Medicare Program; Request for Information To Aid in the Design and Development of a Survey Regarding Patient Experiences With Emergency Department Care, 71600-71601 [2012-29104]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 232 / Monday, December 3, 2012 / Notices
similar information or report available.
T–MSIS will remove current multiple
reporting for similar data by the state to
CMS.
Although T–MSIS will report more
frequently, (monthly vs. quarterly) the
amount of data collected through the
expanded dataset will enable efficient
processing to more efficiently satisfy
data collection needs, thus eliminating
additional similar duplicate current
reporting processes.
Form Number: CMS–R–284 (OCN
0938–0345). Frequency: Quarterly
(MSIS) and Monthly (T–MSIS). Affected
Public: State, Local, or Tribal
Governments. Number of Respondents:
51. Total Annual Responses: 816. Total
Annual Hours: 8,160. (For policy
questions regarding this collection
contact Kay Spence. at 410–786–1617.
For all other issues call 410–786–1326.)
To obtain copies of the supporting
statement and any related forms for the
proposed paperwork collections
referenced above, access CMS Web Site
address at https://www.cms.hhs.gov/
PaperworkReductionActof1995, or
Email your request, including your
address, phone number, OMB number,
and CMS document identifier, to
Paperwork@cms.hhs.gov, or call the
Reports Clearance Office on (410) 786–
1326.
To be assured consideration,
comments and recommendations for the
proposed information collections must
be received by the OMB desk officer at
the address below, no later than 5 p.m.
on January 2, 2013: OMB, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Attention: CMS Desk Officer, Fax
Number: (202) 395–6974, Email:
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov.
Dated: November 27, 2012.
Martique Jones,
Director, Regulations Development Group,
Division-B, Office of Strategic Operations and
Regulatory Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2012–29052 Filed 11–30–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
[CMS–4169–NC]
Medicare Program; Request for
Information To Aid in the Design and
Development of a Survey Regarding
Patient Experiences With Emergency
Department Care
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
AGENCY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
14:30 Nov 30, 2012
Jkt 229001
ACTION:
Request for information.
This document is a request for
information regarding consumer and
patient experiences with emergency
department care.
DATES: The information solicited in this
notice must be received at the address
provided below by February 1, 2013.
ADDRESSES: In responding to this
solicitation, please reply via email to
CMS ED_Survey@cms.hhs.gov or by
postal mail at Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services, Attention: Sai Ma,
Mailstop C1–14–18, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sai
Ma (410) 786–1479.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Background
In accordance with section 3011 of
the Affordable Care Act, the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS)
developed the National Quality Strategy
to create national aims and priorities to
guide local, state, and national efforts to
improve the quality of health care. This
strategy established three aims
supported by six priorities that focus on
better care, healthy people/healthy
communities, and affordable care.1 The
six priorities include: (1) Making care
safer by reducing harm caused by the
delivery of care; (2) ensuring that each
person and family are engaged as
partners in their care; (3) promoting
effective communication and
coordination of care; (4) promoting the
most effective prevention and treatment
practices for the leading causes of
mortality, starting with cardiovascular
disease; (5) working with communities
to promote wide use of best practices to
enable healthy living; and (6) making
quality care more affordable for
individuals, families, employers, and
governments by developing and
spreading new health care delivery
models Surveys focusing on the patient
and caregiver experience, including
those discussed later and the Emergency
Department care survey under
development, support the goals of the
National Quality Strategy for providing
better care.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) has already
implemented patient experience surveys
for health and drug plans, inpatient
hospitals, and home health agencies.
While CMS and the Agency for
1 Please see U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, Report to Congress, National
Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care,
(March 2011), available at https://
www.healthcare.gov/law/resources/reports/
nationalqualitystrategy032011.pdf.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) have developed additional
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems (CAHPS®)
surveys for in-center hemodialysis
facilities, nursing homes, and clinician
and group practices, none of these
surveys address consumers’ and
patients’ experiences with emergency
department services. A patient’s
experience in an emergency department
is an essential component of their
overall healthcare experience in a
hospital, and we believe that a patient
survey evaluating such care will further
support the HHS’s goals and priorities.
