In response to the Outpatient Prospective Payment Proposed Rule, Premier healthcare alliance has released a statement arguing that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services rule inappropriately places reimbursement risk by fudging statutory requirements to post value-based purchasing measures for at least one year before the performance period, according to a Premier news release.
The statement, authored by Premier's Senior Vice President of Public Affairs Blair Childs, states that because financial pressures continue to increase for hospitals, "now is not the time to take further income away from hospitals using ineffective pay-for-performance measures."
Congress has required CMS to finalize measures for an effective VBP program and post data to Hospital Compare, allowing hospitals sufficient time to prepare for the improvements and understand how their performance could affect future payment. For hospital-acquired conditions and AHRQ composite measures, the performance data is not complete or posted.
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The statement, authored by Premier's Senior Vice President of Public Affairs Blair Childs, states that because financial pressures continue to increase for hospitals, "now is not the time to take further income away from hospitals using ineffective pay-for-performance measures."
Congress has required CMS to finalize measures for an effective VBP program and post data to Hospital Compare, allowing hospitals sufficient time to prepare for the improvements and understand how their performance could affect future payment. For hospital-acquired conditions and AHRQ composite measures, the performance data is not complete or posted.
Related Articles on Premier:
Premier COO Mike Alkire: The Future of Healthcare Delivery Depends on Scaling Innovation
Skagit Valley Hospital in Washington Saves $1M After Strengthening Supply Chain Management
Hawaii Hospitals Partner With State's Largest payor on Value-Based Program