Friswold Alec P, von Keudell Arvind, Beagles Clay, Brameier Devon, Harris Mitchel B, Bono Christopher M, Bernstein David N
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2025 May 28. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000003566.
The largest value-based payment system in the United States is the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), implemented by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). MIPS was designed to adjust physician reimbursement based on performance across several categories. However, concerns arose that MIPS may inadvertently penalize physicians caring for patients of high social risk. To address this concern, CMS introduced the Complex Patient Bonus (CPB), which provides a performance bonus for serving a greater proportion of dually eligible, or socially at-risk (as defined by CMS), patients. In orthopaedic surgery, there is a paucity of evidence assessing MIPS performance (such as scores and payment adjustments), the association between patient social risk and MIPS scores, and the relationship of the newly implemented CPB with performance scores.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: In this study, we asked: (1) How do orthopaedic surgeons fare in MIPS based on positive, negative, and bonus payment adjustments? (2) Do orthopaedic surgeons caring for more socially at-risk patients receive worse performance scores and payment adjustments than orthopaedic surgeons who treat fewer socially at-risk patients? (3) To what extent is the CPB associated with differences in MIPS scores and payment adjustments for orthopaedic surgeons caring for a greater proportion of socially at-risk patients?
Orthopaedic surgeons participating in MIPS in 2021 were identified using publicly available, nationally representative, standardized CMS data sets, consistent with prior studies assessing clinician performance under MIPS. In keeping with prior studies and consistent with how CMS defines social risk for the purpose of adjusting MIPS performance and payments using the CPB, dual eligibility for Medicare and Medicaid was used as a proxy for social risk. Surgeons were stratified into quintiles based on the proportion of patients dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid. To answer the first question about how orthopaedic surgeons, in aggregate, perform in MIPS, CMS MIPS outcome data were used to quantify the proportion of surgeons who received a positive or negative payment adjustment, an exceptional performance bonus, and a maximum payment penalty. To address the second question regarding the association between caring for socially at-risk patients and MIPS performance, MIPS scores and payment adjustments were compared between surgeons in the highest and lowest quintiles of patient social risk, as determined by the proportion of dually eligible patients in each surgeon's practice per CMS definition. To evaluate the extent to which the CPB is associated with differences in MIPS performance, multivariable regression was used to assess whether the proportion of socially at-risk patients in a surgeon's practice was associated with differences in MIPS scores, payment adjustments, and exceptional performance bonuses, with and without the CPB.
Regarding how orthopaedic surgeons performed in MIPS, 97% (9415 of 9707) of orthopaedic surgeons in the study received a positive payment adjustment, and 0.5% (50 of 9707) received the maximum penalty. When comparing surgeons caring for more socially at-risk patients with those caring for fewer (mean ± SD proportion of dual eligible patients 31% ± 11% versus 2% ± 2%; p < 0.001), surgeons in the highest social risk quintile achieved higher MIPS scores (with CPB 94 versus 91, p < 0.001; without CPB 90 versus 88, p = 0.001). However, no difference in payment adjustments was observed between surgeons caring for the highest and lowest proportion of socially at-risk patients (lowest quintile, any positive MIPS score adjustment 96% [1872 of 1943] versus highest quintile, any positive MIPS score adjustment 96% [1870 of 1942]; p = 0.93). In examining the role of the CPB, caring for a higher proportion of socially at-risk patients was associated with a higher MIPS score with the CPB (β 1.9 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.51 to 3.20]; p = 0.007), but not without the CPB (β 0.6 [95% CI -0.79 to 2.02]; p = 0.39). No association was found between the proportion of socially at-risk patients cared for and receipt of an exceptional performance bonus (odds ratio [OR] 1.3 [95% CI 0.95 to 1.72]; p = 0.10) or positive payment adjustment (OR: 0.8 [95% CI 0.46 to 1.34]; p = 0.37).
Our findings highlight potential disconnect between MIPS performance and financial implications, particularly for surgeons treating more socially at-risk patients. The lack of differentiation in performance outcomes, evidenced by nearly all participating surgeons receiving a positive adjustment in a budget-neutral program, raises concerns about how MIPS measures and rewards performance. As new value-based payment models continue to be introduced, including those with greater downside or variation in payment adjustments, ensuring appropriate risk-adjustment is crucial to their success and achieving buy-in from practicing orthopaedic surgeons. For orthopaedic surgeons, these findings may contextualize their MIPS performance, clarify the limited role that payment adjustments play in recognizing surgeons who care for more complex or socially at-risk patients, and inform how they engage with institutional quality initiatives or advocate for more meaningful, clinically oriented performance measures. Future studies should evaluate whether a narrower set of episode-based, patient-centric metrics may better reflect the quality of surgical care provided and support outcome-focused value-based payment models.
