Report Assesses Physician Experiences With PQRI
By News Staff
12/24/2008
Earlier this month, AAFP Board Chair Jim King, M.D., of Selmer, Tenn., blasted CMS for its bungling of the distribution of PQRI bonus payments and told CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems that if problems weren't addressed, physicians might refuse to participate in the program.
Summary of Submission Data
Of the more than 14 million quality data codes submitted, 51.6 percent were submitted correctly; 48.4 percent of submissions were invalid.
CMS says that nearly 16 percent of all eligible providers and groups submitted at least one quality data code during the 2007 PQRI reporting period. Of those 109,359 providers or groups,
- 92.5 percent submitted at least one quality data code that was valid;
- 64 percent correctly reported quality data on 80 percent of eligible cases for at least one measure;
- 52 percent earned an incentive payment by successfully reporting data on one to three applicable measures for 80 percent of applicable cases; and
- 1 percent were subject to the PQRI incentive cap.
Causes for Invalid Submissions
- Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System, or HCPCS, denominator codes (18.9 percent);
- diagnosis codes (13.9 percent);
- age for a measure's specific age parameter; and
- patient gender for a specific measure.
Feedback Report Complaints
The agency also notes that the purpose of the reports -- which were required by the PQRI business rules -- was to provide information related to reporting and incentive money earned. The reports were never intended to give physicians quality improvement information, says CMS.
In response to complaints that the 2007 feedback reports were difficult to understand, CMS promises that the 2008 feedback reports will be redesigned to provide more helpful information to PQRI participants.
Physicians with questions about accessing their PQRI feedback reports should refer to updated articles in CMS' online publication MLN Matters.
Physician Outreach in 2009
CMS pledges to offer tools such as
- monthly provider calls;
- an expanded frequently-asked-question page on CMS' PQRI Web site;
- updated measure specifications, tip sheets and fact sheets;
- educational sessions with Medicare carriers and contractors;
- assistance from CMS regional office staff and the provision of conference speakers on PQRI topics; and
- CMS credit for new Web-based courses on PQRI and electronic prescribing topics.
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