Home 5 Lab Industry Advisor 5 Essential 5 Pathology, Lab Communities Weigh In on Proposed MACRA Rules

Pathology, Lab Communities Weigh In on Proposed MACRA Rules

by | Aug 4, 2016 | Essential, Inside the Lab Industry-lir, Laboratory Industry Report

Last year the long-maligned Sustainable Growth Rate payment formula was replaced with the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA), a system where providers are paid in part based on the quality of care they deliver. “This is the biggest change in how physicians are paid … since the creation of DRGs,” said Emily Volk, M.D., a pathologist and chief quality officer for the Baptist Health System in San Antonio who also sits on the board of governors for the College of American Pathologists. MACRA won’t be fully implemented until 2019 at the earliest (and likely later than that), but the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released draft regulations for how the new law would be implemented earlier this year. The agency received nearly 4,000 comments on the proposed regulations from members of the public. The vast majority were physicians, but a handful were pathologists or groups representing that medical specialty as well as laboratories. The sector is taking a fairly cautious wait-and-see attitude. The CMS will take months digesting the comments it received (although hundreds of them were template submissions from members of the Texas Medical Association). It will likely be the end of the […]

Last year the long-maligned Sustainable Growth Rate payment formula was replaced with the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA), a system where providers are paid in part based on the quality of care they deliver.

“This is the biggest change in how physicians are paid ... since the creation of DRGs,” said Emily Volk, M.D., a pathologist and chief quality officer for the Baptist Health System in San Antonio who also sits on the board of governors for the College of American Pathologists.

MACRA won’t be fully implemented until 2019 at the earliest (and likely later than that), but the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released draft regulations for how the new law would be implemented earlier this year. The agency received nearly 4,000 comments on the proposed regulations from members of the public. The vast majority were physicians, but a handful were pathologists or groups representing that medical specialty as well as laboratories.

The sector is taking a fairly cautious wait-and-see attitude. The CMS will take months digesting the comments it received (although hundreds of them were template submissions from members of the Texas Medical Association). It will likely be the end of the year or even 2017 before the final regulations are announced.

“I’m not getting exorcised about it right now,” said Barry Portugal, president of Health Care Development Services, a Florida-based consulting firm to pathology practices.

MACRA – The Current Rundown

  • Applies to all providers who bill the Medicare program $10,000 a year or more.
  • Budget-neutral incentives and penalties will be applied for each provider (for every dollar paid out in incentives, a dollar will be deducted via a penalty). The incentives and penalties will start at 4 percent of Medicare revenue in the early years, eventually growing to a maximum of 9 percent a year.
  • Smaller providers will likely qualify for the Merit- Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), and will have their performance judged on six quality and outcomes-based objectives (half of their final performance score), with the other half of the score weighted on the cost of delivering care, clinical practice improvement activities and advancing care information.
  • Pathologists will qualify for at least eight measures, all holdovers from the 2016 Physician Quality Reporting System measures (among them breast cancer resection pathology reporting; immunohistochemical evaluation of HER2 for breast cancer patients; and Barrett’s esophagus).
  • Many pathologists will likely be classified as nonpatient facing specialists, meaning some of their performance measures may be weighted differently than clinicians who regularly interact with patients.
  • Larger providers will likely qualify for alternate payment models (such as ACOs, although CMS estimates fewer than 4 percent of providers will be participating in this category).
Source: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

For the moment, Portugal said he is most concerned about the record-keeping required for quality measures, particularly for smaller practices.

“It’s a (challenge) keeping track of all of that work and trying to statistically infer how well you’re doing,” he said.

Concern About Smaller Practices
The consensus among many in the health care industry is also that smaller or solo medical practices will be overwhelmed by the many reporting requirements.

“All of the items in MACRA and going back to the (Affordable Care Act) have the secondary impact of increasing administrative costs,” Volk said. “Does this hit a smaller practice more than a larger one? No doubt that it does.”

CAP represents the group of laboratory-oriented clinicians who will be most impacted by the rule. It submitted 27 pages of comments, one of the lengthiest documents submitted by commenters.

The organization wants an expansion of potential quality measurement categories for pathologists and a minimization of clinical practice improvement activities until more specifics for meeting the objectives are created.

“Pathologists for years have been making contributions to delivering value, but the current program was designed with primary care physicians in mind and not our group,” Volk said.

Both Volk and Portugal suggested that pathologists might be measured in areas such as blood management and conservation, as well potentially reducing duplicative testing.

Perhaps most importantly, CAP wants a liberalization of the definition of non-patient facing physicians to automatically default pathologists to that category, where scoring is weighted in a manner more favorable to clinicians that don’t regularly interact with patients. Under the current proposal, physicians or group practices qualify for a non-patient facing designation if they have less than 25 patient encounters a year.

“If there is a change in someone’s status (late in the year), it would be difficult for them to retrospectively meet the reporting requirements,” Volk said.

Quality Improvement Possibilities Seen
COLA, the laboratory quality and safety organization, sees a potential opportunity in MACRA to improve the objectives of its mission.

“There are opportunities to expand and improve upon the rule’s existing list of clinical practice improvement activities to recognize the significant impact laboratory medicine plays in the delivery of quality care,” said COLA Chief Executive Officer Douglas Beigel.

Of particular interest is the measurement category known as clinical practice improvement activities, which would comprise 15 percent of a clinician’s score for an incentive or penalty.

“A CPIA that focuses on enhancing practice safety in waived testing through educational support, training and practice management tools will undoubtedly make a clear impact on the quality of care received by patients by encouraging clinicians to take a closer look at the existing waived testing practices,” Beigel said.

Another area where a CPIA would make sense is in improving quality control during the pre-analytic phase of testing. According to Beigel, up to 68 percent of all testing errors occur during this phase.

“A CPIA that highlights initiatives focused on quality control measures and proper training for the entire care team will help to enhance practice safety,” he said.

Takeaway: The laboratory/pathology sector has taken its first look at the proposed MACRA regulations and has asked for relatively few changes so far.

The Laboratory Sector Weighs In On Proposed MACRA Regulations

American Clinical Laboratory Association
“We suggest CMS formally seek input from the laboratory industry in the future, either directly, or through laboratory associations such as the American Clinical Laboratory Association. More than 70% of medical decisions made by physicians are based on laboratory findings, yet labs are often not consulted regarding critical interoperability decisions. For example, CMS removed laboratory results as a Meaningful Use measure before the Lab Result Interface interoperability standard ONC named for meaningful use certification could be fully deployed. Laboratories invested significant resources developing this interface to help EHR vendors achieve MU certification but few vendors actually deployed this interface, even though they may have certified a product.”

College of American Pathologists
“The CAP is looking forward to continued engagement

with the CMS on this challenging program in order to determine how to measure appropriately providers who typically do not furnish services that involve face-to-face interaction with patients, including pathologists. The CAP believes considerable accommodations or alternate measures will be necessary to meet this clause.”

COLA
“We believe MACRA has the potential to achieve many important aligning objectives across the healthcare field through its innovative incentives program.”

Quest Diagnostics
“CPOE only requires the provider enter the order into the EHR and not the transmission of the order to the laboratory. We suggest that CMS consider changing the rule and the Laboratory Order Measure to require the transmission of laboratory orders to external labs and that (the) ONC name a standard for this exchange.”

Source: Regulations.gov

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