Level III, therapeutic study.
美国最大的基于价值的支付系统是由医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心(CMS)实施的基于绩效的激励支付系统(MIPS)。MIPS旨在根据多个类别的绩效来调整医生的报销费用。然而,有人担心MIPS可能会无意中惩罚那些照顾社会风险高的患者的医生。为了解决这一担忧,CMS引入了复杂患者奖金(CPB),该奖金为服务更大比例的双重资格患者或社会风险患者(如CMS所定义)提供绩效奖金。在骨科手术中,评估MIPS绩效(如分数和支付调整)、患者社会风险与MIPS分数之间的关联以及新实施的CPB与绩效分数之间关系的证据很少。
问题/目的:在本研究中,我们提出以下问题:(1)根据正向、负向和奖金支付调整,骨科医生在MIPS中的表现如何?(2)与治疗社会风险患者较少的骨科医生相比,治疗社会风险患者较多的骨科医生是否获得更差的绩效分数和支付调整?(3)对于照顾社会风险患者比例更高的骨科医生,CPB在多大程度上与MIPS分数和支付调整的差异相关?
使用公开可用的、具有全国代表性的标准化CMS数据集识别2021年参与MIPS的骨科医生,这与之前评估MIPS下临床医生绩效的研究一致。与之前的研究一致,并与CMS为使用CPB调整MIPS绩效和支付而定义社会风险的方式一致,将医疗保险和医疗补助的双重资格用作社会风险的代理指标。根据医疗保险和医疗补助双重资格患者的比例,将外科医生分为五个五分位数。为了回答关于骨科医生总体上在MIPS中表现如何的第一个问题,使用CMS MIPS结果数据来量化获得正向或负向支付调整、卓越绩效奖金和最大支付罚款的外科医生比例。为了解决关于照顾社会风险患者与MIPS绩效之间关联的第二个问题,比较了患者社会风险最高和最低五分位数的外科医生的MIPS分数和支付调整,社会风险由每个外科医生实践中根据CMS定义的双重资格患者比例确定。为了评估CPB在多大程度上与MIPS绩效差异相关,使用多变量回归来评估外科医生实践中社会风险患者的比例与MIPS分数、支付调整和卓越绩效奖金的差异之间是否存在关联,有无CPB的情况均进行分析。
关于骨科医生在MIPS中的表现,研究中的97%(9707名中的9415名)骨科医生获得了正向支付调整,0.5%(9707名中的50名)获得了最大罚款。当比较治疗社会风险患者较多的外科医生与治疗较少的外科医生时(双重资格患者的平均±标准差比例分别为31%±11%和2%±2%;p<0.001),社会风险最高五分位数的外科医生获得了更高的MIPS分数(有CPB时为94分对91分,p<0.001;无CPB时为90分对88分,p = 0.001)。然而,治疗社会风险患者比例最高和最低的外科医生在支付调整方面没有差异(最低五分位数,任何正向MIPS分数调整为96%[1943名中的1872名]对最高五分位数,任何正向MIPS分数调整为96%[1942名中的1870名];p = 0.93)。在研究CPB的作用时,照顾社会风险患者比例较高与有CPB时的MIPS分数较高相关(β 1.9[95%置信区间(CI)0.51至3.20];p = 0.007),但无CPB时则不然(β 0.6[95%CI -0.79至2.02];p = 0.39)。未发现所照顾的社会风险患者比例与获得卓越绩效奖金(优势比[OR] 1.3[95%CI 0.95至1.72];p = 0.10)或正向支付调整(OR:0.8[95%CI 0.46至1.34];p = 0.37)之间存在关联。
我们的研究结果突出了MIPS绩效与财务影响之间的潜在脱节,特别是对于治疗社会风险更高患者的外科医生。几乎所有参与的外科医生在一个预算中性的项目中都获得了正向调整,这表明绩效结果缺乏区分度,这引发了人们对MIPS如何衡量和奖励绩效的担忧。随着新的基于价值的支付模式不断推出,包括那些在支付调整方面有更大下行风险或差异的模式,确保适当的风险调整对于其成功以及获得执业骨科医生的认可至关重要。对于骨科医生来说,这些研究结果可能有助于他们了解自己在MIPS中的表现,阐明支付调整在认可照顾更复杂或社会风险更高患者的外科医生方面所起的有限作用,并为他们如何参与机构质量倡议或倡导更有意义的、以临床为导向的绩效衡量提供参考。未来的研究应该评估一组更窄的基于事件、以患者为中心的指标是否可能更好地反映所提供的手术护理质量,并支持以结果为导向的基于价值的支付模式。
III级,治疗性研究。