The target population for the
emergency department patient
experience of care survey is consumers/
patients and caregivers of patients who
received emergency department care.
The emergency department is a unique
environment within the health care
system, bridging the world of outpatient
and inpatient care. This makes existing
patient experience instruments designed
for either outpatient care or inpatient
care only partially relevant for capturing
patient experiences (for example, none
of the existing surveys addresses
patients’ experience regarding
transitions from emergency room to
inpatient care). Having a rigorous, welldesigned emergency department survey
will allow us to understand patients’
perspectives on their experiences in
emergency departments and how such
experiences change over time. This
information will ultimately be used to
help improve the quality of care patients
receive in emergency departments.
We are in the process of reviewing
potential topic areas, as well as publicly
available instruments and measures, for
the purpose of developing a consumer
and patient experience survey that will
enable objective comparisons of
emergency department experiences
across the country. The principal focus
is to develop a survey for consumers
and patients 18 years of age and older.
However, we are also interested in how
a survey could also be developed for
pediatric patients.
II. Solicitation of Information
We are soliciting the submission of
suggested topic areas (such as
‘‘communication with providers,’’ ‘‘pain
control’’ or ‘‘waiting time’’) as well as
publicly available instruments for
capturing patient experiences with
emergency department care. We are
interested in instruments and items that
can measure quality of care from the
patient’s and caregiver’s perspective,
including pediatric patients, and track
changes over time.
E:\FR\FM\03DEN1.SGM
03DEN1
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 232 / Monday, December 3, 2012 / Notices
We are looking for suggested topic
areas and publicly available instruments
in which—(1) The source of information
is from consumers and patients who
directly received care at an emergency
department or caregivers who were
directly involved in the care (for
example, parents of young children);
and (2) patients or caregivers identified
the information as important to them in
evaluating emergency department care
(for example, wait time, medical staff
and physician communication). Existing
instruments that have been tested, have
a high degree of reliability and validity,
and evidence of wide use is preferred.
The following information would be
especially helpful in any comments
responding to this request for
information:
• A brief cover letter summarizing the
information requested above for
submitted instruments and topic areas,
respectively, and how the submission
will help fulfill the intent of the patient
experiences survey;
• (Optional) Information about the
person submitting the material for the
purposes of follow up questions about
the submission which includes the
following:
++ Name.
++ Title.
++ Organization.
++ Mailing address.
++ Telephone number.
++ Email address.
++ Indication that the topic area or
instrument is publicly available.
• When submitting topic areas, we
encourage including to the extent
available the following information:
++ Detailed descriptions of the
suggested topic area(s) and specific
purpose(s).
++ Relevant peer-reviewed journal
articles or full citations.
• When submitting publicly available
instruments or survey questions, we
encourage including to the extent
available the following information:
++ Name of the instrument.
++ Copies of the full instrument in all
available languages.
++ Topic areas included in the
instrument.
++ Measures derived from the
instrument. Instrument reliability
(internal consistency, test-retest, etc)
and validity (content, construct,
criterion-related).
++ Results of cognitive testing.
++ Results of field testing.
++ Current use of the instrument
(who is using it, what it is being used
for, what population it is being used
with, how instrument findings are
reported, and by whom the findings are
used).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
14:30 Nov 30, 2012
Jkt 229001
++ Relevant peer-reviewed journal
articles or full citations.
++ CAHPS® trademark status.
++ Survey administration
instructions.
++ Data analysis instructions.
++ Guidelines for reporting survey
data.
We are developing this survey and
plan to submit it to AHRQ for
recognition as a Consumer Assessment
of Healthcare Providers and Systems
(CAHPS®) survey. The survey will be
developed in accordance with CAHPS®
Survey Design Principles and
implementation instructions will be
based on those for CAHPS® instruments
(https://www.cahps.AHRQ.gov/AboutCAHPS/Principles.aspx).
