What to know before MCP model participation decisions
CMS will select participants for the Making Care Primary model soon. Once accepted, primary care practices will have to decide whether they’ll join...
CMS’ Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Advanced program will soon kick off a two-year program extension through 2025. Model Year 7 (Jan. 1 - Dec. 31, 2024) will be the first time that current participants (acute care hospitals and physician groups) can update their episode of care selections since 2020. MY7 is also only the second time since BPCIA launched (2018) that CMS will allow new providers to join. Applications were due May 31, 2023.
Whether you’re a new applicant or a current participant looking to update your episode selections to improve results, it’s never too early to prepare. BPCIA participants take on immediate full risk. This makes it critical to choose episodes that present the greatest savings, incentive and quality improvement opportunities.
For optimal BPCIA episode selection, providers must analyze their performance from the historic baseline period and design their clinical effectiveness strategies accordingly. It’s important to ask questions in five key areas: clinical buy-in, sufficient volume, actionable cost, manageable readmissions and achievable targets.
Even long-time BPCIA participants must ensure their clinicians stay engaged, especially if they plan to alter episode bundles. As noted by Alyssa Dahl, DataGen’s senior director, advanced analytics, “Stakeholders must be willing to do the hard work to improve care coordination, identify preferred networks and manage the process through completion.”
Key questions to support buy-in:
To succeed in BPCIA, participants must have sufficient episode volume — at least 100 episodes annually. Sufficient episode volume helps reduce random cost variation and improves clinical intervention assessment. Providers must plan for the varying levels of cost variation inherent in different types of episodes.
Key questions regarding episode volume:
Care management teams must be able to target enough actionable costs to generate savings above the BPCIA program discount. Actionable costs are all payments made by Medicare to providers during the post-anchor period of the episode, excluding professional services. DataGen recommends actionable costs account for at least 50% of the overall episode spend.
Key questions regarding actionable costs:
BPCIA participants must have a readmissions management program to better coordinate patient care and help reduce overall episode costs. Knowing when readmissions occur, from what post-acute care setting and for which diagnostic reasons can help inform a participant’s implementation strategy.
Key questions about readmissions:
Providers considering BPCIA participation must determine if the preliminary target price for an episode category is achievable for their organization. BPCIA target prices take into account the provider’s historic efficiency, current case mix and peer group trends.
Key questions when reviewing target prices:
Every few months, providers should ask themselves the questions above, including the most important one: Has my hospital or physician group put itself at risk for the right reasons?
DataGen can help. Reach out today for baseline data analysis and consultation that can help you optimize episode selection and BPCIA performance.
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