ACOs: Health Care?s Big Project
Health News

ACOs: Health Care?s Big Project


Medicare beneficiaries who are patients of 32 groups of health care providers have started to receive letters informing them that they are now patients of an Accountable Care Organization, or ACO.

ACOs are the focus of a new Medicare demonstration project that is testing out a new model for health care delivery and payment. The ACO demonstration is one of many demonstrations that the Affordable Care Act has planned.

The ACO project relies on a coordinated care system: organization and communication between doctors, hospitals, and other care providers to better coordinate care for patients. The improvements in care come from the potential that lies within sharing information about a patient between medical offices, avoiding unnecessary repeated procedures, and other improvements in the efficiency of medical care providers. The efficiency, along with the improved care being given to patients, is said to lead to savings for the medical care providers. Better care means healthier patients, which ultimately means that patients will be less likely to need some of the more expensive medical care, such as visits to the emergency room. 

The demonstration is led by Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). The ACO demonstration is the third of its type that CMS has undertaken; following a demonstration that began in 2000, and a second in 2005, that investigated the efforts of care groups that were already coordinated to a certain degree, and the benefits that lay within that coordination. For this demonstration, health care provider groups will be measured on 33 points of quality and efficiency in treating Medicare patients, while receiving in return one of two different types of bundled payments from Medicare. The first package allows for less risk, in that CMS will act as a financial buffer if the ACO model is not successful, but a small percentage of the savings, while the second offers the reverse situation to provider groups.

32 groups signed up to participate in this demonstration, including many programs in the Midwest, such as the OSF Healthcare System in Central Illinois. Each of the participants represents one ACO, that is, a coordinated group of physicians, many of which were not coordinated prior to this demonstration. Each participating group must meet specific ACO criteria, such as having established an adequate organizational structure that accounts for not only medical care, but also the necessary administrative and legal processes that go along with coordinated care. Furthermore, all participating ACOs must have 5,000 or more Medicare participants participating, and must have defined the ways in which they will be working to improve the care for those patients, as well as the metrics they will use to measure that quality. If the demonstration goes as planned, the ACO groups will be able to improve the health of their patients in such a way that cuts down on costs, saving the ACO and Medicare money.
              
 If successful, the ACO demonstration could mean bigger changes down the line for health care reform.  In essence, the program uproots the current fee-for-service health care model, in which medical care providers are paid for each service they provide for patients, for a new one. As Ezra Klein phrased it in a blog post: ?The hope is to do nothing less than change the basic business model of American medicine from making money by getting patients to spend more money to making money by saving patients money.?

Responses
Although the responses to the ACO demonstration all seem to emphasize that changes to the current health care system must be made, the demonstration has stirred up criticism from those in the medical sector:

The CMS has been listening to these concerns, and although a successful outcome is still far from guaranteed, they have made some alterations to the original ACO proposal, with things like advanced payments to provider groups to help offset coordination start-up costs, increasing financial incentives while reducing financial risk, and allowing for a broader variety of governance structures within the organizations.  However, the outcomes, both positive and negative, remain to be seen. 




- Funds Available For Critical-access Hospitals, Rural Health-care Providers Through New Federal Program
Critical-access hospitals, physician-owned organizations and rural health-care providers are now eligible for federal funds that will help them implement necessary infrastructure and information-technology systems, the U.S. Department of Health and Human...

- Accountable Care Entities (aces): A New Coordinated Care Model In Illinois
SB 26 to be signed by the Governor into law on July 22, 2013, will expand Medicaid to over 600,000 new potential enrollees but it will also usher in a new form of coordinated care in Illinois for these new Medicaid enrollees as well as existing families...

- Update:illinois? Care Coordination And Managed Care System
In January 2011, the Illinois legislature passed a bill that requires 50% of the State?s Medicaid population to be covered in a risk-based care coordination program by 2015. Subsequently, in May 2012, the State Legislature passed the SMART Act, cutting...

- Moving Forward: Current Waivers For Coordinated Care Projects In Illinois
?Care Coordination,? along with related terms like ?managed care? and ?medical home? have become the buzz words of health care reform. The terms refer to new types of health care delivery models that many states and programs are turning to as the key...

- What Lies Ahead For The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act In 2012?
2011, the first full year for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), is coming to a close. As we?ve written about in the past blog posts, Facebook posts, tweets or on our home page, the year saw many ACA developments, from the announcement...



Health News








.