Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, 628-646 [2010-33143]
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G. Additional Comments
IV. Future QIP Considerations
A. ESRD Services Monitoring and
Evaluation
B. Potential QIP Changes and Updates
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Anticipated Effects
D. Alternatives Considered
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Part 413
[CMS–3206–F]
RIN 0938–AP91
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which
we refer by acronym in this proposed
rule, we are listing the acronyms used
and their corresponding meanings in
alphabetical order below:
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule will implement
a quality incentive program (QIP) for
Medicare outpatient end-stage renal
disease (ESRD) dialysis providers and
facilities with payment consequences
beginning January 1, 2012, in
accordance with section 1881(h) of the
Act (added on July 15, 2008 by section
153(c) of the Medicare Improvements
for Patients and Providers Act (MIPPA)).
Under the ESRD QIP, ESRD payments
made to dialysis providers and facilities
under section 1881(b)(14) of the Social
Security Act will be reduced by up to
two percent if the providers/facilities
fail to meet or exceed a total
performance score with respect to
performance standards established with
respect to certain specified measures.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on February 4, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Shannon Kerr, (410) 786–3039.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Overview of Quality Monitoring
Initiatives
B. Statutory Authority for the ESRD QIP
C. Finalized Anemia Management and
Dialysis Adequacy Measures
II. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public
Comments
A. Performance Standards for the ESRD
QIP Measures
B. Performance Period for the ESRD QIP
Measures
C. Methodology for Calculating the Total
Performance Score for the ESRD QIP
Measures
D. Payment Reductions Using the Total
Performance Score
E. Public Reporting Requirements
1. Introduction
2. Notifying Providers/Facilities of Their
QIP Scores
3. Informing the Public Through FacilityPosted Certificates
4. Informing the Public Through
Medicare’s Web site
F. Excluded Providers
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CIP Core Indicators Project
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
CPM Clinical performance measure
CROWNWeb Consolidated Renal
Operations in a Web-Enabled Network
DFC Dialysis Facility Compare
DFR Dialysis Facility Report
ESA Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent
ESRD End-stage renal disease
FDA Food and Drug Administration
Kt/V A measure of dialysis adequacy where
K is dialyzer clearance, t is dialysis time,
and V is total body water volume
LDO Large dialysis organization
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients
and Providers Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110–
275)
NQF National Quality Forum
PPS Prospective payment system
QIP Quality incentive program
REMIS Renal management information
system
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SIMS Standard information management
system
SSA Social Security Administration
the Act Social Security Act
URR Urea reduction ratio
I. Background
A. Overview of Quality Monitoring
Initiatives
For over 30 years, monitoring the
quality of care provided to end-stage
renal disease (ESRD) patients and
provider/facility accountability have
been important components of the
Medicare ESRD payment system. In the
proposed rule, we described the
evolution of our ESRD quality
monitoring initiatives by category: The
ESRD Network Organization Program,
the Clinical Performance Measures
(CPM) Project, Dialysis Facility
Compare (DFC), the ESRD Quality
Initiative, the ESRD Conditions for
Coverage, and CROWNWeb (75 FR
49216–49217). Most recently, we
finalized three quality measures that we
will use for the initial year of the QIP
(see ‘‘End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System final rule
(referred to in this final rule as the
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‘‘ESRD PPS final rule’’), which appeared
in the Federal Register on August 12,
2010 (75 FR 49030, 49182–49190)). We
also proposed to implement other
components of the QIP in a notice of
proposed rulemaking entitled ‘‘EndStage Renal Disease Quality Incentive
Program’’ proposed rule, which
appeared in the Federal Register on
August 12, 2010 (75 FR 49215–49232).
We received and reviewed many helpful
comments regarding the design of the
QIP that contributed to the development
of this ESRD QIP final rule.
We view the ESRD QIP, required by
section 1881(h) of the Social Security
Act (the Act), as the next step in the
evolution of the ESRD quality program
that began more than three decades ago.
Our vision is to implement a robust,
comprehensive ESRD QIP that builds on
the foundation that has already been
established.
B. Statutory Authority for the ESRD QIP
Congress required in section 153 of
MIPPA that the Secretary implement an
ESRD quality incentive program (QIP).
Specifically, section 1881(h) of the Act,
as added by section 153(c) of MIPPA,
requires the Secretary to develop a QIP
that will result in payment reductions to
providers of dialysis services and
dialysis facilities that do not meet or
exceed an established total performance
score with respect to performance
standards established for certain
specified measures. As provided under
this section, the payment reductions,
which will be up to two percent of
payments otherwise made to providers
and facilities under section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act, will apply to payment for
renal dialysis services furnished on or
after January 1, 2012. The total
performance score that providers and
facilities must meet or exceed in order
to receive their full payment in 2012
will be based on a specific performance
period prior to this date. Under section
1881(h)(1)(C) of the Act, the payment
reduction will only apply with respect
to the year involved for a provider/
facility and will not be taken into
account when computing future
payment rates for the impacted
provider/facility.
For the ESRD QIP, section 1881(h) of
the Act generally requires the Secretary
to: (1) Select measures; (2) establish the
performance standards that apply to the
individual measures; (3) specify a
performance period with respect to a
year; (4) develop a methodology for
assessing the total performance of each
provider and facility based on the
performance standards established with
respect to the measures for a
performance period; and (5) apply an
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appropriate payment reduction to
providers and facilities that do not meet
or exceed the established total
performance score.
C. Finalized Anemia Management and
Hemodialysis Adequacy Measures
In accordance with section
1881(h)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, we finalized
in the ESRD PPS final rule the following
three measures for the initial year of the
ESRD QIP:
• Percentage of Medicare patients
with an average Hemoglobin Less Than
10.0g/dL;
• Percentage of Medicare patients
with an average Hemoglobin Greater
Than 12.0g/dL;
• Percentage of Medicare
hemodialysis patients with an average
Urea Reduction Ratio (URR) > 65
percent.
(75 FR 49182). However, we received
some questions on the measures during
the public comment period for this rule
and are, therefore, providing clarifying
information in this final rule.
As we stated in the ESRD PPS final
rule, pediatric patients (those < 18 years
of age) will not be included in the final
calculation of the anemia management
measures (75 FR 49185). However, we
want to emphasize that providers/
facilities do not need to submit any new
data on the measures we are using for
the first year of the QIP. This population
will be excluded from the final
calculation of the measure during the
first year (75 FR 49185).
We also want to reiterate that the
patient population for the anemia
management measures will include
hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis
patients who are receiving ESAs. To be
eligible for inclusion in the patient
population for these measures, the
patient must have four or more eligible
claims from the provider/facility within
the performance period. Data from
patients whose first ESRD maintenance
dialysis started less than 90 days after
diagnosis or who have hemoglobin
values of less than 5g/dL or greater than
20g/dL will be excluded from the
calculation (75 FR 49182). Also, patients
not receiving ESAs are excluded from
these measures (75 FR 49184).
We would like to clarify that as we
stated in the ESRD PPS final rule, the
hemodialysis adequacy measure will be
calculated as the percentage of patients
with a URR greater than or equal to 65
percent (75 FR 49190).
Additionally, providers/facilities do
not need to submit any additional data
with respect to the measures for the first
year of the ESRD QIP. We will calculate
the measures using claims data, which
we will collect, as we do for DFC, in
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accordance with the technical
specifications outlined in the Dialysis
Facility Reports, which can be accessed
for reference at: https://
www.dialysisreports.org/
Methodology.aspx. For the hemodialysis
adequacy measure, home hemodialysis
patients and peritoneal dialysis patients,
as well as pediatric patients, are
excluded from the calculation (75 FR
49185).
We also note that the laboratory
values we will use to calculate the three
finalized measures are included on the
Medicare ESRD claim form and, thus,
are submitted by providers/facilities
along with their claims. For guidance on
how those values should be obtained
and submitted, please see the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual (Medicare
Publication 100.04, Chapter 8—
Outpatient ESRD Hospital, Independent
Facility, and Physician/Supplier Claims,
Section 50.3).
Requirements for Issuance of
Regulations
Section 902 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA)
amended section 1871(a) of the Act and
requires the Secretary, in consultation
with the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget, to establish
and publish timelines for the
publication of Medicare final
regulations based on the previous
publication of a Medicare proposed or
interim final regulation. Section 902 of
the MMA also states that the timelines
for these regulations may vary, but shall
not exceed three years after publication
of the preceding proposed or interim
final regulation except under
exceptional circumstances.
This final rule finalizes provisions set
forth in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, entitled ‘‘End-Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program’’,
published on August 12, 2010 in the
Federal Register (75 FR 49215 through
49232). In addition, this final rule has
been published within the three-year
time limit imposed by section 902 of the
MMA. Therefore, we believe that this
final rule is being published in
accordance with the statutory
requirements of section 902 to ensure
the timely publication of final
regulations.
II. Provisions of the Proposed
Regulations
On August 12, 2010, we published in
the Federal Register a proposed rule
entitled ‘‘Medicare Program; End-Stage
Renal Disease Quality Incentive
Program’’ (75 FR 49215). In that
proposed rule, we proposed that under
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the ESRD QIP, ESRD payments for
facilities/providers would be reduced by
up to two percent if they failed to meet
or exceed the total performance score
for performance standards established
with respect to certain quality measures.
As stated above, the three quality
measures we will use for payment
consequence year 2012 are Hemoglobin
Less Than 10.0g/dL, Hemoglobin More
Than 12.0g/dL and Hemodialysis
Adequacy ≥ 65 percent (URR). As
detailed below, we received numerous
comments on the various portions of the
proposed rule, which we analyze and
respond to below. After consideration of
these comments and responses, we are
finalizing the ESRD QIP as proposed.
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public
Comments
The proposed rule was published on
August 12, 2010 (75 FR 49215 through
49232) in the Federal Register with a
comment period that ended on
September 24, 2010. We received
approximately 71 public comments.
Interested parties that submitted
comments included dialysis facilities,
the national organizations representing
dialysis facilities, nephrologists, nurses,
nutritionists, home health agencies, the
major chain dialysis facilities, clinical
laboratories, pharmaceutical
manufacturers, hospitals and their
representatives, individual dialysis
patients, advocacy groups, and the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC). In this final
rule, we provide a summary of each
proposed provision, a summary of the
public comments received, our
responses, and any changes to the
proposed ESRD QIP contained in this
final rule.
A. Performance Standards for the ESRD
QIP Measures
Section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
performance standards with respect to
the measures selected for the QIP for a
performance period with respect to a
year. Section 1881(h)(4)(B) of the Act
provides that the performance standards
shall include levels of achievement and
improvement, as determined
appropriate by the Secretary. However,
for the first performance period, we
proposed to use for the three selected
measures the performance standard
required by the special rule in section
1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act. Under this
provision, the Secretary is required to
‘‘initially use’’, as a performance
standard, the lesser of a provider/
facility-specific performance rate in the
year selected by the Secretary under the
second sentence of section
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1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, or a
standard based on the national
performance rates for such measures in
a period determined by the Secretary.
We did not propose to include in this
initial performance standard levels of
achievement or improvement because
we do not believe that section
1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act requires that we
include such levels. In addition, we
interpret the term ‘‘initially’’ to apply
only to the performance period
applicable for payment consequence
calendar year 2012. For subsequent
performance periods, we will propose
performance standards under section
1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act.
As stated above, to implement the
special rule for the anemia management
and hemodialysis adequacy measures,
we proposed to use as the performance
standard the lesser of the performance
of a provider or facility on each measure
during 2007 (the year selected by the
Secretary under the second sentence of
section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act,
referred to as the base utilization year),
or the national performance rates of all
providers/facilities for each measure in
2008.
In setting the performance standard
based on national performance rates, we
proposed to adopt a standard that is
equal to the national performance rates
of all dialysis providers and facilities
based on 2008 data as calculated and
reported on the Dialysis Facility
Compare (DFC) Web site. We proposed
to use 2008 data because it is the most
recent year for which data is publicly
available prior to the beginning of the
proposed performance period.
Specifically, the national performance
rates for the anemia management and
hemodialysis adequacy measures were
posted on DFC in November 2009, as
follows:
• For the anemia management
measure (referred to in this final rule as
the ‘‘Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL
Measure’’)—the percentage of Medicare
patients who have an average
hemoglobin value less than 10.0g/dL:
the national performance rate is two
percent.
• For the anemia management
measure (referred to in this final rule as
the ‘‘Hemoglobin Greater Than 12g/dL
Measure’’)—the percentage of Medicare
patients who have an average
hemoglobin value greater than 12.0g/dL:
the national performance rate is 26
percent.
• For the proposed hemodialysis
adequacy measure (referred to in this
final rule as ‘‘Hemodialysis Adequacy
Measure’’)—the percentage of Medicare
patients who have an average URR level
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greater than or equal to 65 percent: the
national performance rate is 96 percent.
For purposes of implementing the
special rule, we proposed that the
performance standard for each of the
three measures for the initial
performance period with respect to
payment consequence year 2012 would
be the lesser of (1) the provider/facilityspecific rate for each of these measures
in 2007, or (2) the 2008 national
performance rates for each of these
measures.
We received several comments on our
proposed selection of performance
standards. Summaries of the comments
received and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to setting the performance
standards based on previous provider/
facility performance in 2007 and 2008
because they believe that those years
provide an inaccurate picture of the
quality of care furnished to ESRD
patients today. Specifically, these
commenters noted that changes have
been made since 2007 in anemia
management clinical practice and
suggested that CMS set the initial
performance standards based on more
current data, such as data from 2009.
Response: As stated above, under
section 1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act, the
Secretary is required to ‘‘initially use’’ as
a performance standard the lesser of a
provider/facility-specific performance
rate in the year selected by the Secretary
under the second sentence of section
1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, or a
standard based on the national
performance rate for each measure in a
period determined by the Secretary. In
the ESRD PPS final rule we determined
that 2007 was the year representing the
lowest per-patient utilization of the
renal dialysis services which comprise
the ESRD payment bundle as required
by section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act.
(75 FR 49065). Therefore, in accordance
with section 1881(h)(4)(E)(i), we must
use the 2007 provider/facility
performance rates.
In setting the performance standard
based on national performance rates
under section 1881(h)(4)(E)(ii), we
sought to balance the importance of
using the most recent available data
with the desire to use data that was
publicly available at the time we issued
the proposed rule. At the time we issued
the proposed rule, the most recent
national performance rate data that was
publicly available on DFC was from
2008.
We agree with the commenters that
the initial performance standard should
be based on the most contemporary data
and as close to the performance period
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as possible. However, we also believe
that it is important for providers/
facilities, beneficiaries and the public to
know exactly what the performance
standards are as soon as possible.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed initial performance
standard based on the 2008 national
performance rate of two percent for the
Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL measure
would be extremely difficult for
providers/facilities to meet and would
likely lead to overuse of ESAs. The
commenter noted that the 2008 data
reflects practices that were furnished
prior to recent studies and FDA
warnings regarding the danger of high
hemoglobin levels, and that at the time,
providers/facilities were unaware of the
danger of high hemoglobin levels.
Additionally, the commenter suggested
setting the initial performance standards
for the anemia management measures at
10 percent for Hemoglobin Less than
10g/dL and Hemoglobin Greater than
12g/dL.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s suggestion that the anemia
management measures performance
standards should be set at 10 percent.
We have made providers/facilities
aware of the dangers of high hemoglobin
levels related to use of ESAs since as
early as 2005, when we changed our
policy regarding ESAs and the
monitoring of high hemoglobin levels
(see CMS Manual System, Pub 100–04
Medicare Claims Processing,
Transmittal 751 (November 10, 2005)).
Since that time and with the release of
the FDA guidelines in 2008, the
historical data demonstrate that the
number of patients with high
hemoglobin levels has decreased and
the number of patients with Hemoglobin
Less than 10 g/dL has not increased. We
believe that lowering the standard to 10
percent does not move quality forward.
We also believe that most providers/
facilities are capable of meeting the
initial 2 percent performance standard,
and note that the 2008 national
performance rates for the anemia
management measures will only be used
as the initial performance standard for
those providers/facilities whose 2007
specific rates are lower than these
national performance rates. For
providers/facilities that had 2007
specific rates that were higher than the
2008 national performance rates their
specific performance rates will be used
as the initial performance standard. We
also note that analysis of historical data
for all three measures shows
improvements in the average provider/
facility performance of each measure,
and therefore more facilities should
receive maximum performance scores
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for these measures in future years of the
ESRD QIP.
Comment: One commenter requested
that the initial performance standard for
the hemodialysis adequacy measure be
recalculated to reflect that home
hemodialysis patients are excluded from
the measure.
Response: As stated in the ESRD PPS
final rule (75 FR 49186), home
hemodialysis patients are not part of the
measure population for the
hemodialysis adequacy measure for
purposes of the ESRD QIP. Therefore,
home hemodialysis patients will not be
included in the measure calculation.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
performance standards as proposed.
B. Performance Period for the ESRD QIP
Measures
Section 1881(h)(4)(D) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish a
performance period with respect to a
year, and for that performance period to
occur prior to the beginning of such
year. Because we are required under
section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act to
implement the payment reduction
beginning with renal dialysis services
furnished on or after January 1, 2012,
the first performance period would need
to occur prior to that date.
We proposed to select all of CY 2010
as the initial performance period for the
three finalized measures (42 FR 49218).
We believe that this is the performance
period that best balances the need to
collect sufficient data, analyze the data,
calculate the provider/facility-specific
total performance scores, determine
whether providers and facilities meet
the performance standards, prepare the
pricing files needed to implement
applicable payment reductions
beginning on January 1, 2012, and allow
providers and facilities time to preview
their performance scores and inquire
about their scores prior to finalizing
their scores and making performance
data public (75 FR 49218). We requested
public comments about the selection of
CY 2010 as the initial performance
period.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Many commenters
suggested that calendar year 2010
should not be selected as the
performance period. Some commenters
suggested that the QIP was created to
ensure that patient outcomes are not
negatively affected as an unintended
consequence of the new prospective
payment system for ESRD care, and for
that reason, they believe that the initial
performance period should be calendar
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year (CY) 2011, when the new
prospective payment system for ESRD
care is effective, rather than CY 2010.
