1 Discern Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
2 National Pharmaceutical Council, Washington, DC.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2017 Feb;23(2):174-181. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2017.23.2.174.
Payment for health care services, including oncology services, is shifting from volume-based fee-for-service to value-based accountable care. The objective of accountable care is to support providers with flexibility and resources to reform care delivery, accompanied by accountability for maintaining or improving outcomes while lowering costs. These changes depend on health care payers, systems, physicians, and patients having meaningful measures to assess care delivery and outcomes and to balance financial incentives for lowering costs while providing greater value. Gaps in accountable care measure sets may cause missed signals of problems in care and missed opportunities for improvement. Measures to balance financial incentives may be particularly important for oncology, where high cost and increasingly targeted diagnostics and therapeutics intersect with the highly complex and heterogeneous needs and preferences of cancer patients. Moreover, the concept of value in cancer care, defined as the measure of outcomes achieved per costs incurred, is rarely incorporated into performance measurement. This article analyzes gaps in oncology measures in accountable care, discusses challenging measurement issues, and offers strategies for improving oncology measurement. Discern Health analyzed gaps in accountable care measure sets for 10 cancer conditions that were selected based on incidence and prevalence; impact on cost and mortality; a diverse range of high-cost diagnostic procedures and treatment modalities (e.g., genomic tumor testing, molecularly targeted therapies, and stereotactic radiotherapy); and disparities or performance gaps in patient care. We identified gaps by comparing accountable care set measures with high-priority measurement opportunities derived from practice guidelines developed by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network and other oncology specialty societies. We found significant gaps in accountable care measure sets across all 10 conditions. For each gap, we searched for available measures not already being used in programs. Where existing measures did not cover gaps, we recommended refinements to existing measures or proposed measures for development. We shared the results of the measure gap analysis with a roundtable of national experts in cancer care and oncology measurement. During a web meeting and an in-person meeting, the roundtable reviewed the gap analysis and identified priority opportunities for improving measurement. The group determined that overreliance on condition-specific process measures is problematic because of rapidly changing evidence and increasing personalization of cancer care. The group's primary recommendation for enhancing measure sets was to prioritize and develop effective cross-cutting measures that assess clinical and patient-reported outcomes, including shared decision making, care planning, and symptom control. The group also prioritized certain safety and structural measures to complement condition-specific process measures. Further, the group explored strategies for using clinical pathways and devising layered measurement approaches to improve measurement for accountable care. This article presents the roundtable's conclusions and recommendations for next steps.
Funding for this project was provided by the National Pharmaceutical Council (NPC). Westrich and Dubois are employees of the NPC. Valuck is a partner with Discern Health. Blaisdell and Dugan are employed by Discern Health. McClellan reports fees for serving on the Johnson & Johnson Board of Directors. Dugan reports consulting fees from the National Committee for Quality Assurance and Pharmacy Quality Alliance. The remaining authors report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article. Study concept and design were contributed by Blaisdell, Valuck, Dugan, and Westrich. Blaisdell took the lead in data collection, along with Valuck and Dugan, and data interpretation was performed by Valuck, Blaisdell, Westrich, and Dubois. The manuscript was written by Blaisdell, along with Valuck and Dugan, and revised by Valuck, Westrich, Miller, and McClellan.
医疗保健服务的支付方式正从按服务项目收费的基于数量的模式向基于价值的责任制医疗模式转变。责任制医疗的目的是为提供者提供灵活性和资源,以改革医疗服务的提供方式,并在降低成本的同时对维持或改善结果负责。这些变化取决于医疗保健支付方、系统、医生和患者是否有有意义的措施来评估医疗服务的提供和结果,并平衡降低成本和提供更大价值的经济激励。责任制医疗措施集的差距可能导致对护理问题的信号缺失和改进机会的错失。平衡经济激励措施的措施可能对肿瘤学尤为重要,因为高成本和日益靶向的诊断和治疗与癌症患者高度复杂和异质的需求和偏好相交织。此外,癌症护理中价值的概念,即每单位成本实现的结果衡量,很少被纳入绩效衡量。本文分析了责任制医疗中肿瘤学措施的差距,讨论了具有挑战性的测量问题,并提出了改进肿瘤学测量的策略。Discern Health 分析了基于发病率和患病率选择的 10 种癌症状况的责任制医疗措施集的差距;对成本和死亡率的影响;各种高成本的诊断程序和治疗方式(例如,基因组肿瘤测试、分子靶向治疗和立体定向放射治疗);以及患者护理中的差异或绩效差距。我们通过将责任制医疗集措施与国家综合癌症网络和其他肿瘤学专业协会制定的实践指南中衍生的高优先级测量机会进行比较来确定差距。我们发现所有 10 种情况下责任制医疗措施集都存在显著差距。对于每个差距,我们都在寻找尚未在项目中使用的可用措施。在现有措施无法覆盖差距的情况下,我们建议对现有措施进行改进或提出新的措施供开发。我们与癌症护理和肿瘤学测量方面的全国专家进行了圆桌会议,分享了措施差距分析的结果。在网络会议和现场会议上,专家组审查了差距分析,并确定了改进测量的优先机会。专家组确定,过度依赖特定于疾病的过程措施是有问题的,因为证据正在迅速变化,癌症护理的个性化程度也在不断提高。专家组增强措施集的主要建议是优先和开发有效的跨领域措施,以评估临床和患者报告的结果,包括共同决策、护理计划和症状控制。专家组还优先考虑某些安全和结构措施,以补充特定于疾病的过程措施。此外,专家组探讨了使用临床路径和设计分层测量方法来提高责任制医疗测量的策略。本文介绍了专家组对下一步的结论和建议。
本项目的资金由国家制药委员会(NPC)提供。Westrich 和 Dubois 是 NPC 的员工。Valuck 是 Discern Health 的合伙人。Blaisdell 和 Dugan 受雇于 Discern Health。McClellan 报告担任强生公司董事会成员的费用。Dugan 报告了来自全国质量保证协会和药房质量联盟的咨询费。其余作者报告与本文主题有利益冲突的关系或财务利益。研究概念和设计由 Blaisdell、Valuck、Dugan 和 Westrich 贡献。Blaisdell 与 Valuck 和 Dugan 一起领导数据收集,数据解释由 Valuck、Blaisdell、Westrich 和 Dubois 进行。手稿由 Blaisdell 撰写,与 Valuck 和 Dugan 一起修订,并由 Valuck、Westrich、Miller 和 McClellan 修订。