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2014's Top Healthcare Policy Issues Center on Performance, Quality

Although the bungled rollout of health exchange websites has dominated healthcare-related headlines in the last months of 2013, hospitalist leaders say the policy landscape for 2014 features bigger issues.

To set the table, The Hospitalist reached out to four hospitalists who keep a close eye on the policy sphere. Those interviewed agree that the continued shift from fee-for-service to pay-for-performance will dominate policy discussions. In tow with that are the expected quality improvements the payment model is supposed to beget.

“Pay-for-performance and quality measures will be major issues for hospitalists moving forward,” says SHM Public Policy Committee member Joshua Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM. “But, I am not very optimistic that these processes will lead to their desired outcomes. At the end of the day, personal patient responsibility will need to be accounted for if a real change in healthcare outcomes is to be recognized.”

Other pressing policy issues the panel will pay attention to this year include:

1. Value-Based Purchasing

Further refinement and development of just how physician value-based purchasing will be implemented. More specifically, Josh Boswell, SHM’s senior manager of government relations, is watching to see how that will be incorporated into a possible long-term fix for the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula.

“As the costs associated with noncompliance increase, hospitals will increasingly look to hospitalists to drive better performance,” says former SHM Public Policy Committee member Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, director, Aurora Critical Care Service, St Luke’s Medical Center, Milwaukee, and clinical associate professor of medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “The good news: This is job security for many hospitalists. The bad news: Increasing amounts of human capital will be dedicated to meeting Medicare’s mandates, irrespective of whether this represents the most productive or effective use of those resources.”

2. ACOs

Continued monitoring of accountable-care organizations (ACOs) as the first waves of data emerge on claims and performance. Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

3. Observation Status

The rollout of the new two-midnight rule, which the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently changed to allow physicians to admit a patient if they reasonably expect and document in the medical record that a beneficiary will need to stay in the hospital for more than two midnights. Such admissions will be presumed to be appropriate for Medicare Part A payment. CMS cited concerns about the growing trend of longer observation stays to support this change. Connected with this issue is SHM’s continued backing of the Improving Access to Medicare Coverage Act of 2013 (H.R. 1179, S. 569), which would solve the conundrum of “observation status” time not counting toward the required three consecutive overnights an inpatient needs to qualify for Medicare benefits at a skilled nursing facility.

Forward Moving

SHM Public Policy Committee chair Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, says that while insurance reform is one of the three legs of the Affordable Care Act, hospitalists need to be focused just as vigilantly on expanding healthcare access for more patients and reforming the delivery system.

“That’s where we’re supposedly going to get the resources to do these other things,” says Dr. Greeno, chief medical officer for Cogent HMG of Brentwood, Tenn. “Hospitalists are right in the middle of those discussions—and they should be.”

 

 

Whether you are for or against the changes produced by the Affordable Care Act, Dr. Siegal says the system “just became a lot less stable.”

“The tacit, quid pro quo had been that lost revenue from Medicare would, at least in part, [be] offset when 30-plus million Americans with newly minted insurance plans became paying healthcare consumers,” Dr. Siegal adds. “With this delicate balance suddenly jeopardized, my guess is that many health systems will circle their wagons until they know which way the wind will blow.”

All told, the healthcare landscape remains one that is pockmarked by generational reform that will require deft hands to navigate. But those who are still fighting reform and its expanded access provision might be missing the larger point.

“You could repeal the Affordable Care Act today, which is not going to happen obviously, but it wouldn’t change the fact that these emerging alternative payment methodologies are still going to occur,” Dr. Siegal says. “It’s beyond Medicare. The private payors are doing it. Physician groups and hospitals and other integrated healthcare organizations are gearing up to take those payments ... because staying in fee-for-service is untenable.”


Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.

Mr. Hospitalist Goes to Washington

A hospitalist is poised to become the nation’s doctor. President Obama announced late last year that Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, an internal medicine hospitalist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and an instructor at Harvard Medical School, was his nominee for Surgeon General of the United States. Dr. Murthy, the first Indian-American nominee, is a co-founder of Doctors for America.

