The Obama administration is recruiting as many as 20,000 primary care
doctors for an initiative it hopes will change the way physicians get
paid and provide care.
The program,
which was announced Monday, will be run by the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services. The aim is to stop paying doctors based on the
number of billable services and visits provided to Medicare
beneficiaries and instead to tie payments to overall patient health and
outcomes.
"We think there will be a high level of interest across states and regions among primary care providers," said Dr. Patrick Conway, the chief medical officer at CMS. "The model aligns with how doctors and patients want to practice medicine."
Under
the five-year project, CMS will recruit primary care doctors into two
separate payment tracks. Both will include a monthly payment to doctors
for each Medicare beneficiary, but the amounts will vary.
The
fee for doctors in the first track will average $15 a beneficiary; the
physicians will also still be paid for each service they provide. The
fee for the second track will average $28; doctors will receive lower
fees than those in the first track for each service. (In both tracks,
the monthly payments will be higher for patients with more complex
health problems.)
The idea is that doctor groups will use the
payments that aren't tied to specific services to develop different ways
to provide care, including telephone and video consultations. They
might also use care managers to help patients with their medications and
chronic illnesses.
The payment change "really allows them to
move away from a visit-based, fee-for-service structure," Conway said on
a conference call with reporters.
Doctors who want to
participate in the program have to commit to offering patients
preventive care, support for chronic illnesses and 24-hour access to
health care and health information.
Conway says CMS expects the
second track, with lower fees for itemized services, to save Medicare
about $2 billion over five years.
The project is based on a pilot
program set up under the Affordable Care Act to test new ways to
deliver and to pay for health care. The goals are to improving care and
cut costs.
Fee-for-service systems encourage too much medical intervention, says Robert Berenson, a fellow at the Urban Institute who has written about
medical payment systems. But, he adds, programs that only pay a flat
fee for care and result in physicians or hospitals cutting back too
much.
"This is an attempt to balance paying for visits at a
reasonable rate and then reimbursing substantially for all the other
activities that are necessary to provide care," he says, such as phone
calls and coordinating with other doctors.
The CMS program is
similar to successful health care payment systems in Denmark and the
Netherlands that combine fees for itemized services and flat fees per
patient.
Berenson says, however, that CMS's goal of including
20,000 doctors may be too high. CMS would be better off working out the
glitches in the approach with a smaller number of physician practices
before rolling it out more widely.
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