Recognizing the time constraints that
CMS is under with respect to the use of
data from a performance period, one
commenter suggested that CMS select
the first half of 2011 as the performance
period and conduct data processing
during the final six months of 2011, if
this final rule is published in 2010.
Response: Although an important goal
of the ESRD QIP is to assess whether
patient outcomes are negatively affected
as a result of the new ESRD PPS, the
primary purpose of the QIP is to
incentivize providers/facilities to
continuously improve their performance
in the care of ESRD patients. In addition
to the reasons we gave for selecting CY
2010 as the performance period in the
proposed rule (42 FR 49218–19), we
believe that selecting CY 2010 as the
initial performance period will enable
us to do two things: (1) Determine the
first set of performance scores prior to
the change in the ESRD payment system
which, as indicated, may affect
provider/facility practice especially as it
relates to medication management,
laboratory testing and other patient
management practices that now come
under the bundled payment; and (2) use
this first set of performance scores to
evaluate whether the new ESRD PPS has
created positive or negative
consequences. We also believe that
using all of CY 2010 as the initial
performance period will provide us
with a more complete picture of
provider and facility performance than
we would get if we set a six month
performance period, which will enable
us to conduct a more robust evaluation
of provider/facility performance. We
also plan to implement a monitoring
program in 2011 for the purpose of
tracking the impact of the new ESRD
PPS and observing any changes to
access to and quality of care for
beneficiaries.
Comment: Other commenters stated
that using CY 2010 as the initial
performance period would not serve as
an incentive because dialysis providers
and facilities would be judged on
outcomes based on care provided to
patients before the performance
standards were established.
Commenters also observed that data
used for the QIP score will be over a
year old by the time providers/facilities
receive payments affected by that data.
Response: We agree that it is
important to use up-to-date quality data
for the ESRD QIP, which is why we are
working on the feasibility of using such
data in future years. Currently, claims
are the most complete data source for
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631
the selected measures, but we need a
sufficient time period to collect and
analyze the data before we can use it to
make payment determinations. For this
reason, we do not believe that we can
select a performance period more recent
than CY 2010 for the initial year of the
ESRD QIP. As other data sources or
accurate and reliable methodologies for
faster analysis of claims data become
available, we will seek to use those
resources to reduce the gap between the
performance period and payment
implementation.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to the proposed 2010
performance period, claiming that CMS
should have established the
performance standards (by issuing this
final rule) by the end of 2009 if it
wanted to set 2010 as the performance
period. Specifically, commenters
reference section 1881(h)(4)(C), which
requires the Secretary to ‘‘establish the
performance standards * * * prior to
the beginning of the performance period
for the year involved.’’
Response: We acknowledge that
section 1881(h)(4)(C) requires the
Secretary to establish performance
standards under subparagraph (A) prior
to the beginning of the performance
period for the year involved. However,
we are establishing the performance
standard that will affect ESRD payments
in CY 2012 in accordance with section
1881(h)(4)(E), which does not impose
the limitation suggested by the
commenters. As we have stated, we
believe that setting a CY 2010
performance period for the initial ESRD
QIP will ensure that the performance
scores are based on a robust set of data,
and will allow us sufficient time to
analyze that data, determine whether
provider/facilities met the performance
standards, implement the applicable
payment reductions for CY 2012, and
provide providers/facilities with an
opportunity to preview their
performance scores and submit related
inquiries. For these reasons, we are
finalizing calendar year 2010 as the
performance period for the 2012 ESRD
QIP.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
performance period as proposed.
C. Methodology for Calculating the
Total Performance Score for the ESRD
QIP Measures
Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(i) of the Act
requires the Secretary to develop a
methodology for assessing the total
performance of each provider and
facility based on the performance
standards with respect to the measures
selected for a performance period.
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Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act
states that the scoring methodology
must also include a process to weight
the performance scores with respect to
individual measures to reflect priorities
for quality improvement, such as
weighting scores to ensure that
providers/facilities have strong
incentives to meet or exceed anemia
management and dialysis adequacy
performance standards, as determined
appropriate by the Secretary. In
addition, section 1881(h)(3)(B) of the
Act requires the Secretary to calculate
separate performance scores for each
measure. Finally, under section
1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act, for those
providers and facilities that do not meet
(or exceed) the total performance score,
the Secretary is directed to ensure that
the application of the scoring
methodology results in an appropriate
distribution of payment reductions to
providers and facilities, with those
achieving the lowest total performance
scores receiving the largest reductions.
We proposed to calculate the total
performance of each provider and
facility with respect to the measures
adopted for the initial performance
period by assigning 10 points to each of
the three measures (75 FR 49219). If a
provider or facility meets or exceeds the
performance standard for one measure,
then it would receive 10 points for that
measure. We proposed to award points
on a 0 to 10 point scale, because this
scale is commonly used in a variety of
settings and is easily understood by
stakeholders. We also believe that the
scale provides sufficient variation to
show meaningful differences in
performance between providers/
facilities.
We proposed that a provider or
facility that does not meet or exceed the
initial performance standard for a
measure based on its CY 2010 data
would receive fewer than 10 points for
that measure, with the exact number of
points corresponding to how far below
the initial performance standard the
provider/facility’s actual performance
falls (75 FR 49219). Specifically, we
proposed to implement a scoring
methodology that subtracts two points
for every one percentage point the
provider/facility performance falls
below the initial performance standard.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
various examples of how this proposed
methodology would work (75 FR
49219).
TABLE 1—PROPOSED SCORING METHODOLOGY FOR ANEMIA MANAGEMENT MEASURES USING NATIONAL PERFORMANCE
RATES IN 2008 AS THE PERFORMANCE STANDARD FOR 2010 FACILITY-SPECIFIC COMPARISON
Anemia management measures
Percentage of Medicare patients whose average hemoglobin levels are less than
10 g/dL
Percentage of Medicare patients whose average hemoglobin levels are greater than
12 g/dL
POINTS
Percentage
Percentage
10 points
8 points
6 points
4 points
2 points
0 point
2 percent or less
3 percent
4 percent
5 percent
6 percent
7 percent or more
26 percent or less
27 percent
28 percent
29 percent
30 percent
31 percent or more
Note that the bolded rows show the performance standard for the applicable measure.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED SCORING METHODOLOGY FOR ANEMIA MANAGEMENT MEASURES USING FACILITY-SPECIFIC RATES
IN 2007 AS THE PERFORMANCE STANDARD AND 2010 FACILITY-SPECIFIC RATE FOR COMPARISON
Anemia management measures
Percentage of Medicare patients whose average hemoglobin levels are less than
10 g/dL
Percentage of Medicare patients whose average hemoglobin levels are greater than
12 g/dL
Percentage
Percentage
4 percent (Example of a 2007 facilityspecific score)
30 percent
(Example of a 2007 facility-specific score)
4 percent or less
5 percent
6 percent
7 percent
8 percent
9 percent or more
30 percent or less
31 percent
32 percent
33 percent
34 percent
35 percent or more
POINTS
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10 points
8 points
6 points
4 points
2 points
0 points
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in the End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System Proposed
Rule (CMS–1418–P)(74 FR 50010). We
requested public comment on our
proposal to apply the score reductions
in this manner, as opposed to a
methodology which takes into account
SON
the relative variations in performance
that exists for each measure.
Hemodialysis adequacy
We recognize that this straightforward
measure
approach may not be appropriate in
future years of the ESRD QIP as we
POINTS
Percentage of Medicare
patients whose average
adopt new measures for inclusion in the
URR levels are greater than program which may have a wider
or equal to 65 percent
variability in performance. Moreover,
we may need to reevaluate this
10 points
96 percent or more
approach depending on how providers
8 points
95 percent
and facilities perform in future years on
6 points
94 percent
the current measures. As we have
4 points
93 percent
2 points
92 percent
stated, we want to ensure the
0 points
91 percent or less
performance measures included in the
QIP will result in meaningful quality
TABLE 4—PROPOSED SCORING METH- improvement for patients at both the
national and individual facility/
ODOLOGY FOR HEMODIALYSIS ADE- provider level. Therefore, we requested
QUACY MEASURE USING FACILITY- comment on potential methodologies
SPECIFIC RATES IN 2007 AS THE that would take into account variations
STANDARD
AND in performance amongst all measures
PERFORMANCE
2010 FACILITY-SPECIFIC RATE FOR included in the QIP.
In calculating the total performance
COMPARISON
score, section 1881(h)(3)(A)(iii) of the
Act requires the agency to weight the
Hemodialysis adequacy
measure
performance scores with respect to
individual measures to reflect priorities
POINTS
Percentage of Medicare
patients whose URR levels for quality improvement. In developing
are greater than or equal to the conceptual model, we originally
65 percent
considered that the initial scoring
method would weight each of the three
92 Percent
proposed measures equally. After
(Example of a 2007 facility- further examination and based on
specific score)
public comments, we proposed to give
greater weight to the Hemoglobin Less
10 points
92 percent or more
Than 10g/dL measure. Low hemoglobin
8 points
91 percent
levels below 10g/dL can lead to serious
6 points
90 percent
adverse health outcomes for ESRD
4 points
89 percent
2 points
88 percent
patients such as increased
0 points
87 percent or less
hospitalizations, need for transfusions,
and mortality. Assigning greater weight
We noted that our proposed
to the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL
methodology—subtracting two points
measure ensures that providers/facilities
for every one percentage point the
are incentivized to continue to properly
provider or facility’s performance falls
manage and treat anemia. We believe
below the performance standard—does
that this is important in light of
not take into account the relative
concerns that have been raised that the
variability in performance associated
new bundled ESRD payment system
with each measure. Despite the
could improperly incentivize providers/
difference in variability in performance
facilities to under-treat patients with
among the measures, we proposed to
anemia by underutilizing ESAs.
apply the straightforward methodology
Specifically, we proposed to weight
we described in the proposed rule (75
the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL
FR 49219) in a consistent manner across measure as 50 percent of the total
all three measures. We stated that in
performance score (75 FR 49222). The
designing the scoring methodology for
remaining 50 percent of the total
the first year, we wanted to adopt a
performance score would be divided
clear-cut approach (subtracting two
equally between the Hemoglobin
points for each percentage point
Greater Than 12g/dL measure (25
providers and facilities fell below the
percent) and the Hemodialysis
performance standard) consistent with
Adequacy Measure (25 percent) (75 FR
the conceptual model that we discussed 49222). When calculating the total
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TABLE 3—PROPOSED SCORING METHODOLOGY FOR HEMODIALYSIS ADEQUACY MEASURE USING NATIONAL
PERFORMANCE RATES IN 2008 AS
THE PERFORMANCE STANDARD FOR
2010 FACILITY-SPECIFIC COMPARI-
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633
performance score for a provider/
facility, we would first multiply the
score achieved by that provider/facility
on each measure (0–10 points) by that
measure’s assigned weight (either .50 or
.25). Then we would add each of the
three numbers together, resulting in a
number (although not necessarily an
integer) between 0–10. Lastly, this
number would be multiplied by the
number of measures (three) and
rounded to the nearest integer (if
necessary). In rounding, any fractional
portion 0.5 or greater would be rounded
up to the next integer, while fractional
portions less than 0.5 are rounded
down. Thus, a score of 27.4 would
round to 27, while 27.6 would round to
28.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
our rationale and provided examples of
how the proposed scoring methodology
would work for calculating the total
performance score (75 FR 49222). As
discussed in the proposed rule (75 FR
49219), we believe this proposed total
performance score methodology is
appropriate for the initial performance
period in the new ESRD QIP, but
recognize that it will be important to
monitor the impact and potentially
reevaluate this methodology as provider
and facility performance changes, and
as new measures are added in future
years of the ESRD QIP. We requested
public comment on the proposed
scoring methodology for the ESRD QIP.
We also solicited comment on potential
weighting methodologies that could be
incorporated into the QIP in future years
as new measures are introduced.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Many commenters
supported our proposal to weight the
three measures. A few commenters
recommended that CMS re-evaluate the
weights assigned to each performance
measure. Several commenters suggested
that the weight of the anemia
management measure (Hemoglobin Less
Than 10g/dL) was too high. Another
commenter recommended a weighting
schema of 35 percent (Low
Hemoglobin), 30 percent (High
Hemoglobin) and 35 percent (Dialysis
Adequacy), while another suggested a
weighting schema of 40 percent (Low
Hemoglobin), 20 percent (High
Hemoglobin) and 40 percent (Dialysis
Adequacy), to highlight the significant
impact inadequate dialysis can have on
patient morbidity and mortality. Some
commenters that supported the
proposed weighting methodology for the
initial year also asked CMS to revisit the
issue in subsequent years, especially if
additional measures are adopted for the
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QIP or our quality improvement
priorities change.
Response: The purpose of giving
greater weight to the Hemoglobin Less
Than 10g/dL Measure was twofold: (1)
To provide a disincentive to providers/
facilities to under-treat patients for
anemia, particularly in light of the
implementation of the new ESRD PPS;
and (2) to reflect the clinical importance
of this measure. Low hemoglobin levels
that are not appropriately managed can
lead to increased morbidity and
mortality. In terms of giving greater
weight to the Hemodialysis Adequacy
(URR) Measure, we agree that
inadequate dialysis contributes to what
should otherwise be avoidable negative
patient outcomes. As we have noted
earlier in this final rule, we eventually
intend to propose to replace the
Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure with
Kt/V, which is a more precise measure
of dialysis adequacy. Further, unlike
URR values, which are only reported for
patients above the age of 18 years
receiving in-center hemodialysis, Kt/V
values can be reported for all ESRD
beneficiaries. If we propose to replace
the Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure
with a measure that uses Kt/V values,
we will re-evaluate our weighting
methodology in light of the change. We
also note that as the QIP evolves and as
new measures are adopted in the
program, we will reexamine the overall
weighting methodology to ensure that it
aligns with our quality improvement
priorities. However, for the reasons
discussed above, we believe that the
proposed weighting methodology
reflects our current quality goals.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS adopt a scoring system that
will not unduly penalize providers/
facilities for small deviations from the
QIP performance standards.
Response: Based on our evaluation of
historical data, we believe that the
initial performance standards are
achievable by most providers/facilities.
We also considered whether providers/
facilities would be unduly penalized for
small deviations from the ESRD
performance standards and used
historical data to model various
outcomes that could occur under the
proposed scoring methodology. We
concluded that because provider/facility
performance will be initially evaluated
based on the lower of the 2008 national
performance rates or provider/facility
specific performance in 2007, the
proposed scoring methodology allows
for flexibility in meeting ESRD QIP
standards and will not result in undue
penalties for providers/facilities. We
appreciate the commenter’s concern that
providers/facilities not be unduly
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penalized; however, we believe that the
methodology carefully balances this
concern with the need to adequately
incentivize meaningful quality
improvement. After consideration of the
comments, we are finalizing the scoring
methodology as proposed.
D. Payment Reductions Using the Total
Performance Score
Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary to ensure that the
application of the scoring methodology
results in an appropriate distribution of
reductions in payments among
providers and facilities achieving
different levels of total performance
scores; with providers and facilities
achieving the lowest total performance
scores receiving the largest reductions.
We proposed to implement a sliding
scale of payment reductions for
payment consequence year 2012, where
the minimum total performance score
that providers/facilities would need to
achieve in order to avoid a payment
reduction would be a score of 26 out of
30 points (75 FR 49224). Providers/
facilities that score between 21–25
points would receive a 0.5 percent
payment reduction; between 16–20
points a one percent payment reduction;
between 11–15 points a 1.5 percent
payment reduction; and between 0–10
points a two percent payment reduction
(75 FR 49224).
In developing the proposed payment
reduction scale, we carefully considered
the size of the incentive to providers/
facilities to provide high quality care
and the range of total performance
scores to which the payment reduction
applies, recognizing that this would be
the first year of a new program. Our goal
is to avoid situations where small
deficiencies in a provider/facility’s
performance results in a large payment
reduction. We noted that we want to
avoid imposing a large payment
reduction on providers/facilities whose
performance on one or more measures
falls just slightly below the performance
standard (75 FR 49224). At the same
time, poorly performing providers/
facilities should receive a more
significant payment reduction. Our
analysis suggests that using payment
differentials of 0.5 percent for the total
performance score ranges distinguishes
between providers/facilities with fair to
good performance and providers/
facilities with poor performance. We
will consider other differentials between
payment levels for future years of the
QIP, which we believe will further
differentiate providers/facilities based
on their performance. Additionally,
section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act requires
that the Secretary implement payment
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reductions of up to two percent, and
section 1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) requires that
the application of the total performance
score methodology result in an
appropriate distribution of reductions in
payment among providers/facilities.
Consistent with these requirements, we
believe that Medicare beneficiaries will
be best served if the full two percent
payment reduction is initially applied
only to those providers/facilities whose
performance falls well below the
performance standards. We believe that
applying a payment reduction of two
percent to providers/facilities whose
performance falls significantly below
the performance standards, coupled
with applying 0.5 payment differential
reductions to providers/facilities based
on lesser degrees of performance
deficiencies, will incentivize all
providers/facilities to improve the
quality of their care in order to avoid or
reduce the size of a payment reduction.
We requested public comments about
how the proposed payment reduction
scale would incentivize providers/
facilities to meet or exceed the
performance standards for the first year
of the QIP, and whether it is an
appropriate standard to use in future
years.
In general, ESRD facilities are paid
monthly by Medicare for the ESRD
services they furnish to a beneficiary
even though payment is on a pertreatment basis. In finalizing the new
bundled payment system starting on
January 1, 2011, we elected to continue
the practice of paying ESRD facilities
monthly for services furnished to a
beneficiary
We proposed to apply any payment
reduction under the QIP for payment
consequence year 2012 to the monthly
payment amount received by ESRD
facilities and providers. The payment
reduction would be applied after any
other applicable adjustments to an
ESRD facility’s payment were made,
including case-mix, wage index, outlier,
etc. (This includes providers/facilities
being paid a blended amount under the
transition and those that had elected to
be excluded from the transition and
receive its payment amount based
entirely on the payment amount under
the ESRD PPS.)
