The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services today issued a rule finalizing changes to the Medicare Shared Savings Program, including to the structure of payments made to accountable care organizations and other aspects of participation in the MSSP. The changes build on MSSP policies CMS finalized earlier this year in the calendar year 2019 physician fee schedule final rule.
 
The final rule includes policies to:

  • Redesign the MSSP to include only two tracks – Basic and Enhanced.
  • Move ACOs to two-sided risk more quickly by allowing a maximum of two or three years of participation in upside-only risk.
  • Reduce shared savings rates for upside-only models from 50 to 40 percent.
  • Differentiate between “low-” and “high-revenue” ACOs and require high-revenue ACOs to take on more risk more quickly.
  • Increase the length of agreement periods to at least five years.
  • Allow all ACOs to elect prospective beneficiary assignment or preliminary prospective assignment with retrospective reconciliation.
  • Expand the use of regional factors in the benchmarking methodology.
  • Allow ACOs’ risk scores to decrease by an unlimited amount, without the proposed 3 percent cap.
  • Increase access to waivers of telehealth and other Medicare payment requirements. 

“Today’s final rule will not be helpful in the move toward value-based care,” said Tom Nickels, AHA executive vice president of government relations and public policy. “None of the actions taken today will better empower ACOs to maximize their contribution to patient care and are not pathways for improving the value of the program for patients. We remain opposed to CMS drastically shortening the length of time in which ACOs can participate in an upside-only model. Hospitals and health systems have asked for a more gradual pathway because building a successful ACO that is able to take on financial risk requires significant investments in time, effort and finances.”
 
CMS also released the financial and quality results for the second performance year of the Next Generation ACO Model, which requires participants to assume the highest level of risk out of all CMS ACO programs in exchange for greater regulatory flexibility. The results show more than $164 million in net savings to the Medicare Trust Funds from the model in 2017 across 44 ACOs, with strong performance on quality metrics.

Related News Articles

Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has released an operational guide for Medicare-enrolled providers and suppliers on the Wasteful and…
Headline
A report by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General found that many Medicare Advantage and Medicaid managed care plans…
Headline
Medicare open enrollment for 2026 began Oct. 15 and runs through Dec. 7. During the annual enrollment period, Medicare-eligible individuals can check their…
Headline
Members of the AHA Board of Trustees Oct.14 participated in a panel on the future of rural health care during the Sanford Rural Health Summit in Sioux Falls, S…
Headline
The AHA Oct. 3 responded to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission’s recent analysis on the financial impacts of Medicare Advantage enrollment growth on…
Headline
The federal government shutdown will continue as the Senate Oct. 3 failed to adopt a government funding deal. The latest attempt to pass the House-passed…