Hospitals participating in the Medicare Bundled Payment for Care Improvement Program reduced spending for lower extremity joint replacements over three years by an average 1.6% more than hospitals that did not participate, with no change in quality, according to a study reported last week in Health Affairs. Patient selection accounted for 27% of the savings. The study compared changes in spending and outcomes for lower extremity joint replacement episodes and patient, hospital and market characteristics for BPCI and non-BPCI hospitals and markets between October 2013 and December 2016. The authors said the savings support Medicare’s decision to expand voluntary bundles through BPCI Advanced. A systemic review of 20 other studies on bundled payment published last week in Health Affairs also found that bundled payment maintains or improves quality while lowering costs for lower extremity joint replacement, but not for other conditions or procedures. The authors said the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services should continue to scale up the BPCI and Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement programs for lower extremity joint replacement, but account for differences in patient characteristics and risk, and consider changes to certain episode design features.

Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services March 11 issued guidance to state survey agency directors clarifying and reinforcing the roles and…
Headline
The Joint Economic Committee March 10 released a report that found Medicare Part B premiums rose last year due to Medicare Advantage overpayments. The…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Feb. 25 released a request for information on potential regulatory changes in a possible future…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Feb. 23 announced the development of its Medicare App Library. As part of the agency’s Health Technology…
Headline
The Congressional Budget Office has projected that the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund will have sufficient funds to pay full benefits until 2040 — 12 years…
Headline
A JAMA study published Feb. 18 found that 10% of Medicare Advantage beneficiaries — approximately 2.9 million — have needed to find other health coverage for…