Friedberg Mark W, Martsolf Grant R, Tomoaia-Cotisel Andrada, Mendel Peter, McBain Ryan K, Raaen Laura, Kandrack Ryan, Qureshi Nabeel Shariq, Etchegaray Jason Michel, Briscombe Brian, Hussey Peter S
Rand Health Q. 2020 Jun 15;9(1):2. eCollection 2020 Jun.
Through the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) and Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) programs, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has encouraged primary care practices to invest in "comprehensive primary care" capabilities. Empirical evidence suggests these capabilities are under-reimbursed or not reimbursed under prevailing fee-for-service payment models. To help CMS design alternative payment models (APMs) that reimburse the costs of these capabilities, the authors developed a method for estimating related practice expenses. Fifty practices, sampled for diversity across CPC+ participation status, geographic region, rural status, size, and parent-organization affiliation, completed the study. Researchers developed a mixed-methods strategy, beginning with interviews of practice leaders to identify their capabilities and the types of costs incurred. This was followed by researcher-assisted completion of a workbook tailored to each practice, which gathered related labor and nonlabor costs. In a final interview, practice leaders reviewed cost estimates and made any needed corrections before approval. A main goal was to address a persistent question faced by CMS: When practices reported widely divergent costs for a given capability, was that divergence due to practices having different prices for the same capability or from their having substantially different capabilities? The cost estimation method developed in this project collected detailed data on practice capabilities and their costs. However, the small sample did not allow quantitative estimation of the contributions of service level and pricing to the variation in overall costs. This cost estimation method, deployed on a larger scale, could generate robust data to inform new payment models aimed at incentivizing and sustaining comprehensive primary care.
通过综合初级保健(CPC)和综合初级保健升级版(CPC+)项目,医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)鼓励初级保健机构投资于“综合初级保健”能力。实证证据表明,在现行的按服务收费支付模式下,这些能力的报销不足或未得到报销。为了帮助CMS设计能够报销这些能力成本的替代支付模式(APM),作者开发了一种估算相关机构费用的方法。研究选取了50家机构,根据其在CPC+参与状态、地理区域、农村状态、规模和母组织隶属关系等方面的多样性进行抽样,这些机构完成了该研究。研究人员制定了一种混合方法策略,首先对机构负责人进行访谈,以确定他们具备的能力以及产生的成本类型。随后,研究人员协助各机构完成一本量身定制的工作手册,该手册收集了相关的劳动力和非劳动力成本。在最后一次访谈中,机构负责人在批准前审查了成本估算并进行了必要的修正。一个主要目标是解决CMS一直面临的问题:当机构报告给定能力的成本差异很大时,这种差异是由于相同能力的价格不同,还是由于它们具有实质上不同的能力?本项目开发的成本估算方法收集了有关机构能力及其成本的详细数据。然而,样本量较小,无法对服务水平和定价对总成本变化的贡献进行定量估算。这种成本估算方法若能大规模应用,可生成有力数据,为旨在激励和维持综合初级保健的新支付模式提供参考。