“On behalf of SHM, its members, and hospitalists everywhere, we congratulate Dr. Murthy and support his nomination,” SHM President Eric Howell, MD, SFHM, says. “His nomination is a credit to his own personal achievement and the potential for hospitalists to rise up and truly change healthcare for the better. This is truly a milestone for the specialty. Just 17 years ago, the word ‘hospitalist’ was first published; now it was used in a White House press release.”

Indeed, Dr. Murthy’s ascension to national prominence is just the latest example of hospitalists joining the highest ranks of government.

Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, SFHM, is CMS’ chief medicalofficer. His current titles also include director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and director of the Center for Clinical Standards and Quality. He was previously a pediatric hospitalist and director of hospital medicine at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

Kate Goodrich, MD, former director of the hospital medicine division at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, D.C., is medical officer for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the HHS.

Matthew Heinz, MD, a hospitalist from Tucson, Ariz., is the director of provider outreach at the HHS, a position the agency created specifically to educate the public on healthcare policies.

Kevin Larsen, MD, was appointed in 2013 as medical director of meaningful use at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. Dr. Larson is a longtime hospitalist who was previously chief medical informatics officer at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.

— Richard Quinn

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The Hospitalist - 2014(01)
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Although the bungled rollout of health exchange websites has dominated healthcare-related headlines in the last months of 2013, hospitalist leaders say the policy landscape for 2014 features bigger issues.

To set the table, The Hospitalist reached out to four hospitalists who keep a close eye on the policy sphere. Those interviewed agree that the continued shift from fee-for-service to pay-for-performance will dominate policy discussions. In tow with that are the expected quality improvements the payment model is supposed to beget.

“Pay-for-performance and quality measures will be major issues for hospitalists moving forward,” says SHM Public Policy Committee member Joshua Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM. “But, I am not very optimistic that these processes will lead to their desired outcomes. At the end of the day, personal patient responsibility will need to be accounted for if a real change in healthcare outcomes is to be recognized.”

Other pressing policy issues the panel will pay attention to this year include:

1. Value-Based Purchasing

Further refinement and development of just how physician value-based purchasing will be implemented. More specifically, Josh Boswell, SHM’s senior manager of government relations, is watching to see how that will be incorporated into a possible long-term fix for the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula.

“As the costs associated with noncompliance increase, hospitals will increasingly look to hospitalists to drive better performance,” says former SHM Public Policy Committee member Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, director, Aurora Critical Care Service, St Luke’s Medical Center, Milwaukee, and clinical associate professor of medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “The good news: This is job security for many hospitalists. The bad news: Increasing amounts of human capital will be dedicated to meeting Medicare’s mandates, irrespective of whether this represents the most productive or effective use of those resources.”

2. ACOs

Continued monitoring of accountable-care organizations (ACOs) as the first waves of data emerge on claims and performance. Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

3. Observation Status

The rollout of the new two-midnight rule, which the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently changed to allow physicians to admit a patient if they reasonably expect and document in the medical record that a beneficiary will need to stay in the hospital for more than two midnights. Such admissions will be presumed to be appropriate for Medicare Part A payment. CMS cited concerns about the growing trend of longer observation stays to support this change. Connected with this issue is SHM’s continued backing of the Improving Access to Medicare Coverage Act of 2013 (H.R. 1179, S. 569), which would solve the conundrum of “observation status” time not counting toward the required three consecutive overnights an inpatient needs to qualify for Medicare benefits at a skilled nursing facility.

Forward Moving

SHM Public Policy Committee chair Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, says that while insurance reform is one of the three legs of the Affordable Care Act, hospitalists need to be focused just as vigilantly on expanding healthcare access for more patients and reforming the delivery system.

“That’s where we’re supposedly going to get the resources to do these other things,” says Dr. Greeno, chief medical officer for Cogent HMG of Brentwood, Tenn. “Hospitalists are right in the middle of those discussions—and they should be.”

 

 

Whether you are for or against the changes produced by the Affordable Care Act, Dr. Siegal says the system “just became a lot less stable.”

