandatory PDMP checks
  • Further expansion of Maintenance of Certification (MOC) requirements
  • Changes to workers’ compensation laws negatively affecting treatment of injured workers and medical practices
  • Any scope of practice expansions that endanger patients or reduces quality of care
  • Biologic substitution legislation that allows lower standards in Alabama than those set by the FDA that doesn’t provide immediate notifications to patients and their physicians when a biologic is substituted, and that increases administrative burdens on physicians and medical practices

 

2018 FEDERAL AGENDA

 

The Medical Association supports:

  • Meaningful tort reforms that maintain existing state protections
  • Reducing administrative and regulatory burdens on physicians and medical practices
  • Repeal of the Affordable Care Act and replacement with a system that:
    • Includes meaningful tort reforms that maintain existing state protections
    • Preserves employer-based health insurance
    • Protects coverage for patients with pre-existing conditions
    • Protects coverage for dependents under age 26
    • With proper oversight, allows the sale of health insurance across state lines
    • Allows for deducting individual health insurance expenses on tax returns
    • Increases allowed contributions to health savings accounts
    • Ensures access for vulnerable populations
    • Ensures universal, catastrophic coverage
    • Does not increase uncompensated care
    • Does not require adherence with insurance requirements until insurance reimbursement begins
    • Reduces administrative and regulatory burdens
  • Overhauling federal fraud and abuse programs
  • Reforming the RAC program
  • Prescription drug abuse education, prevention and treatment initiatives
  • Allowing patient private contracting in Medicare
  • Expanding veterans’ access to non-VA physicians
  • Reducing escalating prescription drug costs
  • A patient-centered MACRA framework, including non-punitive and flexible implementation of new MIPS, PQRS and MU requirements
  • Congressional reauthorization of CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) at the current enhanced funding level
  • Better interstate PDMP connectivity
  • Eliminating “pain” as the fifth vital sign
  • Repealing the “language interpreters” rule
  • Requiring all VA facilities, methadone clinics and suboxone clinics to input prescription data into state PDMPs where they are located

 

The Medical Association opposes:

  • Non-physicians setting standards for medical care delivery
  • Publication of Medicare physician payment data
  • National medical licensure that supersedes state licensure
  • Legislation/initiatives increasing lawsuits against physicians

Posted in: Advocacy

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Are You a Medicare Provider Without an EHR?

Are You a Medicare Provider Without an EHR?

You can still avoid the MIPS 4 percent penalty by participating this year!

In 2017 the TEST portion of MIPS allows a provider to submit one Quality measure (previously known as PQRS) for less than a 90 day period to potentially avoid a 4 percent MIPS penalty (to be incurred in 2019) on Medicare Part B claims. One example of this is G8427 – Current Medications Documented. Every office typically documents a patient’s Current Medications. If you submit this code on your claims, even if only for a short period of time, you will be participating in the test portion of MIPS and may avoid a 4 percent penalty on Medicare Part B in 2019.

Remember, you will need to do this for every TIN/NPI combination in your practice.

The graph below shows a broad overview of the current MIPS attestation guidelines. Each line gives a brief summary of the four different attestation paths an office can choose from for 2017. Based on your 2017 participation, the above information references the row with one star and explains the simple criteria required this year to easily avoid a 4 percent penalty which incurred in 2019.

Need help understanding these new MIPS requirements? Contact MediSYS today at 1 (334) 277-6201 or email questions to sales@medisysinc.com. Our staff has been assisting practices with various CMS incentive programs since their inception. We combine years of experience with ongoing support and detailed expertise for our clients at no additional support charges.

 

For information on MediSYS electronic health records and practice management solutions as well as outsourcing CCM services, please contact MediSYS at sales@medisysinc.com and visit the website at www.medisysinc.com. MediSYS is an official partner with the Medical Association.

 

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Meaningful Use and the Costs of Noncompliance

Meaningful Use and the Costs of Noncompliance

It is something of an understatement to note that the U.S. health care legal landscape is currently experiencing a degree of transition and uncertainty. There is no shortage of changes to discuss, debate, and, perhaps, grow apprehensive about. One development that has been the radar of many physicians for several years now – and brought into new relief by more recent changes such as the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) – is the Meaningful Use concept introduced by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act.

