News
HHS to doctors: We hear your health IT woes
When ordering aspirin takes eight clicks on the computer and ordering full-strength aspirin takes 16, you know that health IT has become a...
Meaningful use would get a new name and an emphasis on flexibility under a proposal from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
“We’re proposing today to replace meaningful use in the physician office with a new effort that moves the emphasis away from the use of information technology to one that supports patient care, supported by better and more connected technology,” CMS Acting Administrator Andy Slavitt said during an April 27 press teleconference to introduce the changes.
“The program, Advancing Care Information, is designed to be far simpler, less burdensome, and more flexible,” Mr. Slavitt said. “If this proposal is finalized, it will replace the current meaningful use program for physician offices and will be effective January 1, 2017, along with the other components of the MACRA implementations.”
Mr. Slavitt and Dr. Karen DeSalvo, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, noted in a blog postthat the improvements “should increase providers’ ability to use technology in ways that are more relevant to their needs and the needs of their patients.”
The changes come as part of a larger proposed regulation to implement the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, released online April 27 and scheduled for publication in the Federal Register on May 9.
MACRA will create two systems under which doctors will be paid for the quality of care they provide. The changes to the meaningful use program will affect physicians who choose to participate in the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). Under the proposed rule, efforts under the new Advancing Care Information program would account for 25% of the score used to determine pay for office-based physicians under Medicare.
The key difference between the proposed program and meaningful use is that physicians will no longer be faced with an all-or-nothing requirement for meeting criteria to qualify for extra payments under the MIPS program.
Advancing Care Information has been divided into two parts. The first is reporting measures and has been streamlined to 11 measures, down from 18. Reporting on computerized physician order entry and clinical decision support measures have been eliminated.
The second part is based on performance measures, with multiple pathways to achieve those targets, which allow physicians to select the measures that best align with their needs.
There also is an opportunity to earn an extra point if a physician is reporting to more than one public health registry.
“We’ve also taken this opportunity to really focus more on aligning quality, on seeing that we are streamlining workflow and creating opportunities for electronic health record and health IT developers to create products that really meet the needs and expectations of clinicians and providers on the front lines,” Dr. DeSalvo said during the April 27 call.
The proposal also emphasizes interoperability, information exchange, and security measures and requires that patients be able to access their health care information easily through the use of apps and other consumer-friendly technology, according to the blog post.
The proposed rule also emphasizes open data sharing and interoperability, something that has been a continual drag on the current meaningful use program.
Comments on the proposed rule can be made at www.regulations.gov and are due June 26.
When ordering aspirin takes eight clicks on the computer and ordering full-strength aspirin takes 16, you know that health IT has become a...
Meaningful use will be phased out this year. What will replace it? CMS says physicians should stay tuned for more announcements to come about...