Bonuses for voluntary reporting would be in a lump sum and won’t be paid until the first quarter of 2008. The method of payment may be subject to certain limits—and it may not offset the physicians’ administrative costs for reporting. Hospital medicine programs will have to consider whether the costs of reporting are worth the bonus.
SHM Involvement
SHM’s Public Policy Committee (PPC) and its Performance and Standards Task Force (PSTF) have been actively involved in getting measures included on the PRVP list that are applicable to hospitalists.
“SHM is a member of the AMA’s Physician Consortium for Performance Improvement (PCPI) and has representatives on work groups that have developed performance measures and will be revising and maintaining measures over time,” says Dr. Torcson. “We hope to eventually include measures that are specific to hospitalized patients.”
In addition to the PCPI, SHM is represented and has influence in the National Quality Forum and the Ambulatory Care Quality Alliance.
“SHM leadership—CEO Larry Wellikson, Eric Siegal, Public Policy chair, and Lakshmi Halasyamani, chair of the Hospital Quality and Patient Safety (HQPS) Committee—have been proactive in positioning SHM to be very involved in the national quality improvement agenda,” says Dr. Torcson. “It’s really a work in progress, but SHM is part of the work groups that are driving this process.”
The Effect on Hospitalists
As they can with the original PVRP, hospitalists can find a few applicable performance measures to report on, so they are eligible to participate—and SHM encourages them to do so.
“The amount of money will be small and the number of [applicable] measures will be limited and not truly representative of a hospitalist’s practice,” says Dr. Torcson, “but performance reporting should be something that every physician, including hospitalists, has as a skill set as their practice moves into the future.”
Moving Ahead
Details on the new program still need to be clarified by CMS in the first half of 2007. Regardless of the details still to be determined for this first major foray into Medicare pay for performance, one thing is clear: CMS is dedicated to the idea of tying financial reward to quality care. And they aren’t the only ones.
“Medicare is not as far along as private insurers,” says Dr. Torcson. “Commercial insurers are much more aggressive about pursuing physician-level performance and efficiency—I think we’ll see more impactful pay-for-performance plans from them first. However, the CMS model will affect 70 million patients, and commercial insurers have tended to use the CMS model for physician reimbursement.”