“Meaningful Use” relates to physicians’ use of certified electronic health records (EHR) technology in the interest of interoperability and efficient electronic exchange of health information. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) offers an incentive program which offers incentive payments to eligible professionals and eligible hospitals who join and comply. Participation involves making “Meaningful Use Attestations” regarding compliance. Both compliance and noncompliance with Meaningful Use goals can represent a significant cost to physicians: compliance, as bringing a practice’s technological infrastructure up to the appropriate standards does not come cheaply; noncompliance, as those who choose not participate in CMS’s incentive program, face reductions in their Medicare and Medicaid payments. These reductions equal a 3 percent decrease in 2017.

It appears that noncompliance with Meaningful Use standards carries more of a bite than some observers may have thought. In June of 2017, the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) released a report that Medicare made hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of incentive payments to Meaningful Use attesters who failed to meet the necessary requirements. The OIG estimated a total of approximately $730 million dollars in inappropriate payments – more than ten percent of the total payments. CMS’s blunder largely resulted from its failure to conduct adequate documentation review, thus rendering the self-attestations of professionals prone to abuse. Note, too, that CMS is not the only authority to make inappropriate EHR incentive payments: the OIG faulted Texas in August 2015 for making such wrongful payments in an amount over $15 million through its Medicaid program.

This does not, of course, amount to a windfall for the physicians who received the wrongful payments. The OIG’s recommendation to CMS includes directing CMS to recover the wrongful payments it has identified (a small sample of the total), and to seek to identify, and then recover, the rest of the inappropriately directed federal funds. As is characteristically the case, government overpayments cannot be retained by the recipient. Thus, the takeaway from CMS’s improper Meaningful Use largesse should not be an observation that the government has, up till now, not been adequately reviewing Meaningful Use documentation. Instead, it should be that one can, of course, expect such mistakes to be corrected when discovered and that it is even more important to get Meaningful Use compliance correct now. What has been done in the past by a physician may not actually have sufficed. Additionally, part of OIG’s recommendation to CMS was to educate eligible clinicians on proper Meaningful Use documentation requirements. Physicians should look for and take advantage of such education.

This need to double down on one’s Meaningful Use efforts comes at a time when the reimbursement system is shifting to MACRA. The Medicare EHR Incentive Program is no longer a standalone program –it has been combined through MACRA with the Physician Quality Reporting System and the Physician Value-based Payment Modifier into a single program, the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) under the Quality Payment Program (QPP). Although hospital and Medicaid Meaningful Use programs are unaffected by MACRA, clinicians will make their Medicare Meaningful Use attestations through the QPP. This program still focuses on the use of Certified EHR Technology to support interoperability and healthcare quality objectives. The meaningful use measures are calculated and compensated somewhat differently under MIPS; one significant change is that a hybrid scoring system has replaced the previous all-or-nothing approach.

Although the manner of reporting Meaningful Use has changed somewhat, it has not become either less important or markedly simpler. Getting up to speed on the technological, administrative, and reporting features of establishing Meaningful Use now – when there is some clemency as far as timing goes worked into the transition period – is certainly advisable. The need to establish the goals of interoperability, efficiency, and care coordination that Meaningful Use seeks to advance is a need that is unlikely to diminish. The fact that CMS is now beginning to seek hundreds of millions of dollars in wrongful incentive payments only highlights that Meaningful Use compliance is an issue worth following in the always changing health care landscape.

Chris Thompson is an attorney with Burr & Forman LLP. Chris practices exclusively in the firm’s Health Care Practice Group. Burr & Forman, LLP, is an official Bronze Partner with the Medical Association.

Posted in: MACRA

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Medical Association Urges CMS to Reduce EHR and MU Burden on Physicians

Medical Association Urges CMS to Reduce EHR and MU Burden on Physicians

The Medical Association has joined forces with the American Medical Association, Medical Group Management Association and 85 other medical groups to urge Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to reduce electronic health record and meaningful use requirements on physicians.