“The tacit, quid pro quo had been that lost revenue from Medicare would, at least in part, [be] offset when 30-plus million Americans with newly minted insurance plans became paying healthcare consumers,” Dr. Siegal adds. “With this delicate balance suddenly jeopardized, my guess is that many health systems will circle their wagons until they know which way the wind will blow.”

All told, the healthcare landscape remains one that is pockmarked by generational reform that will require deft hands to navigate. But those who are still fighting reform and its expanded access provision might be missing the larger point.

“You could repeal the Affordable Care Act today, which is not going to happen obviously, but it wouldn’t change the fact that these emerging alternative payment methodologies are still going to occur,” Dr. Siegal says. “It’s beyond Medicare. The private payors are doing it. Physician groups and hospitals and other integrated healthcare organizations are gearing up to take those payments ... because staying in fee-for-service is untenable.”


Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.

Mr. Hospitalist Goes to Washington

A hospitalist is poised to become the nation’s doctor. President Obama announced late last year that Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, an internal medicine hospitalist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and an instructor at Harvard Medical School, was his nominee for Surgeon General of the United States. Dr. Murthy, the first Indian-American nominee, is a co-founder of Doctors for America.

“On behalf of SHM, its members, and hospitalists everywhere, we congratulate Dr. Murthy and support his nomination,” SHM President Eric Howell, MD, SFHM, says. “His nomination is a credit to his own personal achievement and the potential for hospitalists to rise up and truly change healthcare for the better. This is truly a milestone for the specialty. Just 17 years ago, the word ‘hospitalist’ was first published; now it was used in a White House press release.”

Indeed, Dr. Murthy’s ascension to national prominence is just the latest example of hospitalists joining the highest ranks of government.

Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, SFHM, is CMS’ chief medicalofficer. His current titles also include director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and director of the Center for Clinical Standards and Quality. He was previously a pediatric hospitalist and director of hospital medicine at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

Kate Goodrich, MD, former director of the hospital medicine division at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, D.C., is medical officer for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the HHS.

Matthew Heinz, MD, a hospitalist from Tucson, Ariz., is the director of provider outreach at the HHS, a position the agency created specifically to educate the public on healthcare policies.

Kevin Larsen, MD, was appointed in 2013 as medical director of meaningful use at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. Dr. Larson is a longtime hospitalist who was previously chief medical informatics officer at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.

— Richard Quinn

Although the bungled rollout of health exchange websites has dominated healthcare-related headlines in the last months of 2013, hospitalist leaders say the policy landscape for 2014 features bigger issues.

To set the table, The Hospitalist reached out to four hospitalists who keep a close eye on the policy sphere. Those interviewed agree that the continued shift from fee-for-service to pay-for-performance will dominate policy discussions. In tow with that are the expected quality improvements the payment model is supposed to beget.

“Pay-for-performance and quality measures will be major issues for hospitalists moving forward,” says SHM Public Policy Committee member Joshua Lenchus, DO, RPh, FACP, SFHM. “But, I am not very optimistic that these processes will lead to their desired outcomes. At the end of the day, personal patient responsibility will need to be accounted for if a real change in healthcare outcomes is to be recognized.”

Other pressing policy issues the panel will pay attention to this year include:

1. Value-Based Purchasing

Further refinement and development of just how physician value-based purchasing will be implemented. More specifically, Josh Boswell, SHM’s senior manager of government relations, is watching to see how that will be incorporated into a possible long-term fix for the sustainable growth rate (SGR) formula.

“As the costs associated with noncompliance increase, hospitals will increasingly look to hospitalists to drive better performance,” says former SHM Public Policy Committee member Eric Siegal, MD, SFHM, director, Aurora Critical Care Service, St Luke’s Medical Center, Milwaukee, and clinical associate professor of medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “The good news: This is job security for many hospitalists. The bad news: Increasing amounts of human capital will be dedicated to meeting Medicare’s mandates, irrespective of whether this represents the most productive or effective use of those resources.”

