The voluntary models are an array of “new payment options that are all designed to reward [physicians] for keeping people healthy, improving quality of life and delivering positive health outcomes,” Ms. Verma said. “These models are intended to allow clinicians to focus on patient care, not billing, and to do what they’ve been trained to do.”
One option, the Primary Care First model, is aimed at small and solo primary care practices.
The model will “provide participating practices with a predictable payment stream, including a partial cap and some fee-for-service spend,” Ms. Verma said, adding that payments will be adjusted for performance in reducing hospitalizations.
Under Primary Care First, practices will receive a flat payment per beneficiary, allowing clinicians to focus more on care than on revenue cycle management, according to CMS. Practices will be able to receive bonuses of up to 50% or penalties of up to 10%, based on performance, as an incentive to reduce costs and improve quality. Performance will be assessed and paid quarterly. Specifics on the per-beneficiary payment were not released.
Participation in Primary Care First is limited to primary care professionals certified in internal medicine, general medicine, geriatric medicine, family medicine, and hospice and palliative medicine. Practices must provide services to at least 125 Medicare beneficiaries and primary care services must account for at least 70% of billing revenue. Practices also must have experience in value-based payments.
There also will be an option for enhanced payment for caring for patients with chronic illnesses.
“When a patient stays healthy and out of the hospital, these practices will get paid a bonus,” Secretary Azar said. “But if the patient ends up sicker than expected, these practices will bear responsibility for the extra spending up to a certain share of their practices’ revenue.”
More information about participating in the Primary Care First model will be available later in the spring of 2019, with the model launching in 2020.