In a letter to new CMS Administrator Seema Verma, the groups first welcomed the new administration’s emphasis on reducing regulatory burdens on the house of medicine by acknowledging that the passage of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, or MACRA, and the existing value-based purchasing programs affecting physicians, such as Meaningful Use, Physician Quality Reporting System and Value-based Payment Modifier needing streamlining and alignment. However, the administration was urged to take steps to address these same challenges in MU, PQRS and VM prior to their replacement by MACRA and minimize the penalties assessed for physicians who tried to participate in these programs.

“Eligible providers should not be penalized for focusing on providing quality patient care rather than the arbitrary ‘check the box’ requirements of MU. Creating an administrative burden hardship exemption would provide immediate relief for those impacted by the programs that predate MACRA,” the letter stated. “As indicated in the MACRA law and final regulations, policymakers in Congress and the Administration clearly understand that fair and accurate measurement of physicians’ performance will not be possible until better tools become available. We also believe the steps we have outlined are in keeping with President Trump’s efforts to reduce regulatory burden.”

See also Medical Association Joins Call to CMS to Delay EHR Certification Requirements

Posted in: Advocacy

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Deadline for Seeking Review of Potential Payment Penalties

Deadline for Seeking Review of Potential Payment Penalties

Late last month, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services posted information on its website that physicians can consult to determine whether they will be subject to 2017 payment penalties associated with the Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS) and the Value Modifier. Physician practices that have concerns about the findings in their report(s) have until November 30 to file for an informal review of their data.

These penalties stem from policies in effect prior to the enactment of the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act. Failure to successfully complete required PQRS reporting will result in a 2 percent penalty. Value Modifier penalties can range from 1 percent to 4 percent depending on the size of the practice and its performance on cost and quality measures. PQRS penalties will be communicated to physicians by mail as well as in the PQRS feedback reports posted on the CMS website. Value Modifier penalties and bonuses can be found in Quality and Resource Use Reports (QRURs) posted on the website only.

Additional information on accessing the reports and filing for an informal review can be found in the attached documents. Those who have questions, even if they are uncertain about penalty status, are urged to submit a request for informal review. Although in most cases a successful PQRS review will trigger an automatic review of related VM penalties, program officials say the safest course is to file requests for review of both PQRS and VM data.

Follow these steps to submit an informal review request:

  1. Go to the Quality Reporting Communication Support Page (CSP)
  2. In the upper left-hand corner of the page, under “Related Links,” select “Communication Support Page”
  3. Select “Informal Review Request”
  4. Select “PQRS Informal Review”
  5. A new page will open
  6. Enter Billing/Primary Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), Individual Rendering National Provider Identifier (NPI), OR Practice Site ID # and select “submit”
  7. Complete the mandatory fields in the online form, including the appropriate justification for the request to be deemed valid. Failure to complete the form in full will result in the inability to have the informal review request analyzed. CMS or the QualityNet Help Desk may contact the requestor for additional information if necessary.

Please see “2015 PQRS: 2017 PQRS Negative Payment Adjustment — Informal Review Made Simple” available on the PQRS Analysis and Payment webpage for more information.

NOTE: The CSP will be unavailable November 18-20 for maintenance.

Additionally, 2015 PQRS feedback reports can be accessed on the CMS Enterprise Portal using an Enterprise Identity Management (EIDM) account. For details on how to obtain your report, please see the “Quick Reference Guide for Accessing 2015 PQRS Feedback Reports.” For information on understanding your report, please see the “2015 PQRS Feedback Report User Guide.” Both guides are on the PQRS Analysis and Payment webpage.

For additional questions regarding the informal review process, contact the QualityNet Help Desk at 1-866-288-8912 (TTY 1-877-715-6222) or Qnetsupport@hcqis.org Monday-Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. CT. To avoid security violations, do not include personal identifying information, such as Social Security Number or TIN, in e-mail inquiries to the QualityNet Help Desk.