2. ACOs

Continued monitoring of accountable-care organizations (ACOs) as the first waves of data emerge on claims and performance. Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

Along with managing health populations, expect consolidation of healthcare systems from nearly 700 to what some experts think could be as few as 50 to 70 mega-providers.

3. Observation Status

The rollout of the new two-midnight rule, which the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently changed to allow physicians to admit a patient if they reasonably expect and document in the medical record that a beneficiary will need to stay in the hospital for more than two midnights. Such admissions will be presumed to be appropriate for Medicare Part A payment. CMS cited concerns about the growing trend of longer observation stays to support this change. Connected with this issue is SHM’s continued backing of the Improving Access to Medicare Coverage Act of 2013 (H.R. 1179, S. 569), which would solve the conundrum of “observation status” time not counting toward the required three consecutive overnights an inpatient needs to qualify for Medicare benefits at a skilled nursing facility.

Forward Moving

SHM Public Policy Committee chair Ron Greeno, MD, FCCP, MHM, says that while insurance reform is one of the three legs of the Affordable Care Act, hospitalists need to be focused just as vigilantly on expanding healthcare access for more patients and reforming the delivery system.

“That’s where we’re supposedly going to get the resources to do these other things,” says Dr. Greeno, chief medical officer for Cogent HMG of Brentwood, Tenn. “Hospitalists are right in the middle of those discussions—and they should be.”

 

 

Whether you are for or against the changes produced by the Affordable Care Act, Dr. Siegal says the system “just became a lot less stable.”

“The tacit, quid pro quo had been that lost revenue from Medicare would, at least in part, [be] offset when 30-plus million Americans with newly minted insurance plans became paying healthcare consumers,” Dr. Siegal adds. “With this delicate balance suddenly jeopardized, my guess is that many health systems will circle their wagons until they know which way the wind will blow.”

All told, the healthcare landscape remains one that is pockmarked by generational reform that will require deft hands to navigate. But those who are still fighting reform and its expanded access provision might be missing the larger point.

“You could repeal the Affordable Care Act today, which is not going to happen obviously, but it wouldn’t change the fact that these emerging alternative payment methodologies are still going to occur,” Dr. Siegal says. “It’s beyond Medicare. The private payors are doing it. Physician groups and hospitals and other integrated healthcare organizations are gearing up to take those payments ... because staying in fee-for-service is untenable.”


Richard Quinn is a freelance writer in New Jersey.

Mr. Hospitalist Goes to Washington

A hospitalist is poised to become the nation’s doctor. President Obama announced late last year that Vivek Murthy, MD, MBA, an internal medicine hospitalist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston and an instructor at Harvard Medical School, was his nominee for Surgeon General of the United States. Dr. Murthy, the first Indian-American nominee, is a co-founder of Doctors for America.

“On behalf of SHM, its members, and hospitalists everywhere, we congratulate Dr. Murthy and support his nomination,” SHM President Eric Howell, MD, SFHM, says. “His nomination is a credit to his own personal achievement and the potential for hospitalists to rise up and truly change healthcare for the better. This is truly a milestone for the specialty. Just 17 years ago, the word ‘hospitalist’ was first published; now it was used in a White House press release.”

Indeed, Dr. Murthy’s ascension to national prominence is just the latest example of hospitalists joining the highest ranks of government.

Patrick Conway, MD, MSc, SFHM, is CMS’ chief medicalofficer. His current titles also include director of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and director of the Center for Clinical Standards and Quality. He was previously a pediatric hospitalist and director of hospital medicine at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center.

Kate Goodrich, MD, former director of the hospital medicine division at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, D.C., is medical officer for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the HHS.

Matthew Heinz, MD, a hospitalist from Tucson, Ariz., is the director of provider outreach at the HHS, a position the agency created specifically to educate the public on healthcare policies.

Kevin Larsen, MD, was appointed in 2013 as medical director of meaningful use at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. Dr. Larson is a longtime hospitalist who was previously chief medical informatics officer at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis.

— Richard Quinn

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