Section 1833 of the Act governs
payments of benefits for Part B services
and the cost-sharing amounts for
services that are considered medical and
other health services. In general, many
Part B services are subject to a payment
structure that requires beneficiaries to
be responsible for a 20 percent coinsurance after the deductible (while
Medicare pays 80 percent). With respect
to dialysis services furnished by ESRD
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facilities, under section 1881(b)(2)(a) of
the Act, payment amounts are 80
percent (and 20 percent by the
individual).
Under the proposed approach for
implementing the QIP payment
reductions, the beneficiary co-insurance
amount would be 20 percent of the total
Medicare ESRD payment, after any
payment reductions are applied. To the
extent a payment reduction applies, we
note that the beneficiary’s co-insurance
amount would be calculated after
applying the proposed payment
reduction and would thus lower the coinsurance amount.
We proposed to incorporate the
statutory requirements of the QIP
payment reduction set forth in proposed
§ 413.177.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS set the
maximum first-year penalty (that is,
payment reduction) in the QIP at one
percent. The commenters characterized
section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act as
saying that ‘‘[p]ayment consequences of
QIP should be up to two percent,’’ and
believe that the Secretary has some
latitude in setting the maximum
payment reduction as an amount lower
than two percent. Commenters noted
that some provider/facilities have a
case-mix (for example, nursing home
patients, patients with complex
conditions) that may make meeting the
performance standards difficult. One of
the commenters suggested that the
lower penalty be used in the first year
to allow for establishment of standards.
A few commenters further suggested
that payment reductions be
implemented in increments of one
quarter percent to support a one percent
maximum reduction.
Response: We understand the
importance of implementing the ESRD
QIP in a manner that does not unfairly
penalize providers/facilities, and we
believe that the performance standards
we are initially setting will be
achievable by the majority of providers/
facilities. However, we also believe that
a full 2 percent payment reduction is
appropriate for the lowest performers
and that it will incentivize them to
improve the quality of care they furnish
to ESRD beneficiaries. We acknowledge
the commenters’ concern that some
providers/facilities face increased
challenges due to the population they
serve (for example, nursing home
patients, higher number of patients with
complex conditions). Below, we discuss
the monitoring plan we intend to
implement for the ESRD QIP to monitor,
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in part, the distribution of measure
outcomes that show a possible pattern
of concern.
Comment: Many commenters
suggested that any funds withheld from
provider/facility payments be used as
additional incentive payments to other
providers/facilities. Several commenters
expressed strong concern that the
quality incentive program would
function only as a disincentive program
and should not be used as a mechanism
to achieve financial savings in the
system. Specifically, some commenters
requested any funds withheld from
providers/facilities that failed to meet
the national performance standards
should be redistributed to providers/
facilities that exceeded the national
performance standards.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns; however, we
interpret section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the
Act to require the Secretary to make
payment reductions of up to 2 percent
with respect to payments that would
otherwise be made to providers/
facilities if those providers/facilities do
not meet the requirements of the ESRD
QIP. The statute that establishes the QIP
does not provide authority to issue
bonus payments for performance above
the standards selected for the QIP.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS apply the
maximum penalty of a two percent
payment reduction to any provider/
facility whose performance on the
Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL Measure
falls six percent or more below the
performance standard.
Response: We agree with the
commenter about the higher relative
importance of the Hemoglobin Less
Than 10g/dL Measure and for that
reason, we proposed to weight that
measure more heavily in calculating the
total performance score. However, we
also believe that the maximum penalty
should initially be applied only to those
providers/facilities whose performance
falls well below the performance
standards for all three measures. We
believe that instituting an automatic
payment reduction along the lines
suggested by the commenter would
dilute the importance of the other
measures. A score-based system
provides an incentive for providers/
facilities to track their progression over
time while not neglecting outcomes on
other measures. We would not want to
apply such a reduction to provider/
facilities that had achieved high scores
on the other two measures, thereby
removing any incentive for them to
perform well on those measures in the
future.
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635
Comment: One commenter suggested
that a two percent payment reduction is
not a large enough deduction to ensure
the quality and safety of dialysis
patients.
Response: Section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the
Act does not permit the Secretary to
make payment reductions greater than
two percent for ESRD providers/
facilities. In determining the potential
impact on facilities of all sizes, it was
important to identify a maximum
percentage level of payment reduction
that provides an incentive, yet is not
overly burdensome.
Comment: A few comments discussed
the impact of lower beneficiary coinsurance amounts as a result of a
payment reduction. One commenter
expressed concern that higher coinsurance costs at high-performing
ESRD facilities might serve as a
disincentive for patients and that lower
income patients may not be able to pay
higher out-of-pocket costs, reducing
patients’ access to quality care. Another
commenter agreed with CMS’ proposal
to calculate beneficiary co-insurance
after applicable quality payment
reductions are made, arguing that
beneficiaries should not have to pay
higher co-insurance for care delivered
by facilities that perform below quality
standards.
Response: Under section
1881(h)(1)(A), the Secretary is required
to make reductions to the ‘‘payments
otherwise made’’ to a provider/facility
that furnishes ESRD services to an
individual with ESRD. We interpret the
phrase ‘‘payments otherwise made’’ to be
the payments for ESRD services that
would otherwise be made after applying
all applicable adjustments, such as casemix, wage index, and outlier. We note
that there will be no increase in
beneficiary co-insurance and that any
changes to beneficiary co-insurance
resulting from the QIP will likely be
minimal. As such, we do not believe
that resulting changes in co-insurance
amounts will significantly affect
beneficiary selection of providers/
facilities.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed methodology for
implementing the QIP payment
reductions as proposed. We are also
finalizing our proposed addition of 42
CFR 413.77, which states that ESRD
facilities that do not meet the
requirements of the ESRD QIP will be
subject to up to a 2 percent reduction in
their payments otherwise made under
section 1814(b)(14) of the Act.
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E. Public Reporting Requirements
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1. Introduction
Section 1881(h)(6)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
procedures for making information
regarding performance under the ESRD
QIP available to the public, including
information on the total performance
score (as well as appropriate
comparisons of providers and facilities
to the national average with respect to
such scores) and performance scores for
individual measures achieved by each
provider and facility. Section
1881(h)(6)(B) further requires that a
provider or facility has an opportunity
to review the information to be made
public with respect to it prior to its
publication.
In addition, section 1881(h)(6)(C) of
the Act requires the Secretary to provide
each provider and facility with a
certificate containing its total
performance score to post in patient
areas within their facility. Finally,
section 1881(h)(6)(D) of the Act requires
the Secretary to post a list of providers/
facilities and performance-score data on
a CMS-maintained Web site.
2. Notifying Providers/Facilities of Their
QIP Scores
Section 1881(h)(6)(B) of the Act
requires CMS to establish procedures
that include giving providers/facilities
an opportunity to review the
information that is to be made public
with respect to the provider or facility
prior to such data being made public.
CMS currently uses a secure, Webbased tool to share confidential, facilityspecific, quality data with providers,
facilities, and select others. Specifically,
we provide annual Dialysis Facility
Reports (DFRs) to dialysis providers/
facilities, ESRD Network Organizations,
and State Survey Agencies. The DFRs
provide valuable facility-specific and
comparative information on patient
characteristics, treatment patterns,
hospitalizations, mortality, and
transplantation patterns. In addition, the
DFRs contain actionable practice
patterns such as dose of dialysis,
vascular access, and anemia
management. We expect providers and
facilities to use the data included in the
DFRs as part of their ongoing clinical
quality improvement projects.
The information contained in the
DFRs is sensitive and, as such, most of
that information is made available
through a secure Web site accessible
only by that provider/facility and its
ESRD Network Organization, State
Survey Agency, and the applicable CMS
Regional Office. However, select
measures based on DFR data are made
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available to the public through the
Dialysis Facility Compare (DFC) Web
site, which allows Medicare
beneficiaries and others to publically
review and compare characteristics and
quality information on dialysis
providers and facilities in the United
States. To allow dialysis providers/
facilities a chance to ‘‘preview’’ these
data before they are released publicly,
we supply draft DFRs to providers/
facilities in advance of every annual
DFC update. Dialysis providers and
facilities are generally given 30 days to
review their facility-specific data and
submit comments if the provider/facility
has any questions or concerns regarding
the report. A provider/facility’s
comment is evaluated and researched. If
a provider/facility makes us aware of an
error in any DFR information, a
recalculation of the quality
measurement results for that provider/
facility is conducted, and the revised
results are displayed on the DFC Web
site.
We proposed to use the abovedescribed procedures, including the
DFR framework, to allow dialysis
providers/facilities to preview their
quality data under the QIP before a
payment reduction is applied and that
data is reported publicly. Specifically,
the quality data available for preview
through the Web system will include a
provider/facility’s performance score
(both in total and by individual quality
measure) as well as a comparison of
how well the provider/facility’s
performance scores compare to national
averages for total performance and
individual quality measure performance
(75 FR 49225). We believe that adapting
these existing procedures for purposes
of the ESRD QIP will create minimum
expense and burden for providers/
facilities because they will not need to
familiarize themselves with a new
system or process for obtaining and
commenting upon their preview reports.
We also note that under these
procedures, dialysis providers and
facilities would have an opportunity to
submit performance score inquiries and
to ask questions of CMS data experts
about how their performance scores
were calculated on a facility-level basis.
This performance score inquiry process
would also give providers/facilities the
opportunity to submit inquiries,
including what they believe to be errors
in their performance score calculations,
prior to the public release of the
performance scores. Every provider/
facility that submits an inquiry will
receive a response.
While we believe that the DFR
process is the most logical solution for
meeting the data preview requirements
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at this time, we may decide to revise
this approach in the future. Should we
decide to make changes, or should we
find a more administratively feasible or
cost-effective solution, we proposed to
use sub-regulatory processes to revise
our approach for administering the QIP
performance score preview process in a
way that maintains our compliance with
section 1881(h)(6)(B) of the Act. We also
proposed to use sub-regulatory
processes to determine issues such as
the length of the preview period and the
process we will use to address inquiries
received from dialysis providers/
facilities during the preview period.
We requested public comments on
our proposal to use the DFR process and
suggestions for other options that will
allow dialysis providers/facilities to
preview the information that is to be
made public with respect to the
provider or facility in advance of such
information being made public.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Although one commenter
agreed with our proposal to use the
existing DFR process to allow providers/
facilities to preview their QIP data and
make performance score inquiries, it
suggested that CMS extend the review
period from 30 days to 60 days.
Response: We believe the 30-day
preview period is an adequate
timeframe for providers/facilities to
review their performance information
and submit questions regarding their
performance scores. Because the initial
measures have been collected by ESRD
providers/facilities since 2001, we
believe that providers/facilities should
be familiar with how they are
calculated. We have also worked to
make the calculation of the measures
and the scoring methodology as
transparent as possible to facilitate
review by providers/facilities.
Comment: Another commenter
recommended that there be a method to
allow providers/facilities to post
comments related to their scores.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion and will explore the
possibility of allowing providers/
facilities to post comments related to
their scores on an appropriate venue (for
example, a secure Web site).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that there be a formal appeals process so
that providers may appeal a payment
determination if they believe it was
made in error.
Response: As part of the preview
process we discuss above, providers/
facilities may submit inquiries related to
what they believe to be one or more
errors in their performance score
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calculations, and we will respond to
those inquiries. We note, however, that
under section 1881(h)(5)(A), there is ‘‘no
administrative or judicial review under
section 1869, section 1878, or otherwise
of * * * the determination of the
amount of the payment reduction under
paragraph (1).’’
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed methodology for notifying
providers/facilities of their QIP Scores
as proposed.
3. Informing the Public Through
Facility-Posted Certificates
Section 1881(h)(6)(C) of the Act
requires the Secretary to provide
certificates to dialysis providers and
facilities about their total performance
scores under the QIP. This section also
requires each provider/facility that
receives a QIP certificate to display it
prominently in patient areas.
We proposed to meet this requirement
by providing providers and facilities
with an electronic file in a generally
accessible format (for example,
Microsoft Word and/or Adobe Acrobat).
We proposed to disseminate these
certificates to providers and facilities
once per year after the preview period
for the QIP performance scores has been
completed. We would use a secure,
Web-based system, similar to the system
used to allow facilities to preview their
QIP performance scores, to disseminate
certificates. The secure Web-based
system would allow CMS to transmit
performance score certificates to
providers/facilities in a secure manner.
We stated that we would make every
effort to synchronize the release of the
certificates for provider/facility display
with the release of performance score
information on the Internet.
Under our proposal, each provider/
facility would be required to display the
certificate no later than 5 business days
after CMS sends it. We stated that we
expect that dialysis providers/facilities
would have the capability to download
and print their certificates from the
secure Web site. We proposed that
providers/facilities would be prohibited
from altering the content of the
certificates and that they must print the
certificates on plain, blank, white or
light-colored paper, no smaller than 81⁄2
inches by 11 inches (a standard-sized
document). In addition, providers/
facilities may not reduce or otherwise
change the font size on the certificate.
We proposed that each provider/
facility must post at least one copy of
the certificate prominently in a patient
area of the dialysis provider/facility.
Specifically, we proposed that
providers/facilities must post the
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certificate in a conspicuous place where
they post other patient-directed
materials so that it is in plain view for
all patients (or their parents/guardians
or representatives) to inspect. We stated
that we would update the certificates
annually with new performance
information, and that providers/
facilities would be required to post the
updated certificate within 5 business
days of the day that we transmit it. We
stated that we expect that providers/
facilities will take steps to prevent
certificates from being altered, defaced,
stolen, marred, or covered by other
material. In the event that a certificate
is stolen or destroyed while it is posted,
providers/facilities would be
responsible for replacing the stolen or
destroyed certificate with a fresh copy
by re-printing the certificate file they
have received from CMS. The provider/
facility would also be responsible for
answering patient questions about the
certificate in an understandable manner,
taking into account that some patients
might have limited English proficiency.
We proposed to include on the
certificate of each provider/facility all of
the information that we are also making
available to the public under sections
1881(h)(6)(A) and 1881(h)(6)(D) with
respect to the provider/facility. These
data elements include:
• The total performance score
achieved by the provider/facility under
the QIP with respect to the year
involved;
• Comparative data that shows how
well the provider/facility’s total
performance score compares to the
national total performance rate;
• The performance score that the
provider/facility achieved on each
individual measure with respect to the
year involved; and
• Comparative data that shows how
well the provider/facility’s individual
quality measure performance scores
compare to the national performance
rate for each quality measure. (75 FR
49226).
We considered several options for
making the QIP performance score data
available via certificate. Regarding the
content of the certificates, we
considered including not just
information for the ESRD QIP-related
quality measures, but additional quality
measure information that CMS has at its
disposal from the DFC Web site that is
not related to the QIP, such as riskadjusted survival information.
Ultimately, we determined that an
electronic method of disseminating
certificates was the easiest way for CMS
to deliver certificates directly to
providers/facilities because it is the
least burdensome and most cost
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effective way of providing the
certificates. We also determined that the
information posted on the certificates
should be restricted only to QIP
information. We believe that limiting
the information on the certificate to QIPspecific data will make the certificate
easier for Medicare beneficiaries to read
and understand.
We requested public comments on
how to make the information contained
on the certificate as user friendly and
easy to understand as possible, and how
to make the information available to
Medicare beneficiaries who may be
unable to read the certificates due to a
physical disability or because of limited
or no reading proficiency in the English
language. We stated that we were
particularly interested in comments on
how we can educate Medicare
beneficiaries and their families about
the presence of certificates in dialysis
providers/facilities and how the
information can be used to engage in
meaningful conversations with their
dialysis caregivers and the clinical
community about the quality of
America’s kidney dialysis care.
Furthermore, we requested public
comments on the proposal to use the
DFR distribution process to provide the
certificates to providers/facilities under
section 1881(h)(6)(C) of the Act.
Specifically, we requested comments on
the feasibility and advisability of using
the DFR system to provide the
certificates to providers/facilities in a
generally available format such as
Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: A few commenters offered
recommendations about how to help
patients interpret the certificates
(including considerations for
beneficiaries with limited English
proficiency and low health literacy and/
or numeracy) as well as provider/facility
survey reports. One of the commenters
recommended that the State survey
reports and any complaint
investigations by CMS or the ESRD
Networks be posted in dialysis facilities
along with the QIP certificates. Another
commenter suggested that the
certificates account for various levels of
reading ability as well as cultural and
language diversity. In addition, another
commenter viewed the posting of the
certificate as an opportunity to educate
ESRD patients on quality and
recommended including data on
beneficiary-specific results (for example,
hospitalizations, infections, UFR (UltraFiltration Rate) (ml/kg/hr), measures of
bone health, Kt/V, and hemoglobin) in
the context of the provider/facility’s
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results (and in the context of state,
Network area, national results), as well
as CMS guidance on how to use the
information. The commenter also
offered that of the three finalized
measures, only the Hemoglobin Less
Than 10g/dL should be displayed.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on how to make the QIP
certificates useful and easy to
understand for beneficiaries and other
dialysis facility visitors. We will
consider the suggestions from the
commenters as we craft the certificates’
visual display and language. Whenever
possible, we will share draft designs
with the public and seek a broad range
of stakeholder input. We will consider
including additional information on the
certificates in future years. Also, we
plan to include on the 2012 certificates
quality data related to all three measures
that we use to calculate the provider/
facility’s total performance score
because we believe that this information
is critical to inform beneficiaries and the
public about the quality of care that the
facility/provider is delivering, and that
Medicare beneficiaries deserve. We
believe that including on the certificates
information related to all three
measures, rather than just the
Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL Measure,
will provide a better picture of ESRD
provider/facility care. Lastly, it is
important to note that we have proposed
to make enhancements to the DFC Web
site so that it includes the same
information that appears on the
certificates, which we believe will
provide more robust and meaningful
information to beneficiaries. With
access to more useful information, we
hope that this will encourage more
effective communication between
patients and their providers.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that performance scores
be eliminated from the public
certificate. The commenter stated that,
‘‘without appropriate individualized
counseling as to the ‘scores,’ the
document may lead to more confusion
than what its intent originally was
meant to accomplish.’’ One of the
commenters also noted that wherever
CMS reports quality, consistency in its
reporting is the most important decision
CMS can make in public reporting. The
commenter stated that patients need to
be able to see the same quality
information on the certificates that they
see on the DFC Web site.