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.773, Medicare—Hospital
Insurance; and Program No. 93.774,
Medicare—Supplementary Medical
Insurance Program)
Dated: October 2, 2012.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2012–29104 Filed 11–30–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
[Docket No. FDA–2012–N–0477]
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for Office of
Management and Budget Review;
Comment Request; Investigational
Device Exemptions Reports and
Records
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is announcing
that a proposed collection of
information has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and clearance under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: Fax written comments on the
collection of information by January 2,
2013.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, Fax: 202–
395–7285, or emailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
71601
OMB control number 0910–0078. Also
include the FDA docket number found
in brackets in the heading of this
document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Gittleson, Office of Information
Management, Food and Drug
Administration, 1350 Piccard Dr., PI50–
400B, Rockville, MD 20850, 301–796–
5156, Daniel.Gittleson@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
compliance with 44 U.S.C. 3507, FDA
has submitted the following proposed
collection of information to OMB for
review and clearance.
Investigational Device Exemptions
Reports and Records—(OMB Control
Number 0910–0078)—Extension
Section 520(g) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the FD&C Act)
(21 U.S.C. 360j(g)) establishes the
statutory authority to collect
information regarding investigational
devices, and establishes rules under
which new medical devices may be
tested using human subjects in a clinical
setting. The Food and Drug
Administration Modernization Act of
1997 (Pub. L. 105–115) added section
520(g)(6) to the FD&C Act and permitted
changes to be made to either the
investigational device or to the clinical
protocol without FDA approval of an
investigational device exemption (IDE)
supplement. An IDE allows a device,
which would otherwise be subject to
provisions of the FD&C Act, such as
premarket notification or premarket
approval, to be used in investigations
involving human subjects in which the
safety and effectiveness of the device is
being studied. The purpose of part 812
(21 CFR part 812) is to encourage, to the
extent consistent with the protection of
public health and safety and with
ethical standards, the discovery and
development of useful devices intended
for human use. The IDE regulation is
designed to encourage the development
of useful medical devices and allow
investigators the maximum freedom
possible, without jeopardizing the
health and safety of the public or
violating ethical standards. To do this,
the regulation provides for different
levels of regulatory control, depending
on the level of potential risk the
investigational device presents to
human subjects. Investigations of
significant risk devices, ones that
present a potential for serious harm to
the rights, safety, or welfare of human
subjects, are subject to the full
requirements of the IDE regulation.
Nonsignificant risk device
investigations, i.e., devices that do not
present a potential for serious harm, are
E:\FR\FM\03DEN1.SGM
03DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 232 (Monday, December 3, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71600-71601]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-29104]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
[CMS-4169-NC]
Medicare Program; Request for Information To Aid in the Design
and Development of a Survey Regarding Patient Experiences With
Emergency Department Care
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document is a request for information regarding consumer
and patient experiences with emergency department care.
DATES: The information solicited in this notice must be received at the
address provided below by February 1, 2013.
ADDRESSES: In responding to this solicitation, please reply via email
to CMS ED_Survey@cms.hhs.gov or by postal mail at Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, Attention: Sai Ma, Mailstop C1-14-18, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sai Ma (410) 786-1479.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
In accordance with section 3011 of the Affordable Care Act, the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) developed the National
Quality Strategy to create national aims and priorities to guide local,
state, and national efforts to improve the quality of health care. This
strategy established three aims supported by six priorities that focus
on better care, healthy people/healthy communities, and affordable
care.\1\ The six priorities include: (1) Making care safer by reducing
harm caused by the delivery of care; (2) ensuring that each person and
family are engaged as partners in their care; (3) promoting effective
communication and coordination of care; (4) promoting the most
effective prevention and treatment practices for the leading causes of
mortality, starting with cardiovascular disease; (5) working with
communities to promote wide use of best practices to enable healthy
living; and (6) making quality care more affordable for individuals,
families, employers, and governments by developing and spreading new
health care delivery models Surveys focusing on the patient and
caregiver experience, including those discussed later and the Emergency
Department care survey under development, support the goals of the
National Quality Strategy for providing better care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Please see U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Report to Congress, National Strategy for Quality Improvement in
Health Care, (March 2011), available at https://www.healthcare.gov/law/resources/reports/nationalqualitystrategy032011.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has already
implemented patient experience surveys for health and drug plans,
inpatient hospitals, and home health agencies. While CMS and the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) have developed additional
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS[supreg])
surveys for in-center hemodialysis facilities, nursing homes, and
clinician and group practices, none of these surveys address consumers'
and patients' experiences with emergency department services. A
patient's experience in an emergency department is an essential
component of their overall healthcare experience in a hospital, and we
believe that a patient survey evaluating such care will further support
the HHS's goals and priorities.
