One addition for 2009 is the use of patient registries to avoid claims systems for certain outpatient measures. “I don’t see the registry-reporting option being available to hospitalists in the short term,” Dr. Torcson says, “but it’s worth watching for the future.”
Beginning in 2009 and continuing through the next four years, Medicare also will provide incentive payments to eligible professionals who are successful electronic prescribers. (See the “Public Policy” article on p. 15 of the September 2008 The Hospitalist.) The e-prescribing measure in the 2008 PQRI will be removed for next year and used wholesale for a separate pay-for-reporting initiative pending changes from the Department of Health & Human Services. Unfortunately, none of the 2008 coding specifications for e-prescribing are available for hospitalist reporting.
“A lot of [the PQRI] measures have been created from the perspective of the cottage-industry model of an office-based private practice,” Dr. Torcson explains. “This 2008 (e-prescribing) measure was geared for an office-based physician practice—and the unforeseen consequence of the measure is that it’s not inclusive of patients being discharged from the hospital.”
Where Hospital Medicine Fits
By now, hospitalists should be resigned to the idea that many measures in PQRI don’t apply to their patients. However, SHM continues to work toward more inclusion for hospital-based physicians, by commenting on proposed rules and participating in the National Quality Forum and the American Medical Association’s Physician Consortium for Performance Improvement.
“We have been advocating for including performance measures for care processes, including transitions of care,” Dr. Torcson says. “This will probably come into play more in 2010 than 2009.”
SHM also has submitted comments on the proposed e-prescribing measures. Dr. Torcson says the organization is lobbying to make e-prescribing applicable to all hospital-based physicians, including ER doctors, and for discharged patients. “We want the whole process to harmonize with a comprehensive and safe discharge process that includes medication reconciliation,” he says.
To Report or Not to Report?
Regardless of whether lobbying efforts succeed in making more reporting applicable to hospital medicine, should groups start reporting in 2009? “It’s going to be a tough decision,” Dr. Torcson admits. “There’s a pretty significant investment in time and infrastructure to set this up. For the groups I know, the return on investment was negative.” In other words, PQRI does not pay for itself in a hospital medicine setting.
He says any hospital medicine group that wants to report should have in place a computerized system, and be willing to start slowly. “I’m convinced that it’s going to take an electronic coding/documentation system, as well as designated support staff within the hospital medicine group to pull it off,” he says. “This almost requires a full-time person.”
Dr. Torcson recommends starting with the reporting of three or four measures. “If you’re using a manual process or a homegrown system,” he says, “then the fewer measures the better, in terms of doing PQRI right to reach the 80% threshold.”
If you’re interested in reporting under the 2009 PQRI, go to SHM’s Web site at www.hospitalmedicine.org/ and type “PQRI 2008” into the advanced search bar. The article, “Information on PQRI 2008,” from May 17, 2007, provides important details about the program, including which measures apply to hospitalists. TH
Jane Jerrard is a medical writer based in Chicago.