Response: Although we understand
the commenter’s concern, section
1881(h)(5)(C) of the Act requires that
each certificate indicate the total
performance score achieved by the
provider/facility. We appreciate the
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commenter’s concern that the
information be put into context for the
reader. As previously mentioned, we are
working to design the certificate so that
it is a useful tool for beneficiaries. We
are also working on a strategy for
educating ESRD beneficiaries and their
caregivers about what the certificates
say and their implications for the
quality of care ESRD beneficiaries can
expect to receive from their provider/
facility. We also will assure that
information on the certificates matches
what is contained on the DFC Web site.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed methodology for informing the
public through facility-posted
certificates as proposed.
4. Informing the Public Through a
Medicare Web Site
Section 1881(h)(6)(D) of the Act
requires the Secretary to use a CMSmaintained Web site for the purpose of
establishing a list of dialysis providers/
facilities that furnish renal dialysis
services to Medicare beneficiaries and
indicates the total performance score
and the performance score for
individual measures achieved by the
provider or facility.
We currently use the DFC Web site (a
CMS-maintained Web site) to publish
information about the availability of
dialysis providers/facilities across the
United States, as well as data about how
well each of these providers/facilities
has performed on existing dialysisrelated quality of care measures. DFC is
part of a larger suite of ‘‘Compare’’ tools,
all of which are available online at
https://www.medicare.gov. In addition to
DFC, the suite of Compare sites include
Nursing Home Compare, Home Health
Compare, and Hospital Compare, as
well as tools that allow users to compare
prescription drug plans, health plans,
and Medigap policies.
DFC links Medicare beneficiaries with
detailed information about each of the
over 5400 dialysis providers/facilities
certified to participate in Medicare, and
allows them to compare providers/
facilities in a geographic region. Users
can review information about the size of
the provider/facility, the types of
dialysis offered, the provider/facility’s
ownership, and whether the provider/
facility offers evening treatment shifts.
Beneficiaries can also compare dialysis
providers/facilities based on three key
quality measures—how well patients at
a provider/facility have their anemia
managed, and how well patients at a
provider/facility have waste removed
from their blood during dialysis, and
whether the patients treated at a
provider/facility generally live as long
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as expected. DFC aims to help
beneficiaries decide which dialysis
provider/facility would best serve their
care needs, as well as to encourage
conversations among beneficiaries and
their caregivers about the quality of care
at dialysis providers/facilities, thus
providing an additional incentive for
dialysis providers/facilities to improve
the quality of care they furnish. Lastly,
DFC links beneficiaries to resources that
support family members, as well as
beneficiary advocacy groups.
We proposed to use DFC as the
mechanism for meeting the Web-based
public information requirement under
section 1881(h)(6)(D) of the Act. We
noted that the DFC is a consumerfocused tool, and the implementation of
the QIP will not change this focus. We
recognize that sharing information with
the public about the QIP is not only a
statutory requirement, it is also a
function of open and transparent
government. Ultimately, the intent of
DFC is to provide beneficiaries with the
information they need to be able to
make proper care choices.
We believe that DFC already provides
accurate and trusted information about
the characteristics of all Medicare
certified dialysis providers/facilities, as
well as information about the quality of
care furnished by these providers/
facilities. Furthermore, CMS already has
the information technology
infrastructure in place to support DFC
and its public reporting functions;
therefore, adding new QIP-related data
to the DFC Web site would not create
additional significant expenditures or
overly burden agency resources.
We proposed to update the DFC Web
site once per year at a minimum with
the following data elements for every
provider/facility listed on DFC (that is,
every Medicare-approved provider/
facility):
• The total performance score
achieved by each provider/facility
under the QIP with respect to the year
involved;
• Comparative data that shows how
well the provider/facility’s total
performance score compares to the
national total performance rate;
• Scores for each of the individual
measures that comprise the overall QIP
performance score for the provider/
facility with respect to the year
involved; and
• Comparative data that shows how
well the provider/facility’s individual
quality measure performance scores
compare to the national performance
rate for each quality measure.
We note that this is the same
information we proposed to include on
the certificates that we will provide to
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providers/facilities. We also note that
for the 2012 payment year, we do not
propose to include comparative
information on DFC about how the
provider’s or the facility’s performance
has changed from year to year, since the
2012 total performance score calculation
does not provide any differential scoring
for improvement versus achievement.
However, we will consider including
this data on DFC in future program
years.
We requested public comments about
whether the total performance score and
the individual measure performance
scores should be integrated into the
design of the DFC tool itself or whether
we should alternatively implement
section 1881(h)(6)(D) by making a file
available to the public on the CMS Web
site (at https://www.cms.gov). We are
sensitive to the need to balance our
interest in making QIP performance
score information public with our need
to provide beneficiaries with easy-tounderstand, non-technical information
about providers/facilities that they can
use to make decisions about where to
receive dialysis care.
We also requested public comment on
the advisability of using DFC as our
mechanism for making QIP information
available over the Internet. We also
requested comment on the presentation
of QIP information on the Web site and
the breadth of detail that we should
make publicly available regarding QIP
performance scores. Lastly, we
requested comment on how DFC could
be redesigned to make QIP information
useful to Medicare beneficiaries as they
compare the quality of care available at
the nation’s Medicare-approved dialysis
providers/facilities.
The comments we received on this
proposal and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that the total
performance score and the individual
measure performance scores be
integrated into the design of the DFC
Web site.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion and are currently reviewing
strategies for increasing the usefulness
of DFC, especially for reporting
information from the ESRD QIP. CMS is
committed to providing beneficiaries
and ESRD stakeholders with
information that is accessible and
useful.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
proposed methodology for informing the
public through a Medicare Web site as
proposed.
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F. Applicability of the QIP
We received a number of comments
asking if certain types of providers/
facilities would be excluded from the
first year of the QIP. These comments
and our responses are set forth below.
Comment: Several commenters noted
their concern that for providers/
facilities that treat small numbers of
patients, one or a few patients that
achieve poor outcomes could
dramatically affect the provider/
facility’s overall performance score. One
of the commenters also recommended
that CMS develop a statistically valid
methodology for evaluating the
performance of small dialysis providers/
facilities.
Response: We agree with the
commenter’s concern regarding the
potential impact on small providers/
facilities, recognizing that one or two
poor patient outcomes could greatly
skew their performance scores for
reasons unrelated to the quality of care
they have furnished. Therefore, as we
proposed, we are using for purposes of
the CY 2012 QIP the specifications for
the three finalized measures that are
also used for DFC, each of which
requires that a provider/facility have a
minimum of 11 cases that meet the
reporting criteria for the measure in
order for us to calculate it. We believe
that this minimum case threshold will
help prevent the possibility that a small
number of poor outcomes artificially,
and for reasons unrelated to the quality
of care, skews a small provider/facility’s
performance score. Also, eleven cases is
a statistically valid threshold that will
give us confidence that a provider/
facility’s total performance score is an
accurate reflection of the quality of care
it furnishes. As a result, this threshold
will help preserve beneficiary access to
care at much needed small providers/
facilities in rural and/or under-served
areas. We will also be closely
monitoring to determine if the
implementation of the QIP has any
adverse impact on beneficiary access to
care, including by looking at the rate of
facility closures, and particularly small
facility closures. We will also continue
to examine how to best treat small
providers/facilities and intend to
address this issue in future years of the
ESRD QIP.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that CMS exclude from the
QIP provider/facilities that treat nursing
home patients because the complex
nature of the health problems faced by
these patients will make it difficult for
these facilities to achieve the
performance standards.
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Response: We understand that certain
patients present a challenge in terms of
their clinical management due to comorbidities and other factors that add to
the complexity of care. However, we do
not believe that providers/facilities that
treat patients with complex health
problems should be subject to a
different standard than other providers/
facilities.
Comment: One commenter asked if
the ESRD QIP would affect home health
agencies that provide dialysis supplies
and medicine.
Response: We believe that the
commenter’s question is in reference to
the provision of dialysis supplies and
medicine under Method II. Effective
January 1, 2011 Method II home dialysis
will be eliminated. Medicare will no
longer make payments directly to
DMEPOS suppliers of home dialysis
equipment and supplies. All Medicare
payments for home dialysis services
(including equipment and supplies) will
be made to the dialysis provider/facility
(75 FR 49056). Thus, the concern raised
by the commenter will be moot by the
time the QIP incentive payments are
made.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned how home dialysis providers
will be evaluated under the QIP.
Specifically, they asked how the
absence of a relevant hemodialysis
adequacy measure would affect the
calculation of their total performance
score and potential payment reductions.
Response: The commenters are correct
that home hemodialysis patients (as
well as peritoneal dialysis patients and
pediatric patients) are excluded from
the patient population for purposes of
calculating the hemodialysis adequacy
measure (URR) for payment
consequence year 2012. As such, a very
small provider/facility may not have a
sufficient number of in-center dialysis
patients to receive a score on the
hemodialysis adequacy measure (URR),
but could have enough patient data to
be scored on the anemia management
measures. For these providers/facilities
that do not have enough data to assign
a score on all three measures, we will
not assign a total performance score for
the CY 2012 ESRD QIP and will also not
reduce their payment. As stated
previously, we believe that requiring a
minimum number of cases that meets
the measure reporting criteria for the
three finalized measures will help
prevent the possibility that a small
provider/facility’s performance score
could be greatly skewed for reasons
unrelated to the quality of care it
furnishes. We are also concerned about
the impact of the QIP on small facilities,
and particularly how that impact may
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affect beneficiary access to these much
needed facilities in rural or underserved areas. For these reasons, we will
be closely monitoring to determine if
the ESRD QIP has any adverse impact
on beneficiary access to care, especially
at small providers/facilities. We intend
to examine alternative methodologies to
address this situation for future years of
the ESRD QIP.
Comment: Several commenters asked
how new providers/facilities would be
treated under the QIP. Some
commenters asked what performance
standards they would have to meet
while others recommended that new
providers/facilities, or those not in
operation for 12 months, or those not in
operation for 24 months, be exempt
from any potential payment reductions.
Response: Under the special rule in
section 1881(h)(4)(E), we will be setting
the initial performance standard as the
lesser of the provider’s/facility’s
performance during 2007 or the 2008
national performance rates. If a
provider/facility was not in existence in
2007, we will assign a score of zero for
purposes of assessing which of the two
standards applies to the provider/
facility. The provider/facility’s
performance in 2010 will then be
compared against that initial
performance standard.
G. Additional Comments
Additional comments and our
responses are set forth below.
Comment: One commenter asked that
CMS utilize formal rulemaking
procedures for future changes to the
QIP, including changes to the measures,
weighting, and scoring methodologies.
Response: We interpret the comment
to be asking about the notice and
comment rulemaking process (informal
rulemaking versus where an agency is
required by law to make a decision on
the record after the opportunity for an
agency hearing). We agree that the
informal rulemaking process is the best
approach for making changes to the
ESRD QIP in the future and will use that
approach whenever possible. We note
that procedural guidance that does not
impact measures, weighting, or scoring
methodologies may be issued separate
from the rulemaking process. We also
note that section 1881(h) of the Act does
not require us to establish the ESRD QIP
rules via formal rulemaking procedures.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS solicit the participation of
private insurance companies and
Medicare Advantage Plans to develop a
quality incentive program similar to the
ESRD QIP.
Response: Medicare is currently
conducting the Evaluation of the ESRD
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Disease Management Demonstration to
study the effectiveness of disease
management for patients enrolled in
Medicare Advantage plans. The
demonstration will assess participating
plans’ clinical and financial impact to
determine whether integrated disease
management programs can minimize
treatment complications and improve
complications while reducing costs.
We are also exploring the feasibility of
implementing a number of other
programs that will attempt to align
financial incentives with the quality of
care delivered. These initiatives will
touch on a wide variety of health care
settings, including physician offices,
inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
inpatient psychiatric hospitals, longterm care hospitals, cancer hospitals,
ambulatory surgery centers, hospice
providers, and hospitals. Within the
Medicare Advantage program, section
3201 of the Affordable Care Act requires
CMS to provide for enhanced payments
based on a Medicare Advantage plan’s
overall quality rating. CMS looks
forward to working with payers,
advocacy groups, patients, and other
stakeholders in developing important
initiatives aimed at transforming
Medicare from a passive payer of claims
to an active purchaser of quality health
care.
Comment: Several commenters
stressed the need to encourage greater
use of home modalities. Another
commenter suggested that CMS make all
forms of dialysis equally profitable by
equalizing profit margins across all
forms of dialysis treatments and monitor
recommended treatments to assess
whether one treatment is being
recommended over another because of
the potential to receive a higher profit
margin.
Response: Medicare currently pays
one rate for all forms of dialysis. We
agree with commenters that home
dialysis is an important modality for
ESRD patients that should be
encouraged if clinically appropriate.
Home modalities can enable patients to
continue with employment and other
activities that may be difficult with incenter dialysis. In an effort to promote
patient-centered care, we want to ensure
there are incentives to provide ESRD
patients with options that fit their
clinical needs and personal preferences.
We will be monitoring whether the
implementation of both the ESRD PPS
and the ESRD QIP leads to shifts in
modality and, if so, whether those shifts
affect the quality of care furnished to
ESRD beneficiaries.
Comment: One commenter was
concerned about the potential burden
on small dialysis providers/facilities if
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they have to manually record and
maintain data for the ESRD QIP.
Response: The measures we have
adopted for the initial year of the ESRD
QIP are claims-based measures, and we
can calculate them using information
contained on Medicare FFS claims. To
the extent we want to adopt QIP
measures in the future for which
providers/facilities would need to
submit additional data, we will
carefully consider any impacts that such
data submission might have on
providers/facilities.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS ensure that facilities/providers
submit valid, reliable data and take
steps to ensure that they don’t misreport
data.
Response: We agree that having
reliable data is crucial in evaluating
provider/facility performance for the
QIP and intend to implement a formal
validation process in the future. We also
intend to monitor the ESRD QIP,
including identifying whether certain
patterns or trends warrant further
investigation or response. We anticipate
that these activities will help to ensure
that providers/facilities are submitting
complete and accurate data.
Comment: One commenter, a former
dialysis patient, expressed support for
the QIP.
Response: We appreciate the support
the commenter expressed.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS involve more beneficiaries in
committees and study groups.
Response: We appreciate the
importance of beneficiary input.
Beneficiaries are considered one of the
most important stakeholder groups, and
we plan to continue our outreach efforts
to gather the feedback of beneficiaries
and patient advocates when making
decisions regarding the QIP.
IV. Future ESRD QIP Considerations
A. Monitoring and Evaluation
CMS plans to monitor and evaluate
the new ESRD PPS and ESRD QIP as
part of our ongoing effort to ensure that
Medicare beneficiaries with ESRD
receive high quality care. The
monitoring will focus on whether,
following implementation of the new
PPS and the ESRD QIP, we observe
changes in access to and quality of care,
especially within vulnerable
populations. We will be evaluating the
effects of the new ESRD PPS and the
QIP and focusing on areas such as:
• Access to care for beneficiaries,
including categories or subgroups of
beneficiaries;
• Changes in care practices that could
adversely impact the quality of care for
beneficiaries;
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• Patterns of care suggesting
particular effects of the new PPS—for
example, whether there are increases/
decreases in utilization of injectable
ESRD drugs and the use of home
modalities for certain groups of ESRD
beneficiaries;
• Best practices of high-performing
providers/facilities that might be
adopted by other providers/facilities.
CMS currently collects detailed
claims data on patients’ hemoglobin
levels and adequacy of dialysis, and also
collects information on other facets of
ESRD care, including treatments
provided, drugs, hospitalizations, and
deaths. In addition, we collect
beneficiary enrollment data which
provides important demographic and
other information related to Medicare
ESRD beneficiaries. These data and
other data sources will provide the basis
for early examination of overall trends
in care delivery, access, and quality. We
will also use the data to assess more
fully the quality of care furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries under the new
PPS, and to help inform possible
refinements to the PPS and QIP moving
forward. We requested public comments
about an approach to monitoring and
evaluating the ESRD PPS and the ESRD
QIP.
The comments we received on this
monitoring approach and our responses
are set forth below.
Comment: A number of commenters
addressed the issue of monitoring and
our plan to evaluate the impact of both
the new ESRD PPS and the QIP on
beneficiary access to, and the quality of,
care. Many commenters expressed
support for this plan and urged CMS to
closely monitor whether the new ESRD
PPS and QIP impact the quality of care
furnished by ESRD providers/facilities
to vulnerable populations and at-risk
populations. Citing a March 2010 report
issued by the Government
Accountability Office (GAO), one
commenter recommended that CMS
specifically monitor whether injectable
drug usage increases or decreases after
the new ESRD PPS and QIP go into
effect. Other commenters raised the
concern that the QIP could lead to
increased ‘‘cherry picking’’ in the
practice of patient referrals, increased
involuntary discharges, and other
barriers to dialysis care for difficult-totreat patients or those patients who
might negatively affect provider/facility
performance metrics. One commenter
recommended the universal
implementation of CROWNWeb for
monitoring the PPS and the QIP.
Another commenter suggested that CMS
establish a national database that tracks
the number, demographics and reasons
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why a provider/facility involuntarily
discharged/released a patient. Another
commenter requested that CMS set forth
specific details on how it plans to
monitor the effects of the QIP on
beneficiaries, that CMS provide details
on how it plans to engage the ESRD
community to ensure that special needs
are met, and that the agency provide an
opportunity for public comment on the
monitoring plan. One commenter
recommended that facilities provide
easier methods for patients to return
satisfaction surveys. Finally, one
commenter requested that the results of
studies evaluating the QIP be made
public.