The target population for the emergency department patient
experience of care survey is consumers/patients and caregivers of
patients who received emergency department care. The emergency
department is a unique environment within the health care system,
bridging the world of outpatient and inpatient care. This makes
existing patient experience instruments designed for either outpatient
care or inpatient care only partially relevant for capturing patient
experiences (for example, none of the existing surveys addresses
patients' experience regarding transitions from emergency room to
inpatient care). Having a rigorous, well-designed emergency department
survey will allow us to understand patients' perspectives on their
experiences in emergency departments and how such experiences change
over time. This information will ultimately be used to help improve the
quality of care patients receive in emergency departments.
We are in the process of reviewing potential topic areas, as well
as publicly available instruments and measures, for the purpose of
developing a consumer and patient experience survey that will enable
objective comparisons of emergency department experiences across the
country. The principal focus is to develop a survey for consumers and
patients 18 years of age and older. However, we are also interested in
how a survey could also be developed for pediatric patients.
II. Solicitation of Information
We are soliciting the submission of suggested topic areas (such as
``communication with providers,'' ``pain control'' or ``waiting time'')
as well as publicly available instruments for capturing patient
experiences with emergency department care. We are interested in
instruments and items that can measure quality of care from the
patient's and caregiver's perspective, including pediatric patients,
and track changes over time.
[[Page 71601]]
We are looking for suggested topic areas and publicly available
instruments in which--(1) The source of information is from consumers
and patients who directly received care at an emergency department or
caregivers who were directly involved in the care (for example, parents
of young children); and (2) patients or caregivers identified the
information as important to them in evaluating emergency department
care (for example, wait time, medical staff and physician
communication). Existing instruments that have been tested, have a high
degree of reliability and validity, and evidence of wide use is
preferred.
The following information would be especially helpful in any
comments responding to this request for information:
A brief cover letter summarizing the information requested
above for submitted instruments and topic areas, respectively, and how
the submission will help fulfill the intent of the patient experiences
survey;
(Optional) Information about the person submitting the
material for the purposes of follow up questions about the submission
which includes the following:
++ Name.
++ Title.
++ Organization.
++ Mailing address.
++ Telephone number.
++ Email address.
++ Indication that the topic area or instrument is publicly
available.
When submitting topic areas, we encourage including to the
extent available the following information:
++ Detailed descriptions of the suggested topic area(s) and
specific purpose(s).
++ Relevant peer-reviewed journal articles or full citations.
When submitting publicly available instruments or survey
questions, we encourage including to the extent available the following
information:
++ Name of the instrument.
++ Copies of the full instrument in all available languages.
++ Topic areas included in the instrument.
++ Measures derived from the instrument. Instrument reliability
(internal consistency, test-retest, etc) and validity (content,
construct, criterion-related).
++ Results of cognitive testing.
++ Results of field testing.
++ Current use of the instrument (who is using it, what it is being
used for, what population it is being used with, how instrument
findings are reported, and by whom the findings are used).
++ Relevant peer-reviewed journal articles or full citations.
++ CAHPS[supreg] trademark status.
++ Survey administration instructions.
++ Data analysis instructions.
++ Guidelines for reporting survey data.
We are developing this survey and plan to submit it to AHRQ for
recognition as a Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (CAHPS[supreg]) survey. The survey will be developed in
accordance with CAHPS[supreg] Survey Design Principles and
implementation instructions will be based on those for CAHPS[supreg]
instruments (https://www.cahps.AHRQ.gov/About-CAHPS/Principles.aspx).
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program No. 93.773,
Medicare--Hospital Insurance; and Program No. 93.774, Medicare--
Supplementary Medical Insurance Program)
Dated: October 2, 2012.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2012-29104 Filed 11-30-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P