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CMS finalizes quality measures in support of MACRA

The Quality Measure Development Plan supports the Merit-based Incentive Payment System and Advanced Alternative Payment Models.

Susan Morse, Executive Editor

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on Monday released its finalized Quality Measure Development Plan to support the recently-released Merit-based Incentive Payment System and Advanced Alternative Payment Models.

Both models for value-based reimbursement fulfill the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act's payment incentives for physicians and other clinicians.

The 80-page Quality Measure Development Plan is an essential aspect of this transition, said Kate Goodrich, director, Center for Clinical Standards and Quality for CMS. It provides the foundation for implementing measures to support MACRA's quality payment programs, she said.

[Also: MACRA rules for physician payments stacked against small practices, critics say]

The measures are meaningful and applicable across payer and healthcare settings, requiring a partnership with patients, their families, frontline clinicians, and professional organizations, she said.

It takes into account feedback from 60 individuals and 150 organizations.

The plan refines quality measures to close performance gaps in  clinical care; safety; care coordination; patient and caregiver experience; population health and prevention; and affordable care.

[Also: Breaking down the Medicare physician payment changes for doctors under MACRA]

It improves alignment of measures in the Core Quality Measures Collaborative, a work group convened by America's Health Insurance Plans. On February 16, CMS and the collaborative announced seven core measure sets to support multi-payer reporting across healthcare systems.

The plan reduces the administrative burden of quality measurement and ensures its relevance to clinical practices.

It gives consideration to patients and caregivers as a measure of development.

It increases coordination with federal agencies and other stakeholders to lessen duplication of effort and promote person-centered health care.

Its aim is to drive improvement in healthcare through the use of quality measures that are periodically assessed, CMS said.

Twitter: @SusanJMorse