Response: Beginning in 2009, we
conducted a series of town hall
meetings, listening sessions, and other
outreach efforts to assess reaction to
upcoming changes to the Medicare
ESRD program. CMS had identified a
need to monitor the impact of both the
new ESRD PPS and the QIP, and
through these interactions sought the
feedback of the ESRD community,
including facilities, providers, and
patient advocates.
In its March 2010 report, entitled
‘‘End-Stage Renal Disease: CMS Should
Monitor Access to and Quality of
Dialysis Care Promptly after
Implementation of New Bundled
Payment System’’ (GAO–10–295), GAO
recommended that CMS monitor
whether beneficiary access to, and the
quality of, dialysis care is diminished or
degraded following implementation of
the newly expanded ESRD bundled
payment system, especially for certain
groups of Medicare ESRD beneficiaries
who may be more vulnerable.
Specifically, the GAO report highlighted
a concern that the new ESRD PPS might
affect access to and quality of dialysis
care for ‘‘certain groups of beneficiaries,
such as those who receive above average
doses of injectable ESRD drugs.’’
In response to these concerns and as
part of fulfilling our mission to ensure
effective, up-to-date healthcare coverage
and quality care for beneficiaries, we
will launch an ESRD services
monitoring program to identify changes
in beneficiary access to and quality of
care following implementation of the
ESRD PPS in January 2011 and the QIP
in January 2012. The ESRD services
monitoring program will enable CMS to
identify whether there are access-to-care
and quality concerns requiring further
examination and response, as well as
help to drive continuous improvement
by identifying best practices and
providing constructive feedback to
ESRD facilities and providers. Findings
from the monitoring program will also
be used to design longer-term evaluation
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641
studies assessing relationships between
program policies and outcomes. While
monitoring alone cannot determine the
cause of observed changes, certain
events identified through the
monitoring program will be used to alert
CMS of the need for further review and
investigation.
In addition to conducting monitoring
activities, CMS will be evaluating the
impact of the new program on access to
and quality of care for Medicare ESRD
beneficiaries. Evaluation takes a longterm focus, examining relationships
between ESRD PPS and/or QIP policies
and patient outcomes for vulnerable
subpopulations of ESRD beneficiaries
over a study period.
In developing the ESRD services
monitoring and evaluation program, we
sought input from a broad array of
stakeholders, including ESRD
providers/facilities, the ESRD Network
Organizations, and patient advocates.
We also took into account the
recommendations of a study that looked
at whether particular segments of the
ESRD population, including racial and
ethnic minorities and other populations
that we consider to be vulnerable or atrisk, could be disproportionately
affected by the new ESRD PPS.
As part of the planned ESRD services
monitoring and evaluation program, we
will also examine a number of
indicators and available data sources to
ascertain whether any disruptions in
access or quality occur following
implementation of the QIP. We intend
to track monitoring indicators of
facility/provider practice, including
patient loss rates, facility closures, and
other areas of concern to determine if
there are any changes that may need
further study. We plan to utilize
available data sources, including
CROWNWeb, claims data, patient
activity reports, provider forms, and
other quantitative and qualitative data
sources in the monitoring and
evaluation program. As we continue to
refine and develop the monitoring and
evaluation program in 2011 and beyond,
we will consider the commenters’
suggestions.
As the ESRD services monitoring
effort continues to expand and mature
in 2012 and beyond, we expect to gain
insight into how the ESRD PPS and QIP
are affecting the quality of care
furnished to individuals with ESRD,
and with that insight in mind, we
expect to design additional evaluation
studies and make information available
to the public, including the ESRD
community and researchers.
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B. Potential QIP Changes and Updates
As noted above, section 1881(h)(4)(B)
of the Act provides that the performance
standards established under section
1881(h)(4)(A) shall include levels of
achievement and improvement, as
determined appropriate by the
Secretary. We anticipate that we will
propose to adopt performance standards
under section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act
that include levels of achievement and
improvement for the 2013 QIP.
In addition, we anticipate
strengthening the performance standard
for each measure in future years of the
QIP, including potentially moving away
from using the national performance
rate as the performance standard and
instead identifying absolute standards
that reflect performance goals widely
recognized by the ESRD medical
community as demonstrating high
quality care for ESRD patients. For
instance, we may seek to raise the
performance standard for each of the
three measures finalized for the 2012
QIP above the proposed or finalized
level (that is, Hemoglobin Less Than
10g/dL—two percent; Hemoglobin More
Than 12g/dL—26 percent; and
Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure—96
percent).
Additionally, for these initial three
finalized measures, we intend to
establish the national performance rates
of each of these measures as ‘‘floors’’,
such that the performance standards
will never be lower than those set for
the previous year, even if provider/
facility performance—and therefore the
national performance rate—fails to
improve, or even declines, over time.
The performance standard to which
facilities and providers will be held for
these measures will not be lowered from
one year to the next. This will better
ensure that the quality of ESRD patient
care will continue to improve over time.
Establishing such floors for performance
standards, however, will in no way
prohibit the Secretary from establishing
performance standards that are higher
than the floors if the Secretary
determines that higher performance
standards are appropriate.
In establishing new measures for the
QIP in future years, we intend that the
concept of ‘‘floors’’ described above
would be established for each new
measure and applied to these new
measures in order to better ensure
improvement in the quality of care, once
we have a historical perspective on how
the measure performs. While we will
consider the use of national
performance rates, we also will take into
consideration future performance
standards that reflect performance goals
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widely recognized by the ESRD medical
community as demonstrating high
quality care for ESRD patients, should
such a consensus be reached.
As noted above, section 1881(h)(2)(A)
of the Act also requires that the
measures include, to the extent feasible,
measures on patient satisfaction, as well
as such other measures that the
Secretary specifies, including iron
management, bone mineral metabolism
(that is, calcium and phosphorus), and
vascular access. We are currently
developing measures in each of the
areas specified in section 1881(h)(2)(A)
of the Act and are also moving forward
with developing additional measures
such as Kt/V, access infection rate, fluid
weight management, and pediatric
measures. As part of the process of
developing these new measures, where
necessary data are not currently being
collected, we intend to require
providers to submit data needed to
establish a baseline for each of the
measures under consideration, as listed
above, as soon as is practicable. For QIP
measures, we will use a collection
process that has been determined
appropriate by the Secretary to obtain
this data. We anticipate proposing
additional measures, such as those
listed above under section 1881(h)(2)(A)
of the Act, in future rulemaking for the
QIP.
We requested public comments on
how we might best incorporate both
improvement and achievement
standards as specified by the Act. We
also requested comments on
performance standards for future years
of the QIP. We are committed to
adopting additional quality measures for
the QIP as soon as practicable. While we
are evaluating measures for inclusion in
future years of the QIP, we also
requested public comment on setting
performance standards for the first year
a new measure is included in the QIP.
The comments we received on these
issues and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: A few commenters
encouraged CMS to measure
improvement as well as achievement
under the QIP. One of the commenters
expressed disappointment that CMS has
chosen not to address improvement in
the first year of the QIP.
Response: We believe that levels of
achievement and improvement are
important components of the future QIP
performance standards, and we
anticipate proposing to adopt such
levels for the 2013 QIP program year.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for our concept of
establishing ‘‘floors’’ for the performance
standards, to ensure that a measure’s
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performance standards will never be
lowered in future years even if provider/
facility performance fails to improve or
even declines. Other commenters
expressed concern that when measures
change (for example, from URR to Kt/V),
it would be necessary to establish new
floors, and believe that CMS should
remain open to changes based on
scientific evidence and best practices.
Response: We appreciate the
comments supportive of establishing
performance standard floors for future
years of the QIP, and will continue to
examine the benefits of establishing
them. We also share the commenters’
belief that we must be open to
establishing new floors in the event that
the scientific evidence or best practice
changes with respect to a measure.
Comment: Many commenters offered
suggestions regarding the inclusion of
additional measures in future years of
the QIP. Most commenters strongly
advocated for the inclusion of new
measures such as Kt/V, transplant
referrals, access infection rates, fluid
weight management, iron management,
bone mineral metabolism, vascular
access, patient satisfaction, and
measures for pediatric and home
hemodialysis patients as soon as
possible.
Response: We plan to continuously
work to improve the ESRD QIP,
including adopting robust measures that
provide valid assessments of the quality
of care delivered to ESRD beneficiaries
by providers and facilities. To that end,
we are in the process of developing
measures that can be applied to all
modalities (that is, home and in-center)
as well as the pediatric population.
Measures that we are considering
proposing to adopt include measures on
mineral metabolism, vascular access
infections, vascular access type,
pediatric anemia (for example, iron
targets), pediatric dialysis adequacy (Kt/
V), and fluid management. Additionally,
we are currently testing the feasibility of
using claims data to calculate some of
these measures. We are also considering
establishing all or part of 2011 as the
performance period for the 2013 QIP.
As the ESRD QIP continues to evolve,
we realize the importance of assuring
that the measures are reviewed and
refined to confirm that they continue to
align with currently accepted clinical
practices. Further, we will review any
needs for risk adjustment for measures
that currently do not have this
specification. As we consider the
feasibility of adopting new measures for
the QIP, we intend to seek the input of
the ESRD community to ensure that the
measures we seek to adopt are
appropriate, scientifically acceptable,
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and valuable to continuous quality
improvement.
We are also focused on identifying
QIP patient-centered measures such as
patient satisfaction, access to nutrition
services, referral to transplant, and
training for those on home modalities.
Patient perceptions of care and support
services that contribute to dialysis
outcomes are critical. Again,
collaboration with beneficiaries as well
as the renal community will be
important for identifying key issues for
measurement. CMS is dedicated to
making the measure development and
selection process as transparent and
inclusive as possible so that it
continuously advances the goals of the
ESRD QIP to ensure that individuals
with ESRD have access to quality care.
Lastly, as we work toward identifying
and proposing to adopt new measures
for the QIP, we understand the
importance of collecting real-time data
for more timely measurement of
performance. We are working to expand
the scope of the CROWNWeb project
and intend to explore the feasibility of
using the CROWNWeb system to collect
QIP data.
V. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency;
• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden;
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected;
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
Therefore, we solicited public
comment on each of these issues for the
following sections of this document that
contain information collection
requirements (ICRs):
In the proposed rule, we discussed a
disclosure requirement (75 FR 49226).
Section 1881(h)(6)(C) of the Act requires
the Secretary to provide certificates to
dialysis care providers and facilities
about their total performance scores
under the QIP. This section also
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requires each provider and facility that
receives a QIP certificate to display it
prominently in patient areas.
To comply with this requirement, we
proposed to issue QIP certificates to
providers and facilities via a generally
accessible electronic file format. We
proposed that each provider and facility
would prominently display the QIP
certificate in patient areas. In addition,
we proposed that each provider and
facility will take the necessary measures
to ensure the security of the certificate
in the patient areas. Finally, we
proposed that each provider/facility
would have staff available to answer
questions about the certificate in an
understandable manner, taking into
account that some patients might have
limited English proficiency.
We finalized these requirements in
this final rule.
We stated in the proposed rule that
the burden associated with the
aforementioned requirements is the time
and effort necessary for providers and
facilities to print the QIP certificates,
display the certificate prominently in
patient areas, ensure the safety of the
certificate, and respond to patient
inquiries in reference to the certificates.
We estimated that 4,311 providers and
facilities will receive QIP certificates
and will be required to display them.
We also estimated that it will take each
provider or facility 10 minutes to print,
prominently display and secure the QIP
certificate, for a total estimated annual
burden of 719 hours. We estimated that
approximately one-third of ESRD
patients will ask a question about the
QIP certificate. We further estimated
that it will take each provider/facility
five minutes to answer each patient
question about the QIP certificate, or
1.65 hours per provider or facility each
year. We estimated that the total annual
burden associated with this requirement
would be 7,121 hours. We also
estimated that the total annual burden
for both displaying the QIP certificates
and answering patient questions about
the certificates would be 7,840 hours.
While the total estimated annual burden
associated with both of these
requirements would be 7,840 hours, we
stated that we did not believe that there
would be a significant cost associated
with these requirements because we
would not be requiring providers/
facilities to complete new forms. As
discussed in the proposed rule (75 FR
49228), we estimated the total cost for
all ESRD facilities to comply with the
collection of information requirements
would be less than $200,000.
We did not receive any comments
related to this information collection
and are finalizing these burdens.
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643
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule implements a QIP for
Medicare ESRD dialysis providers and
facilities with payment reductions
beginning January 1, 2012. Under
section 1881(h) of the Act, after
selecting measures, establishing
performance standards that apply to
each of the measures, specifying a
performance period, and developing a
methodology for assessing the total
performance of each provider and
facility based on the specified
performance standards, the Secretary is
required to apply an appropriate
reduction to ESRD providers and
facilities that do not meet or exceed the
established total performance score. We
view the ESRD QIP required by section
1881(h) of the Act as the next step in the
evolution of the ESRD quality program
that began more than 30 years ago. Our
vision is to implement a robust,
comprehensive ESRD QIP that builds on
the foundation that has already been
established.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Social Security
Act, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104–4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Order 12866 directs
agencies to assess all costs and benefits
of available regulatory alternatives and,
if regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis (RIA) must be prepared for
major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year). This final rule is not an
economically significant rule because
we estimate that the effects of the rule
will fall well below the economic
threshold of $100 million (see analysis
below). In addition, given this estimated
impact, this final rule also is not a major
rule under the Congressional Review
Act. We requested comments on the
economic analysis.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
businesses if a rule has a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
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entities. For purposes of the RFA,
approximately 19 percent of ESRD
dialysis facilities are considered small
entities according to the Small Business
Administration’s size standards, which
consider small businesses those dialysis
facilities having total Medicare revenues
of $34.5 million or less in any one year,
and 19 percent of dialysis facilities are
nonprofit organizations. For more
information on SBA’s size standards,
see the Small Business Administration’s
Web site at https://sba.gov/idc/groups/
public/documents/sba_homepage/
serv_sstd_tablepdf.pdf (Kidney Dialysis
Centers are listed as 621492 with a size
standard of $34.5 million).
For purposes of the RFA, using DFC
performance data based on Medicare
claims from 2007 and 2008, we consider
the 802 independent facilities and
hospital-based facilities to be small
entities. The ESRD facilities that are
owned and operated by a Large Dialysis
Organization (LDO) and/or regional
chain, comprising approximately 3,509
facilities, would have total revenues in
excess of $34.5 million in any year
when the total revenues for all locations
are combined for each business
(individual LDO or regional chain).
Table 5 below shows the estimated
impact of the QIP on small entities for
payment consequence year 2012. The
distribution of ESRD providers/facilities
by facility size (both among facilities
considered to be small entities for
purposes of this analysis and by number
of treatments per facility), geography
(both urban/rural and by region), and by
facility type (hospital based/
freestanding facilities).
TABLE 5—IMPACT OF ESRD QIP PAYMENT REDUCTIONS TO ESRD FACILITIES FOR CY 2012 INCLUDES ESTIMATED
IMPACT ON SMALL ENTITIES FOR REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ACT (RFA) ANALYSIS
Number of facilities expected to
receive a payment reduction
Payment reduction (percent
change in total
ESRD payments)
4,311
1,106
¥0.19
3,916
167
228
977
47
82
¥0.18
¥0.25
¥0.30
802
3,509
252
854
¥0.27
¥0.17
3,159
924
228
788
236
82
¥0.19
¥0.18
¥0.30
652
2,048
871
705
35
182
521
237
158
8
¥0.22
¥0.18
¥0.22
¥0.16
¥0.23
261
2,566
1,484
77
675
354
¥0.28
¥0.20
¥0.18
Number of
facilities
Facility type
All Facilities ................................................................................................................
Type:
Freestanding .......................................................................................................
Hospital Based ...................................................................................................
Unknown 1 ...........................................................................................................
Facility Size: 2
Small entities ......................................................................................................
Large entities ......................................................................................................
Urban/Rural status:
Urban ..................................................................................................................
Rural ...................................................................................................................
Unknown 3 ...........................................................................................................
Geographic Region:
Northeast ............................................................................................................
South ..................................................................................................................
Midwest ...............................................................................................................
West ....................................................................................................................
Other 4 .................................................................................................................
Facility Size (number of treatments):
Less than 3,000 treatments ................................................................................
3,000–9,999 treatments ......................................................................................
Over 10,000 treatments ......................................................................................
1 Based
on DFC self-reported status.
entities’’ include hospital-based facilities and non-chain facilities based on DFC self-reported status.
on DFC self-reported status.
4 Includes American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and Virgin Islands.
Source: Analysis of DFC/Medicare claims data (2007–2008) for ESRD providers/facilities reporting data on all three measures.
2 ‘‘Small
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3 Based
We note that guidance issued by the
Department of Health and Human
Services interpreting the RFA considers
effects to be economically significant if
they reach a threshold of three to five
percent or more of total revenue or total
costs. Under the final rule, the
maximum payment reduction applied to
providers/facilities, regardless of its
size, is 2.0 percent of aggregate
Medicare payments for dialysis services.
This falls below the 3.0 percent
threshold for economic significance
established by HHS. To further ascertain
the impact on small entities for
purposes of the RFA, we projected
provider/facility performance based on
DFC performance data from 2007 and
2008. For the 2012 ESRD QIP, of the
1,106 ESRD facilities expected to
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receive a payment reduction, 252 small
entities would be expected to receive a
payment reduction (ranging from 0.5
percent up to 2.0 of total payments). The
average payment reduction for the 252
small facilities receiving a payment
reduction is approximately $18,000 per
facility. Using our projections of
provider/facility performance, we next
estimated the impact of expected
payment reductions on small entities by
comparing the total payment reduction
for the 252 small entities expected to
receive a payment reduction with
aggregate ESRD payments to all small
entities. For the entire group of 802
small entities, a minor decrease of 0.27
percent in aggregate ESRD payments is
observed.