Posted in: CMS

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Five Secrets to Preventing Provider Cardiac Arrest Secondary to Meaningful Use 2 — There’s a Diagnosis Code for This!

Five Secrets to Preventing Provider Cardiac Arrest Secondary to Meaningful Use 2 — There’s a Diagnosis Code for This!

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published in the 2015 Inaugural Issue of Alabama Medicine magazine

Kill two or three measures with one click. Clinical Decision Support Rules, PQRS and Clinical Quality Measures can be managed simultaneously.

Here’s an example of what I mean: Meaningful Use 2 requires the smoking status of all patients 13 years and older to be documented. The Physician Quality Reporting System also requires Providers who select this measure for reporting to screen patients for tobacco use who are 18 years or older and to provide them with cessation counseling if they are tobacco users.

Build a clinical support decision rule to remind you to record the tobacco status of patients 13 years of age (automatic pop-up). You’ve knocked out recording the smoking status of the patient and core measure number 5. The patient then tells you that he or she smokes two packs a day and loves it. At that point, you revel in the opportunity to save a life and conquer measure number 13. Suddenly, you realize that you have just performed PQRS measure number 226, and you do your proverbial happy dance.

If you get that queasy feeling of being “unsure” when you attest to performing a Security Risk Analysis, ask a professional for advice. You can be audited for up to six years – you may be all for doing it yourself to save money, but unless you are a physician as well as a Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP), you could miss something critical. Additionally, the cost for inadvertently allowing a hacker to successfully hack in to your EHR, violate patient privacy, sell your patients’ information to the highest bidder, and give you five minutes of fame in the local news is much higher than the fee for allowing a truly certified professional to prevent this from happening.

Encourage secure messaging with patients by incorporating it into your workflow. The Provider is not the sole individual allowed to manage these messages. Imagine the angry patient who has been sitting in your exam room for 45 minutes, waiting to see you. Unfortunately, you did not anticipate six walk-ins that day and are running a little behind schedule. Fortunately for you, your clinical staff is utilizing the patient engagement template created specifically for this all too common occasion. Medical Assistant Molly walks into the exam room and pulls up the patient’s record. She explains kindly that Mr. Doe can now send the physician a secure message through the patient portal. Mr. Doe does not have an email or know how to set up his portal. No problem! She can assist with that as well. The MA then helps the patient send a secure message stating “Dear Dr. Awesome, thanks for showing me how to contact you via secure message.”

Sending information to a public health registry requires teamwork between both parties involved. Unlike Meaningful Use 1, failed testing does not meet the measure in Meaningful Use 2. Ongoing submission to a registry is the rule. Take heart. Most health departments have a special section set up on their websites for meaningful users. They have the ability to accept submission of things liked diabetes diagnoses, cancer cases and immunizations, and if they don’t, you are probably excluded from the measure. Contact the local health department and find out who is managing Meaningful Use on their end. There are forms to be filled out, calls to vendors and registries to be made, but in the end, Providers will be able to submit vital information to health departments electronically. Some EHRs have a one-directional interface. In this case, make sure the Practice Administrator submits the information at least weekly, and follows-up to insure effective transmission. A bi-directional interface allows for automated transmissions with limited time devoted to monitoring processes.

Qualified professionals can assist the Provider with CPOE. Some EHRs do not recognize orders placed by another “qualified professional” if they are not linked with the Provider. If the number of patients being prescribed medications or for whom labs/radiology are ordered is increasing daily — but the meaningful use stats are not adding up — the problem might be as simple as selecting the supervising provider.
In order to keep your clicking fingers from getting worn out, I suggest creating a “favorites” page of labs, medications and imaging most commonly ordered. This will cut down on the time it takes to rummage through the endless options available in EHRs.

The information in this article is not intended as tax or legal advice. Please consult your tax advisor for specific information regarding your individual situation.

bronzemvpContributed by Patti G. Perdue, CPA.CITP, Jackson Thornton. Rebecca Hanif, CCS, CPCO, CPC, also contributed to this article. Jackson Thornton is a Certified Public Accounting and Consulting Firm and an official partner with the Medical Association.

Posted in: Management

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