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Therefore, we are not preparing an
analysis for the RFA because the
Secretary has determined that this final
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
Comment: In reviewing Table 9 in the
proposed rule (75 FR 49230) for the
estimated impact of payment
reductions, one commenter noted that
31 percent of small entities will be
affected by this proposed rule as
opposed to only 24 percent of large
entities. The commenter further noted
that this disproportionately affects
smaller entities, which do not have the
inherent volume discounts and diverse
purchasing powers that large entities
typically have. The payment reduction
(percent changes in aggregate ESRD
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payments), though considered minor, is
estimated to be 0.10 percent higher for
smaller entities.
Response: The technical
specifications for each of the finalized
measures require that a provider/facility
has a minimum of 11 cases meeting the
measure criteria in order to report it. We
believe that these specifications will
minimize the rule’s economic burden on
small entities. Second, we note that for
purposes of RFA analysis in
determining whether agencies must
perform an initial or final regulatory
flexibility analysis, agencies must
determine whether the regulation is
expected to have a significant economic
impact on small entities. Though the
rule may have a disproportionate, but
not economically significant, impact on
small entities, it is not relevant for
purposes of the analysis. Third, we
expect all facilities to provide quality
care, particularly in the important areas
of anemia management and dialysis
adequacy, regardless of size. Finally, we
intend to monitor and evaluate the
impact of the ESRD QIP on access to
and quality of care for ESRD
beneficiaries, including indicators of
facility financial health, to identify any
disruptions or to make future
improvements in the program.
Comment: Another commenter noted
that CMS has provided an estimate of
the number and geographic region of
other facilities it projects will receive
reductions based on other
characteristics (such as small versus
large and rural versus urban) but would
like to understand the impact of the
proposed payment reductions safety-net
and other not-for-profit providers. The
commenter also stated that it is
important to estimate the influence of
payment reductions by facility type (for
example, large dialysis organizations
(LDOs) versus independent facilities).
Response: As stated, we estimate 19
percent of ESRD facilities to be
nonprofit for purposes of RFA analysis.
These entities are included in the
estimates of the impact of payment
reductions on small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. Any such regulatory impact
analysis must conform to the provisions
of section 604 of the RFA. For purposes
of section 1102(b) of the Act, we define
a small rural hospital as a hospital that
is located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area and has fewer than 100
beds. We do not believe this final rule
has a significant impact on operations of
a substantial number of small rural
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hospitals because most dialysis facilities
are freestanding. Overall, we estimate
that the hospital-based dialysis facilities
will experience an average 0.25 percent
decrease in payments. As a result, this
rule will not have a significant impact
on small rural hospitals. Therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this final
rule will not have a significant impact
on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Finally, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any one year $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2010, that
threshold is approximately $135
million. We do not believe that this rule
includes any mandates that would
impose spending costs on State, local, or
Tribal governments in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, of $135 million or
more in 2010.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule and subsequent final rule
that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
We do not believe this final rule will
have a substantial direct effect on State
or local governments, preempt State
law, or otherwise have Federalism
implications.
C. Anticipated Effects
This final rule is intended to mitigate
possible reductions in the quality of
ESRD dialysis facility services provided
to beneficiaries as a result of payment
changes under the ESRD PPS by
implementing a QIP that would reduce
ESRD payments by up to two percent to
dialysis providers/facilities that fail to
meet or exceed a total performance
score with respect to performance
standards established by the Secretary
with respect to certain specified
measures. Any reductions in ESRD
payment would begin on January 1,
2012 for services furnished on or after
January 1, 2012.
The calculations used to determine
the impact of this proposed rule reveal
that approximately 27 percent, or 1,106,
ESRD dialysis facilities would likely
receive some kind of payment reduction
for 2012. Again using DFC/Medicare
claims data from 2007–2008, Table 6
shows the overall estimated distribution
of payment reductions resulting from
the 2012 ESRD QIP.
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
TABLE 6—ESTIMATED
OF CY 2012 ESRD
REDUCTIONS
645
DISTRIBUTION
QIP PAYMENT
Payment reduction
No Payment Reduction ............
0.5% Payment Reduction .........
1.0% Payment Reduction .........
1.5% Payment Reduction .........
2.0% Payment Reduction .........
Number of
ESRD
facilities
3,205
709
183
184
30
To estimate the total payment
reductions in 2012 resulting from the
proposed rule for each facility, we
multiplied the number of patients
treated at each facility receiving a
reduction times an average of three
treatments per week. We then
multiplied this product by a base rate of
$229.63 per dialysis treatment (the
finalized 2011 rate, before an adjustor is
applied) to arrive at a total ESRD
payment for each facility:
((Number of patients treated at each
facility × three treatments per week)
× base rate)
Finally, we applied the estimated
payment reduction percentage expected
under the ESRD QIP, yielding a total
payment reduction amount for each
facility:
(Total ESRD payment × estimated
payment reduction percentage)
Totaling all of the payment reductions
for each of the 1,106 facilities expected
to receive a reduction leads to a total
payment reduction of approximately
$17.3 million for payment consequence
year 2012. Further, we estimate that the
total costs associated with the collection
of information requirements described
in section IV of this final rule would be
less than $200,000 for all ESRD
facilities. As a result, the estimated
aggregate $17.5 million impact for 2012
does not reach the $100 million
threshold for an economically
significant rule.
D. Alternatives Considered
In developing this final rule, we
considered a number of alternatives. We
carefully considered the size of the
incentive to providers and facilities to
provide high-quality care. We also
selected the measures adopted for the
2012 ESRD QIP because these measures
are important indicators of patient
outcomes and quality of care. Poor
management of anemia and inadequate
dialysis, for example, can lead to
avoidable hospitalizations, decreased
quality of life, and death. Thus, we
believe the measures selected will allow
CMS to continue focusing on improving
the quality of care that Medicare
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kgrant on DSKGBLS3C1PROD with BILLS
beneficiaries receive from ESRD dialysis
providers and facilities.
We considered alternatives for
identifying the performance standard,
including the mean, median, and mode.
However, we determined that the
national average would be appropriate
for the first payment year for the reasons
listed below:
• CMS believes that the legislative
intent was to set the performance
standard at the ‘‘average,’’ as this is the
performance standard that has been
publicly reported on the Dialysis
Facility Compare Web site (DFC) for the
past ten years and was the standard in
effect when the language was crafted;
• Recognizing, however, that there
was some flexibility, CMS reviewed
other possible standards and noted that
there was little difference in the range
of performance, with the exception of
performance for Hemoglobin Greater
Than 12g/dL (Hemoglobin < 10g/dL: 0
percent–3 percent; Hemoglobin > 12g/
dL: 8 percent–38 percent; URR ≥ 65
percent: 94 percent–100 percent). As the
bundled payment will likely reverse the
incentive that may be leading to the
wider range for this measure, the
differences in the performance did not
warrant moving from the use of a
national performance rate for
performance.
• CMS has seen great improvement in
the rates for these measures over the
past several years as reported in DFC, in
part due to public reporting and
continuous oversight and monitoring.
The rate for Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/
dL has improved and maintained
improvement, while Hemoglobin
Greater Than 12g/dL improved from 44
percent in 2007 to 26 percent in 2008
as demonstrated below. Should it
become evident that the rates begin to
move in the wrong direction due to the
bundled payment, different performance
standards can be proposed through
future rulemaking. For example, if the
national average for Hemoglobin Less
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17:21 Jan 04, 2011
Jkt 223001
Than 10g/dL began to drop, CMS could
propose to require a rate of two percent
or less regardless of the national
average.
• The national average was also
selected because of the rapid
implementation date for the first year
and because the proposed rule was
published more than halfway into the
period of performance for the first
payment year. Especially for this first
year of the QIP, we did not believe
introduction of a new performance
standard after the period of performance
has nearly ended was appropriate.
We also considered alternatives for
applying payment reductions. Our main
alternatives considered varying point
reductions based on each one
percentage point a facility or provider
was below the performance standard.
We did not propose alternatives that
applied payment reductions that
accounted for the variability seen within
each measure, and as noted above, we
asked for public comment on such
alternatives.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this regulation
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 413
Health facilities, Kidney diseases,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
■ For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 413—PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE COST
REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
SERVICES; OPTIONAL
PROSPECTIVELY DETERMINED
PAYMENT RATES FOR SKILLED
NURSING FACILITIES
1. The authority citation for part 413
continues to read as follows:
■
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
Authority: Secs. 1102, 1812(d), 1814(b),
1815, 1833(a), (i), and (n), 1861(v), 1871,
1881, 1883, and 1886 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395d(d), 1395f(b),
1395(g), 1395I(a), (i), and (n), 1395x(v),
1395hh, 1395rr, 1395tt, and 1395ww); and
sec. 124 of Public Law 106–113 (133 stat.
1501A–332).
Subpart H—Payment for End-Stage
Renal Disease (ESRD) Services and
Organ Procurement Costs
2. Section 413.177 is added to subpart
H to read as follows:
■
§ 413.177 Quality Incentive Program
Payment.
(a) With respect to renal dialysis
services as defined under § 413.171 of
this part, in the case of an ESRD facility
that does not meet the performance
requirements described in section
1881(h)(1)(B) of the Act for the
performance year, payments otherwise
made to the provider or facility section
1881(b)(14) of the Act for renal dialysis
services will be reduced by up to two
percent, as determined appropriate by
the Secretary.
(b) Any payment reduction will apply
only to the payment year involved and
will not be taken into account in
computing the single payment amount
under this subpart for services provided
in a subsequent payment year.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: November 18, 2010.
Donald Berwick,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: December 15, 2010.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2010–33143 Filed 12–29–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\05JAR2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 3 (Wednesday, January 5, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 628-646]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-33143]
[[Page 627]]
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Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Part 413
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 3 / Wednesday, January 5, 2011 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 628]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Part 413
[CMS-3206-F]
RIN 0938-AP91
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive
Program
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule will implement a quality incentive program
(QIP) for Medicare outpatient end-stage renal disease (ESRD) dialysis
providers and facilities with payment consequences beginning January 1,
2012, in accordance with section 1881(h) of the Act (added on July 15,
2008 by section 153(c) of the Medicare Improvements for Patients and
Providers Act (MIPPA)). Under the ESRD QIP, ESRD payments made to
dialysis providers and facilities under section 1881(b)(14) of the
Social Security Act will be reduced by up to two percent if the
providers/facilities fail to meet or exceed a total performance score
with respect to performance standards established with respect to
certain specified measures.
DATES: These regulations are effective on February 4, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Shannon Kerr, (410) 786-3039.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Overview of Quality Monitoring Initiatives
B. Statutory Authority for the ESRD QIP
C. Finalized Anemia Management and Dialysis Adequacy Measures
II. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public Comments
A. Performance Standards for the ESRD QIP Measures
B. Performance Period for the ESRD QIP Measures
C. Methodology for Calculating the Total Performance Score for
the ESRD QIP Measures
D. Payment Reductions Using the Total Performance Score
E. Public Reporting Requirements
1. Introduction
2. Notifying Providers/Facilities of Their QIP Scores
3. Informing the Public Through Facility-Posted Certificates
4. Informing the Public Through Medicare's Web site
F. Excluded Providers
G. Additional Comments
IV. Future QIP Considerations
A. ESRD Services Monitoring and Evaluation
B. Potential QIP Changes and Updates
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact
C. Anticipated Effects
D. Alternatives Considered
Acronyms
Because of the many terms to which we refer by acronym in this
proposed rule, we are listing the acronyms used and their corresponding
meanings in alphabetical order below:
CIP Core Indicators Project
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
CPM Clinical performance measure
CROWNWeb Consolidated Renal Operations in a Web-Enabled Network
DFC Dialysis Facility Compare
DFR Dialysis Facility Report
ESA Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent
ESRD End-stage renal disease
FDA Food and Drug Administration
Kt/V A measure of dialysis adequacy where K is dialyzer clearance, t
is dialysis time, and V is total body water volume
LDO Large dialysis organization
MIPPA Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008
(Pub. L. 110-275)
NQF National Quality Forum
PPS Prospective payment system
QIP Quality incentive program
REMIS Renal management information system
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SIMS Standard information management system
SSA Social Security Administration
the Act Social Security Act
URR Urea reduction ratio
I. Background
A. Overview of Quality Monitoring Initiatives
For over 30 years, monitoring the quality of care provided to end-
stage renal disease (ESRD) patients and provider/facility
accountability have been important components of the Medicare ESRD
payment system. In the proposed rule, we described the evolution of our
ESRD quality monitoring initiatives by category: The ESRD Network
Organization Program, the Clinical Performance Measures (CPM) Project,
Dialysis Facility Compare (DFC), the ESRD Quality Initiative, the ESRD
Conditions for Coverage, and CROWNWeb (75 FR 49216-49217). Most
recently, we finalized three quality measures that we will use for the
initial year of the QIP (see ``End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective
Payment System final rule (referred to in this final rule as the ``ESRD
PPS final rule''), which appeared in the Federal Register on August 12,
2010 (75 FR 49030, 49182-49190)). We also proposed to implement other
components of the QIP in a notice of proposed rulemaking entitled
``End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program'' proposed rule,
which appeared in the Federal Register on August 12, 2010 (75 FR 49215-
49232). We received and reviewed many helpful comments regarding the
design of the QIP that contributed to the development of this ESRD QIP
final rule.
We view the ESRD QIP, required by section 1881(h) of the Social
Security Act (the Act), as the next step in the evolution of the ESRD
quality program that began more than three decades ago. Our vision is
to implement a robust, comprehensive ESRD QIP that builds on the
foundation that has already been established.
B. Statutory Authority for the ESRD QIP
Congress required in section 153 of MIPPA that the Secretary
implement an ESRD quality incentive program (QIP). Specifically,
section 1881(h) of the Act, as added by section 153(c) of MIPPA,
requires the Secretary to develop a QIP that will result in payment
reductions to providers of dialysis services and dialysis facilities
that do not meet or exceed an established total performance score with
respect to performance standards established for certain specified
measures. As provided under this section, the payment reductions, which
will be up to two percent of payments otherwise made to providers and
facilities under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, will apply to payment
for renal dialysis services furnished on or after January 1, 2012. The
total performance score that providers and facilities must meet or
exceed in order to receive their full payment in 2012 will be based on
a specific performance period prior to this date. Under section
1881(h)(1)(C) of the Act, the payment reduction will only apply with
respect to the year involved for a provider/facility and will not be
taken into account when computing future payment rates for the impacted
provider/facility.
For the ESRD QIP, section 1881(h) of the Act generally requires the
Secretary to: (1) Select measures; (2) establish the performance
standards that apply to the individual measures; (3) specify a
performance period with respect to a year; (4) develop a methodology
for assessing the total performance of each provider and facility based
on the performance standards established with respect to the measures
for a performance period; and (5) apply an
[[Page 629]]
appropriate payment reduction to providers and facilities that do not
meet or exceed the established total performance score.
C. Finalized Anemia Management and Hemodialysis Adequacy Measures
In accordance with section 1881(h)(2)(A)(i) of the Act, we
finalized in the ESRD PPS final rule the following three measures for
the initial year of the ESRD QIP:
Percentage of Medicare patients with an average Hemoglobin
Less Than 10.0g/dL;
Percentage of Medicare patients with an average Hemoglobin
Greater Than 12.0g/dL;
Percentage of Medicare hemodialysis patients with an
average Urea Reduction Ratio (URR) 65 percent.
(75 FR 49182). However, we received some questions on the measures
during the public comment period for this rule and are, therefore,
providing clarifying information in this final rule.
As we stated in the ESRD PPS final rule, pediatric patients (those
< 18 years of age) will not be included in the final calculation of the
anemia management measures (75 FR 49185). However, we want to emphasize
that providers/facilities do not need to submit any new data on the
measures we are using for the first year of the QIP. This population
will be excluded from the final calculation of the measure during the
first year (75 FR 49185).
We also want to reiterate that the patient population for the
anemia management measures will include hemodialysis and peritoneal
dialysis patients who are receiving ESAs. To be eligible for inclusion
in the patient population for these measures, the patient must have
four or more eligible claims from the provider/facility within the
performance period. Data from patients whose first ESRD maintenance
dialysis started less than 90 days after diagnosis or who have
hemoglobin values of less than 5g/dL or greater than 20g/dL will be
excluded from the calculation (75 FR 49182). Also, patients not
receiving ESAs are excluded from these measures (75 FR 49184).
We would like to clarify that as we stated in the ESRD PPS final
rule, the hemodialysis adequacy measure will be calculated as the
percentage of patients with a URR greater than or equal to 65 percent
(75 FR 49190).
Additionally, providers/facilities do not need to submit any
additional data with respect to the measures for the first year of the
ESRD QIP. We will calculate the measures using claims data, which we
will collect, as we do for DFC, in accordance with the technical
specifications outlined in the Dialysis Facility Reports, which can be
accessed for reference at: https://www.dialysisreports.org/Methodology.aspx. For the hemodialysis adequacy measure, home
hemodialysis patients and peritoneal dialysis patients, as well as
pediatric patients, are excluded from the calculation (75 FR 49185).
We also note that the laboratory values we will use to calculate
the three finalized measures are included on the Medicare ESRD claim
form and, thus, are submitted by providers/facilities along with their
claims. For guidance on how those values should be obtained and
submitted, please see the Medicare Claims Processing Manual (Medicare
Publication 100.04, Chapter 8--Outpatient ESRD Hospital, Independent
Facility, and Physician/Supplier Claims, Section 50.3).
Requirements for Issuance of Regulations
Section 902 of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) amended section 1871(a) of the Act and
requires the Secretary, in consultation with the Director of the Office
of Management and Budget, to establish and publish timelines for the
publication of Medicare final regulations based on the previous
publication of a Medicare proposed or interim final regulation. Section
902 of the MMA also states that the timelines for these regulations may
vary, but shall not exceed three years after publication of the
preceding proposed or interim final regulation except under exceptional
circumstances.
This final rule finalizes provisions set forth in the Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, entitled ``End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program'', published on August 12, 2010 in the Federal
Register (75 FR 49215 through 49232). In addition, this final rule has
been published within the three-year time limit imposed by section 902
of the MMA. Therefore, we believe that this final rule is being
published in accordance with the statutory requirements of section 902
to ensure the timely publication of final regulations.
II. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations
On August 12, 2010, we published in the Federal Register a proposed
rule entitled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program'' (75 FR 49215). In that proposed rule, we proposed
that under the ESRD QIP, ESRD payments for facilities/providers would
be reduced by up to two percent if they failed to meet or exceed the
total performance score for performance standards established with
respect to certain quality measures. As stated above, the three quality
measures we will use for payment consequence year 2012 are Hemoglobin
Less Than 10.0g/dL, Hemoglobin More Than 12.0g/dL and Hemodialysis
Adequacy >= 65 percent (URR). As detailed below, we received numerous
comments on the various portions of the proposed rule, which we analyze
and respond to below. After consideration of these comments and
responses, we are finalizing the ESRD QIP as proposed.
III. Analysis of and Responses to Public Comments
The proposed rule was published on August 12, 2010 (75 FR 49215
through 49232) in the Federal Register with a comment period that ended
on September 24, 2010. We received approximately 71 public comments.
Interested parties that submitted comments included dialysis
facilities, the national organizations representing dialysis
facilities, nephrologists, nurses, nutritionists, home health agencies,
the major chain dialysis facilities, clinical laboratories,
pharmaceutical manufacturers, hospitals and their representatives,
individual dialysis patients, advocacy groups, and the Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission (MedPAC). In this final rule, we provide a summary
of each proposed provision, a summary of the public comments received,
our responses, and any changes to the proposed ESRD QIP contained in
this final rule.
A. Performance Standards for the ESRD QIP Measures
Section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish performance standards with respect to the measures selected
for the QIP for a performance period with respect to a year. Section
1881(h)(4)(B) of the Act provides that the performance standards shall
include levels of achievement and improvement, as determined
appropriate by the Secretary. However, for the first performance
period, we proposed to use for the three selected measures the
performance standard required by the special rule in section
1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act. Under this provision, the Secretary is
required to ``initially use'', as a performance standard, the lesser of
a provider/facility-specific performance rate in the year selected by
the Secretary under the second sentence of section
[[Page 630]]
1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, or a standard based on the national
performance rates for such measures in a period determined by the
Secretary. We did not propose to include in this initial performance
standard levels of achievement or improvement because we do not believe
that section 1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act requires that we include such
levels. In addition, we interpret the term ``initially'' to apply only
to the performance period applicable for payment consequence calendar
year 2012. For subsequent performance periods, we will propose
performance standards under section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act.
As stated above, to implement the special rule for the anemia
management and hemodialysis adequacy measures, we proposed to use as
the performance standard the lesser of the performance of a provider or
facility on each measure during 2007 (the year selected by the
Secretary under the second sentence of section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of
the Act, referred to as the base utilization year), or the national
performance rates of all providers/facilities for each measure in 2008.
In setting the performance standard based on national performance
rates, we proposed to adopt a standard that is equal to the national
performance rates of all dialysis providers and facilities based on
2008 data as calculated and reported on the Dialysis Facility Compare
(DFC) Web site. We proposed to use 2008 data because it is the most
recent year for which data is publicly available prior to the beginning
of the proposed performance period. Specifically, the national
performance rates for the anemia management and hemodialysis adequacy
measures were posted on DFC in November 2009, as follows:
For the anemia management measure (referred to in this
final rule as the ``Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL Measure'')--the
percentage of Medicare patients who have an average hemoglobin value
less than 10.0g/dL: the national performance rate is two percent.
For the anemia management measure (referred to in this
final rule as the ``Hemoglobin Greater Than 12g/dL Measure'')--the
percentage of Medicare patients who have an average hemoglobin value
greater than 12.0g/dL: the national performance rate is 26 percent.
For the proposed hemodialysis adequacy measure (referred
to in this final rule as ``Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure'')--the
percentage of Medicare patients who have an average URR level greater
than or equal to 65 percent: the national performance rate is 96
percent.
For purposes of implementing the special rule, we proposed that the
performance standard for each of the three measures for the initial
performance period with respect to payment consequence year 2012 would
be the lesser of (1) the provider/facility-specific rate for each of
these measures in 2007, or (2) the 2008 national performance rates for
each of these measures.
We received several comments on our proposed selection of
performance standards. Summaries of the comments received and our
responses are set forth below.
Comment: Several commenters objected to setting the performance
standards based on previous provider/facility performance in 2007 and
2008 because they believe that those years provide an inaccurate
picture of the quality of care furnished to ESRD patients today.
Specifically, these commenters noted that changes have been made since
2007 in anemia management clinical practice and suggested that CMS set
the initial performance standards based on more current data, such as
data from 2009.
Response: As stated above, under section 1881(h)(4)(E) of the Act,
the Secretary is required to ``initially use'' as a performance
standard the lesser of a provider/facility-specific performance rate in
the year selected by the Secretary under the second sentence of section
1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, or a standard based on the national
performance rate for each measure in a period determined by the
Secretary. In the ESRD PPS final rule we determined that 2007 was the
year representing the lowest per-patient utilization of the renal
dialysis services which comprise the ESRD payment bundle as required by
section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act. (75 FR 49065). Therefore, in
accordance with section 1881(h)(4)(E)(i), we must use the 2007
provider/facility performance rates.
In setting the performance standard based on national performance
rates under section 1881(h)(4)(E)(ii), we sought to balance the
importance of using the most recent available data with the desire to
use data that was publicly available at the time we issued the proposed
rule. At the time we issued the proposed rule, the most recent national
performance rate data that was publicly available on DFC was from 2008.
We agree with the commenters that the initial performance standard
should be based on the most contemporary data and as close to the
performance period as possible. However, we also believe that it is
important for providers/facilities, beneficiaries and the public to
know exactly what the performance standards are as soon as possible.
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed initial performance
standard based on the 2008 national performance rate of two percent for
the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL measure would be extremely difficult
for providers/facilities to meet and would likely lead to overuse of
ESAs. The commenter noted that the 2008 data reflects practices that
were furnished prior to recent studies and FDA warnings regarding the
danger of high hemoglobin levels, and that at the time, providers/
facilities were unaware of the danger of high hemoglobin levels.
Additionally, the commenter suggested setting the initial performance
standards for the anemia management measures at 10 percent for
Hemoglobin Less than 10g/dL and Hemoglobin Greater than 12g/dL.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's suggestion that the
anemia management measures performance standards should be set at 10
percent. We have made providers/facilities aware of the dangers of high
hemoglobin levels related to use of ESAs since as early as 2005, when
we changed our policy regarding ESAs and the monitoring of high
hemoglobin levels (see CMS Manual System, Pub 100-04 Medicare Claims
Processing, Transmittal 751 (November 10, 2005)). Since that time and
with the release of the FDA guidelines in 2008, the historical data
demonstrate that the number of patients with high hemoglobin levels has
decreased and the number of patients with Hemoglobin Less than 10 g/dL
has not increased. We believe that lowering the standard to 10 percent
does not move quality forward.
We also believe that most providers/facilities are capable of
meeting the initial 2 percent performance standard, and note that the
2008 national performance rates for the anemia management measures will
only be used as the initial performance standard for those providers/
facilities whose 2007 specific rates are lower than these national
performance rates. For providers/facilities that had 2007 specific
rates that were higher than the 2008 national performance rates their
specific performance rates will be used as the initial performance
standard. We also note that analysis of historical data for all three
measures shows improvements in the average provider/facility
performance of each measure, and therefore more facilities should
receive maximum performance scores
[[Page 631]]
for these measures in future years of the ESRD QIP.
Comment: One commenter requested that the initial performance
standard for the hemodialysis adequacy measure be recalculated to
reflect that home hemodialysis patients are excluded from the measure.
Response: As stated in the ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49186), home
hemodialysis patients are not part of the measure population for the
hemodialysis adequacy measure for purposes of the ESRD QIP. Therefore,
home hemodialysis patients will not be included in the measure
calculation.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
performance standards as proposed.
B. Performance Period for the ESRD QIP Measures
Section 1881(h)(4)(D) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish a performance period with respect to a year, and for that
performance period to occur prior to the beginning of such year.
Because we are required under section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act to
implement the payment reduction beginning with renal dialysis services
furnished on or after January 1, 2012, the first performance period
would need to occur prior to that date.
We proposed to select all of CY 2010 as the initial performance
period for the three finalized measures (42 FR 49218). We believe that
this is the performance period that best balances the need to collect
sufficient data, analyze the data, calculate the provider/facility-
specific total performance scores, determine whether providers and
facilities meet the performance standards, prepare the pricing files
needed to implement applicable payment reductions beginning on January
1, 2012, and allow providers and facilities time to preview their
performance scores and inquire about their scores prior to finalizing
their scores and making performance data public (75 FR 49218). We
requested public comments about the selection of CY 2010 as the initial
performance period.
The comments we received on this proposal and our responses are set
forth below.
Comment: Many commenters suggested that calendar year 2010 should
not be selected as the performance period. Some commenters suggested
that the QIP was created to ensure that patient outcomes are not
negatively affected as an unintended consequence of the new prospective
payment system for ESRD care, and for that reason, they believe that
the initial performance period should be calendar year (CY) 2011, when
the new prospective payment system for ESRD care is effective, rather
than CY 2010. Recognizing the time constraints that CMS is under with
respect to the use of data from a performance period, one commenter
suggested that CMS select the first half of 2011 as the performance
period and conduct data processing during the final six months of 2011,
if this final rule is published in 2010.
Response: Although an important goal of the ESRD QIP is to assess
whether patient outcomes are negatively affected as a result of the new
ESRD PPS, the primary purpose of the QIP is to incentivize providers/
facilities to continuously improve their performance in the care of
ESRD patients. In addition to the reasons we gave for selecting CY 2010
as the performance period in the proposed rule (42 FR 49218-19), we
believe that selecting CY 2010 as the initial performance period will
enable us to do two things: (1) Determine the first set of performance
scores prior to the change in the ESRD payment system which, as
indicated, may affect provider/facility practice especially as it
relates to medication management, laboratory testing and other patient
management practices that now come under the bundled payment; and (2)
use this first set of performance scores to evaluate whether the new
ESRD PPS has created positive or negative consequences. We also believe
that using all of CY 2010 as the initial performance period will
provide us with a more complete picture of provider and facility
performance than we would get if we set a six month performance period,
which will enable us to conduct a more robust evaluation of provider/
facility performance. We also plan to implement a monitoring program in
2011 for the purpose of tracking the impact of the new ESRD PPS and
observing any changes to access to and quality of care for
beneficiaries.
Comment: Other commenters stated that using CY 2010 as the initial
performance period would not serve as an incentive because dialysis
providers and facilities would be judged on outcomes based on care
provided to patients before the performance standards were established.
Commenters also observed that data used for the QIP score will be over
a year old by the time providers/facilities receive payments affected
by that data.
Response: We agree that it is important to use up-to-date quality
data for the ESRD QIP, which is why we are working on the feasibility
of using such data in future years. Currently, claims are the most
complete data source for the selected measures, but we need a
sufficient time period to collect and analyze the data before we can
use it to make payment determinations. For this reason, we do not
believe that we can select a performance period more recent than CY
2010 for the initial year of the ESRD QIP. As other data sources or
accurate and reliable methodologies for faster analysis of claims data
become available, we will seek to use those resources to reduce the gap
between the performance period and payment implementation.
Comment: Several commenters objected to the proposed 2010
performance period, claiming that CMS should have established the
performance standards (by issuing this final rule) by the end of 2009
if it wanted to set 2010 as the performance period. Specifically,
commenters reference section 1881(h)(4)(C), which requires the
Secretary to ``establish the performance standards * * * prior to the
beginning of the performance period for the year involved.''
Response: We acknowledge that section 1881(h)(4)(C) requires the
Secretary to establish performance standards under subparagraph (A)
prior to the beginning of the performance period for the year involved.
However, we are establishing the performance standard that will affect
ESRD payments in CY 2012 in accordance with section 1881(h)(4)(E),
which does not impose the limitation suggested by the commenters. As we
have stated, we believe that setting a CY 2010 performance period for
the initial ESRD QIP will ensure that the performance scores are based
on a robust set of data, and will allow us sufficient time to analyze
that data, determine whether provider/facilities met the performance
standards, implement the applicable payment reductions for CY 2012, and
provide providers/facilities with an opportunity to preview their
performance scores and submit related inquiries. For these reasons, we
are finalizing calendar year 2010 as the performance period for the
2012 ESRD QIP.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
performance period as proposed.
C. Methodology for Calculating the Total Performance Score for the ESRD
QIP Measures
Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(i) of the Act requires the Secretary to
develop a methodology for assessing the total performance of each
provider and facility based on the performance standards with respect
to the measures selected for a performance period.
[[Page 632]]
Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act states that the scoring
methodology must also include a process to weight the performance
scores with respect to individual measures to reflect priorities for
quality improvement, such as weighting scores to ensure that providers/
facilities have strong incentives to meet or exceed anemia management
and dialysis adequacy performance standards, as determined appropriate
by the Secretary. In addition, section 1881(h)(3)(B) of the Act
requires the Secretary to calculate separate performance scores for
each measure. Finally, under section 1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act, for
those providers and facilities that do not meet (or exceed) the total
performance score, the Secretary is directed to ensure that the
application of the scoring methodology results in an appropriate
distribution of payment reductions to providers and facilities, with
those achieving the lowest total performance scores receiving the
largest reductions.
We proposed to calculate the total performance of each provider and
facility with respect to the measures adopted for the initial
performance period by assigning 10 points to each of the three measures
(75 FR 49219). If a provider or facility meets or exceeds the
performance standard for one measure, then it would receive 10 points
for that measure. We proposed to award points on a 0 to 10 point scale,
because this scale is commonly used in a variety of settings and is
easily understood by stakeholders. We also believe that the scale
provides sufficient variation to show meaningful differences in
performance between providers/facilities.
We proposed that a provider or facility that does not meet or
exceed the initial performance standard for a measure based on its CY
2010 data would receive fewer than 10 points for that measure, with the
exact number of points corresponding to how far below the initial
performance standard the provider/facility's actual performance falls
(75 FR 49219). Specifically, we proposed to implement a scoring
methodology that subtracts two points for every one percentage point
the provider/facility performance falls below the initial performance
standard. In the proposed rule, we discussed various examples of how
this proposed methodology would work (75 FR 49219).
Table 1--Proposed Scoring Methodology for Anemia Management Measures Using National Performance Rates in 2008 as
the Performance Standard for 2010 Facility-Specific Comparison
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anemia management measures
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage of Medicare patients Percentage of Medicare patients
whose average hemoglobin levels are whose average hemoglobin levels are
less than 10 g/dL greater than 12 g/dL
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POINTS Percentage Percentage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 points 2 percent or less 26 percent or less
8 points 3 percent 27 percent
6 points 4 percent 28 percent
4 points 5 percent 29 percent
2 points 6 percent 30 percent
0 point 7 percent or more 31 percent or more
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note that the bolded rows show the performance standard for the applicable measure.
Table 2--Proposed Scoring Methodology for Anemia Management Measures Using Facility-Specific Rates in 2007 as
the Performance Standard and 2010 Facility-Specific Rate for Comparison
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Anemia management measures
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage of Medicare patients Percentage of Medicare patients
whose average hemoglobin levels are whose average hemoglobin levels are
less than 10 g/dL greater than 12 g/dL
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
POINTS Percentage Percentage
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4 percent (Example of a 2007 30 percent
facility-specific score) (Example of a 2007 facility-specific
score)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 points 4 percent or less 30 percent or less
8 points 5 percent 31 percent
6 points 6 percent 32 percent
4 points 7 percent 33 percent
2 points 8 percent 34 percent
0 points 9 percent or more 35 percent or more
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 633]]
Table 3--Proposed Scoring Methodology for Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure
Using National Performance Rates in 2008 as the Performance Standard for
2010 Facility-Specific Comparison
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hemodialysis adequacy measure
------------------------------------------
POINTS Percentage of Medicare patients whose
average URR levels are greater than or
equal to 65 percent
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 points 96 percent or more
8 points 95 percent
6 points 94 percent
4 points 93 percent
2 points 92 percent
0 points 91 percent or less
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 4--Proposed Scoring Methodology for Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure
Using Facility-Specific Rates in 2007 as the Performance Standard and
2010 Facility-Specific Rate for Comparison
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hemodialysis adequacy measure
------------------------------------------
POINTS Percentage of Medicare patients whose URR
levels are greater than or equal to 65
percent
------------------------------------------------------------------------
92 Percent
(Example of a 2007 facility-specific
score)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10 points 92 percent or more
8 points 91 percent
6 points 90 percent
4 points 89 percent
2 points 88 percent
0 points 87 percent or less
------------------------------------------------------------------------
We noted that our proposed methodology--subtracting two points for
every one percentage point the provider or facility's performance falls
below the performance standard--does not take into account the relative
variability in performance associated with each measure. Despite the
difference in variability in performance among the measures, we
proposed to apply the straightforward methodology we described in the
proposed rule (75 FR 49219) in a consistent manner across all three
measures. We stated that in designing the scoring methodology for the
first year, we wanted to adopt a clear-cut approach (subtracting two
points for each percentage point providers and facilities fell below
the performance standard) consistent with the conceptual model that we
discussed in the End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System
Proposed Rule (CMS-1418-P)(74 FR 50010). We requested public comment on
our proposal to apply the score reductions in this manner, as opposed
to a methodology which takes into account the relative variations in
performance that exists for each measure.
We recognize that this straightforward approach may not be
appropriate in future years of the ESRD QIP as we adopt new measures
for inclusion in the program which may have a wider variability in
performance. Moreover, we may need to reevaluate this approach
depending on how providers and facilities perform in future years on
the current measures. As we have stated, we want to ensure the
performance measures included in the QIP will result in meaningful
quality improvement for patients at both the national and individual
facility/provider level. Therefore, we requested comment on potential
methodologies that would take into account variations in performance
amongst all measures included in the QIP.
In calculating the total performance score, section
1881(h)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act requires the agency to weight the
performance scores with respect to individual measures to reflect
priorities for quality improvement. In developing the conceptual model,
we originally considered that the initial scoring method would weight
each of the three proposed measures equally. After further examination
and based on public comments, we proposed to give greater weight to the
Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL measure. Low hemoglobin levels below 10g/dL
can lead to serious adverse health outcomes for ESRD patients such as
increased hospitalizations, need for transfusions, and mortality.
Assigning greater weight to the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL measure
ensures that providers/facilities are incentivized to continue to
properly manage and treat anemia. We believe that this is important in
light of concerns that have been raised that the new bundled ESRD
payment system could improperly incentivize providers/facilities to
under-treat patients with anemia by underutilizing ESAs.
Specifically, we proposed to weight the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL
measure as 50 percent of the total performance score (75 FR 49222). The
remaining 50 percent of the total performance score would be divided
equally between the Hemoglobin Greater Than 12g/dL measure (25 percent)
and the Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure (25 percent) (75 FR 49222). When
calculating the total performance score for a provider/facility, we
would first multiply the score achieved by that provider/facility on
each measure (0-10 points) by that measure's assigned weight (either
.50 or .25). Then we would add each of the three numbers together,
resulting in a number (although not necessarily an integer) between 0-
10. Lastly, this number would be multiplied by the number of measures
(three) and rounded to the nearest integer (if necessary). In rounding,
any fractional portion 0.5 or greater would be rounded up to the next
integer, while fractional portions less than 0.5 are rounded down.
Thus, a score of 27.4 would round to 27, while 27.6 would round to 28.
In the proposed rule, we discussed our rationale and provided
examples of how the proposed scoring methodology would work for
calculating the total performance score (75 FR 49222). As discussed in
the proposed rule (75 FR 49219), we believe this proposed total
performance score methodology is appropriate for the initial
performance period in the new ESRD QIP, but recognize that it will be
important to monitor the impact and potentially reevaluate this
methodology as provider and facility performance changes, and as new
measures are added in future years of the ESRD QIP. We requested public
comment on the proposed scoring methodology for the ESRD QIP. We also
solicited comment on potential weighting methodologies that could be
incorporated into the QIP in future years as new measures are
introduced.
The comments we received on this proposal and our responses are set
forth below.
Comment: Many commenters supported our proposal to weight the three
measures. A few commenters recommended that CMS re-evaluate the weights
assigned to each performance measure. Several commenters suggested that
the weight of the anemia management measure (Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/
dL) was too high. Another commenter recommended a weighting schema of
35 percent (Low Hemoglobin), 30 percent (High Hemoglobin) and 35
percent (Dialysis Adequacy), while another suggested a weighting schema
of 40 percent (Low Hemoglobin), 20 percent (High Hemoglobin) and 40
percent (Dialysis Adequacy), to highlight the significant impact
inadequate dialysis can have on patient morbidity and mortality. Some
commenters that supported the proposed weighting methodology for the
initial year also asked CMS to revisit the issue in subsequent years,
especially if additional measures are adopted for the
[[Page 634]]
QIP or our quality improvement priorities change.
Response: The purpose of giving greater weight to the Hemoglobin
Less Than 10g/dL Measure was twofold: (1) To provide a disincentive to
providers/facilities to under-treat patients for anemia, particularly
in light of the implementation of the new ESRD PPS; and (2) to reflect
the clinical importance of this measure. Low hemoglobin levels that are
not appropriately managed can lead to increased morbidity and
mortality. In terms of giving greater weight to the Hemodialysis
Adequacy (URR) Measure, we agree that inadequate dialysis contributes
to what should otherwise be avoidable negative patient outcomes. As we
have noted earlier in this final rule, we eventually intend to propose
to replace the Hemodialysis Adequacy Measure with Kt/V, which is a more
precise measure of dialysis adequacy. Further, unlike URR values, which
are only reported for patients above the age of 18 years receiving in-
center hemodialysis, Kt/V values can be reported for all ESRD
beneficiaries. If we propose to replace the Hemodialysis Adequacy
Measure with a measure that uses Kt/V values, we will re-evaluate our
weighting methodology in light of the change. We also note that as the
QIP evolves and as new measures are adopted in the program, we will
reexamine the overall weighting methodology to ensure that it aligns
with our quality improvement priorities. However, for the reasons
discussed above, we believe that the proposed weighting methodology
reflects our current quality goals.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS adopt a scoring system
that will not unduly penalize providers/facilities for small deviations
from the QIP performance standards.
Response: Based on our evaluation of historical data, we believe
that the initial performance standards are achievable by most
providers/facilities. We also considered whether providers/facilities
would be unduly penalized for small deviations from the ESRD
performance standards and used historical data to model various
outcomes that could occur under the proposed scoring methodology. We
concluded that because provider/facility performance will be initially
evaluated based on the lower of the 2008 national performance rates or
provider/facility specific performance in 2007, the proposed scoring
methodology allows for flexibility in meeting ESRD QIP standards and
will not result in undue penalties for providers/facilities. We
appreciate the commenter's concern that providers/facilities not be
unduly penalized; however, we believe that the methodology carefully
balances this concern with the need to adequately incentivize
meaningful quality improvement. After consideration of the comments, we
are finalizing the scoring methodology as proposed.
D. Payment Reductions Using the Total Performance Score
Section 1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) of the Act requires the Secretary to
ensure that the application of the scoring methodology results in an
appropriate distribution of reductions in payments among providers and
facilities achieving different levels of total performance scores; with
providers and facilities achieving the lowest total performance scores
receiving the largest reductions.
We proposed to implement a sliding scale of payment reductions for
payment consequence year 2012, where the minimum total performance
score that providers/facilities would need to achieve in order to avoid
a payment reduction would be a score of 26 out of 30 points (75 FR
49224). Providers/facilities that score between 21-25 points would
receive a 0.5 percent payment reduction; between 16-20 points a one
percent payment reduction; between 11-15 points a 1.5 percent payment
reduction; and between 0-10 points a two percent payment reduction (75
FR 49224).
In developing the proposed payment reduction scale, we carefully
considered the size of the incentive to providers/facilities to provide
high quality care and the range of total performance scores to which
the payment reduction applies, recognizing that this would be the first
year of a new program. Our goal is to avoid situations where small
deficiencies in a provider/facility's performance results in a large
payment reduction. We noted that we want to avoid imposing a large
payment reduction on providers/facilities whose performance on one or
more measures falls just slightly below the performance standard (75 FR
49224). At the same time, poorly performing providers/facilities should
receive a more significant payment reduction. Our analysis suggests
that using payment differentials of 0.5 percent for the total
performance score ranges distinguishes between providers/facilities
with fair to good performance and providers/facilities with poor
performance. We will consider other differentials between payment
levels for future years of the QIP, which we believe will further
differentiate providers/facilities based on their performance.
Additionally, section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act requires that the
Secretary implement payment reductions of up to two percent, and
section 1881(h)(3)(A)(ii) requires that the application of the total
performance score methodology result in an appropriate distribution of
reductions in payment among providers/facilities. Consistent with these
requirements, we believe that Medicare beneficiaries will be best
served if the full two percent payment reduction is initially applied
only to those providers/facilities whose performance falls well below
the performance standards. We believe that applying a payment reduction
of two percent to providers/facilities whose performance falls
significantly below the performance standards, coupled with applying
0.5 payment differential reductions to providers/facilities based on
lesser degrees of performance deficiencies, will incentivize all
providers/facilities to improve the quality of their care in order to
avoid or reduce the size of a payment reduction. We requested public
comments about how the proposed payment reduction scale would
incentivize providers/facilities to meet or exceed the performance
standards for the first year of the QIP, and whether it is an
appropriate standard to use in future years.
In general, ESRD facilities are paid monthly by Medicare for the
ESRD services they furnish to a beneficiary even though payment is on a
per-treatment basis. In finalizing the new bundled payment system
starting on January 1, 2011, we elected to continue the practice of
paying ESRD facilities monthly for services furnished to a beneficiary
We proposed to apply any payment reduction under the QIP for
payment consequence year 2012 to the monthly payment amount received by
ESRD facilities and providers. The payment reduction would be applied
after any other applicable adjustments to an ESRD facility's payment
were made, including case-mix, wage index, outlier, etc. (This includes
providers/facilities being paid a blended amount under the transition
and those that had elected to be excluded from the transition and
receive its payment amount based entirely on the payment amount under
the ESRD PPS.)
Section 1833 of the Act governs payments of benefits for Part B
services and the cost-sharing amounts for services that are considered
medical and other health services. In general, many Part B services are
subject to a payment structure that requires beneficiaries to be
responsible for a 20 percent co-insurance after the deductible (while
Medicare pays 80 percent). With respect to dialysis services furnished
by ESRD
[[Page 635]]
facilities, under section 1881(b)(2)(a) of the Act, payment amounts are
80 percent (and 20 percent by the individual).
Under the proposed approach for implementing the QIP payment
reductions, the beneficiary co-insurance amount would be 20 percent of
the total Medicare ESRD payment, after any payment reductions are
applied. To the extent a payment reduction applies, we note that the
beneficiary's co-insurance amount would be calculated after applying
the proposed payment reduction and would thus lower the co-insurance
amount.
We proposed to incorporate the statutory requirements of the QIP
payment reduction set forth in proposed Sec. 413.177.
The comments we received on this proposal and our responses are set
forth below.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS set the maximum
first-year penalty (that is, payment reduction) in the QIP at one
percent. The commenters characterized section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act
as saying that ``[p]ayment consequences of QIP should be up to two
percent,'' and believe that the Secretary has some latitude in setting
the maximum payment reduction as an amount lower than two percent.
Commenters noted that some provider/facilities have a case-mix (for
example, nursing home patients, patients with complex conditions) that
may make meeting the performance standards difficult. One of the
commenters suggested that the lower penalty be used in the first year
to allow for establishment of standards. A few commenters further
suggested that payment reductions be implemented in increments of one
quarter percent to support a one percent maximum reduction.
Response: We understand the importance of implementing the ESRD QIP
in a manner that does not unfairly penalize providers/facilities, and
we believe that the performance standards we are initially setting will
be achievable by the majority of providers/facilities. However, we also
believe that a full 2 percent payment reduction is appropriate for the
lowest performers and that it will incentivize them to improve the
quality of care they furnish to ESRD beneficiaries. We acknowledge the
commenters' concern that some providers/facilities face increased
challenges due to the population they serve (for example, nursing home
patients, higher number of patients with complex conditions). Below, we
discuss the monitoring plan we intend to implement for the ESRD QIP to
monitor, in part, the distribution of measure outcomes that show a
possible pattern of concern.
Comment: Many commenters suggested that any funds withheld from
provider/facility payments be used as additional incentive payments to
other providers/facilities. Several commenters expressed strong concern
that the quality incentive program would function only as a
disincentive program and should not be used as a mechanism to achieve
financial savings in the system. Specifically, some commenters
requested any funds withheld from providers/facilities that failed to
meet the national performance standards should be redistributed to
providers/facilities that exceeded the national performance standards.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns; however, we
interpret section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act to require the Secretary to
make payment reductions of up to 2 percent with respect to payments
that would otherwise be made to providers/facilities if those
providers/facilities do not meet the requirements of the ESRD QIP. The
statute that establishes the QIP does not provide authority to issue
bonus payments for performance above the standards selected for the
QIP.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS apply the maximum
penalty of a two percent payment reduction to any provider/facility
whose performance on the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL Measure falls six
percent or more below the performance standard.
Response: We agree with the commenter about the higher relative
importance of the Hemoglobin Less Than 10g/dL Measure and for that
reason, we proposed to weight that measure more heavily in calculating
the total performance score. However, we also believe that the maximum
penalty should initially be applied only to those providers/facilities
whose performance falls well below the performance standards for all
three measures. We believe that instituting an automatic payment
reduction along the lines suggested by the commenter would dilute the
importance of the other measures. A score-based system provides an
incentive for providers/facilities to track their progression over time
while not neglecting outcomes on other measures. We would not want to
apply such a reduction to provider/facilities that had achieved high
scores on the other two measures, thereby removing any incentive for
them to perform well on those measures in the future.
Comment: One commenter suggested that a two percent payment
reduction is not a large enough deduction to ensure the quality and
safety of dialysis patients.
Response: Section 1881(h)(1)(A) of the Act does not permit the
Secretary to make payment reductions greater than two percent for ESRD
providers/facilities. In determining the potential impact on facilities
of all sizes, it was important to identify a maximum percentage level
of payment reduction that provides an incentive, yet is not overly
burdensome.
Comment: A few comments discussed the impact of lower beneficiary
co-insurance amounts as a result of a payment reduction. One commenter
expressed concern that higher co-insurance costs at high-performing
ESRD facilities might serve as a disincentive for patients and that
lower income patients may not be able to pay higher out-of-pocket
costs, reducing patients' access to quality care. Another commenter
agreed with CMS' proposal to calculate beneficiary co-insurance after
applicable quality payment reductions are made, arguing that
beneficiaries should not have to pay higher co-insurance for care
delivered by facilities that perform below quality standards.
Response: Under section 1881(h)(1)(A), the Secretary is required to
make reductions to the ``payments otherwise made'' to a provider/
facility that furnishes ESRD services to an individual with ESRD. We
interpret the phrase ``payments otherwise made'' to be the payments for
ESRD services that would otherwise be made after applying all
applicable adjustments, such as case-mix, wage index, and outlier. We
note that there will be no increase in beneficiary co-insurance and
that any changes to beneficiary co-insurance resulting from the QIP
will likely be minimal. As such, we do not believe that resulting
changes in co-insurance amounts will significantly affect beneficiary
selection of providers/facilities.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
proposed methodology for implementing the QIP payment reductions as
proposed. We are also finalizing our proposed addition of 42 CFR
413.77, which states that ESRD facilities that do not meet the
requirements of the ESRD QIP will be subject to up to a 2 percent
reduction in their payments otherwise made under section 1814(b)(14) of
the Act.
[[Page 636]]
E. Public Reporting Requirements
1. Introduction
Section 1881(h)(6)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish procedures for making information regarding performance under
the ESRD QIP available to the public, including information on the
total performance score (as well as appropriate comparisons of
providers and facilities to the national average with respect to such
scores) and performance scores for individual measures achieved by each
provider and facility. Section 1881(h)(6)(B) further requires that a
provider or facility has an opportunity to review the information to be
made public with respect to it prior to its publication.
In addition, section 1881(h)(6)(C) of the Act requires the
Secretary to provide each provider and facility with a certificate
containing its total performance score to post in patient areas within
their facility. Finally, section 1881(h)(6)(D) of the Act requires the
Secretary to post a list of providers/facilities and performance-score
data on a CMS-maintained Web site.
2. Notifying Providers/Facilities of Their QIP Scores
Section 1881(h)(6)(B) of the Act requires CMS to establish
procedures that include giving providers/facilities an opportunity to
review the information that is to be made public with respect to the
provider or facility prior to such data being made public.
CMS currently uses a secure, Web-based tool to share confidential,
facility-specific, quality data with providers, facilities, and select
others. Specifically, we provide annual Dialysis Facility Reports
(DFRs) to dialysis providers/facilities, ESRD Network Organizations,
and State Survey Agencies. The DFRs provide valuable facility-specific
and comparative information on patient characteristics, treatment
patterns, hospitalizations, mortality, and transplantation patterns. In
addition, the DFRs contain actionable practice patterns such as dose of
dialysis, vascular access, and anemia management. We expect providers
and facilities to use the data included in the DFRs as part of their
ongoing clinical quality improvement projects.
The information contained in the DFRs is sensitive and, as such,
most of that information is made available through a secure Web site
accessible only by that provider/facility and its ESRD Network
Organization, State Survey Agency, and the applicable CMS Regional
Office. However, select measures based on DFR data are made available
to the public through the Dialysis Facility Compare (DFC) Web site,
which allows Medicare beneficiaries and others to publically review and
compare characteristics and quality information on dialysis providers
and facilities in the United States. To allow dialysis providers/
facilities a chance to ``preview'' these data before they are released
publicly, we supply draft DFRs to providers/facilities in advance of
every annual DFC update. Dialysis providers and facilities are
generally given 30 days to review their facility-specific data and
submit comments if the provider/facility has any questions or concerns
regarding the report. A provider/facility's comment is evaluated and
researched. If a provider/facility makes us aware of an error in any
DFR information, a recalculation of the quality measurement results for
that provider/facility is conducted, and the revised results are
displayed on the DFC Web site.
We proposed to use the above-described procedures, including the
DFR framework, to allow dialysis providers/facilities to preview their
quality data under the QIP before a payment reduction is applied and
that data is reported publicly. Specifically, the quality data
available for preview through the Web system will include a provider/
facility's performance score (both in total and by individual quality
measure) as well as a comparison of how well the provider/facility's
performance scores compare to national averages for total performance
and individual quality measure performance (75 FR 49225). We believe
that adapting these existing procedures for purposes of the ESRD QIP
will create minimum expense and burden for providers/facilities because
they will not need to familiarize themselves with a new system or
process for obtaining and commenting upon their preview reports. We
also note that under these procedures, dialysis providers and
facilities would have an opportunity to submit performance score
inquiries and to ask questions of CMS data experts about how their
performance scores were calculated on a facility-level basis. This
performance score inquiry process would also give providers/facilities
the opportunity to submit inquiries, including what they believe to be
errors in their performance score calculations, prior to the public
release of the performance scores. Every provider/facility that submits
an inquiry will receive a response.
While we believe that the DFR process is the most logical solution
for meeting the data preview requirements at this time, we may decide
to revise this approach in the future. Should we decide to make
changes, or should we find a more administratively feasible or cost-
effective solution, we proposed to use sub-regulatory processes to
revise our approach for administering the QIP performance score preview
process in a way that maintains our compliance with section
1881(h)(6)(B) of the Act. We also proposed to use sub-regulatory
processes to determine issues such as the length of the preview period
and the process we will use to address inquirie