BY PETER M.G. DEANE, M.D.
The changes announced for Medicare and Medicaid, to be implemented over the next few years, are breathtaking in scope and ambition. A system based on payment for services is to become a system based on payment for individual health and population health outcomes. This will require enormous changes in the way health care is delivered, and this is an intended effect. Private payers will certainly desire the same results and savings.
I am a partner in a multiphysician, single-specialty private group practice. We have two hospital systems locally. Both of these are now health systems, in that they either employ or closely interact with many physicians.
Just a few years ago, our practice could comfortably make decisions about how we went about delivering care without much consideration of the plans of larger local institutions. Then came the rise of our local accountable care networks. These were created by the local health care systems to provide the overall organizational infrastructure to move from the current payment model to the coming one. We delayed for awhile but have now signed up with both. It can only be a matter of months before each of them pursues a meaningful degree of clinical integration. In other words, they will be analyzing data from our electronic medical record about our individual practice patterns and results, and giving us the results along with feedback on how to improve care.
For this to happen, our EMR system needs to be up to the task. We are unsure it will be. It has been difficult for some of us to adapt to electronic records systems. Now we need to see if our existing system can interoperate effectively. If not, we may be paying quite a bit for another one soon.
Our physicians are not accustomed to seeing report cards about their practice patterns. It will be a shock to see comparisons and rankings. But patients will be enrolled in and referred to us by the networks, and it will not be possible to ignore the reports we get.
Likely this radical change in the practice of medicine will drive some to retire, affecting the size of our group. We intend to remain in private practice, but independence may prove increasingly costly.
Already, patients see that their physicians make less eye contact with them and more time documenting care. This will likely get worse. We worry that if increased expenses cause staff cuts, the personal service we provide will suffer.
Redesigning medical practice will be a serious challenge for us. But our goal has always been to provide the best care, and in a value-based system, that should be what sustains us all.
Dr. Deane specializes in allergy, immunology, and rheumatology and is a partner in a private group practice with eight physicians and five offices in greater Rochester, N.Y. He is also the chief of allergy, immunology, and rheumatology at Unity Hospital in Rochester.
Value shift brings irreparable change to private practice
BY ROBERT SHOR, M.D.
The simple truth is that we are in transition. The current health system, for the most part, rewards “making widgets” (volume). That is, being paid for units of work actually being done. The more patients you see, the more procedures you do, the more you are compensated. We are moving from “volume” to “value” as we try to move away from “widgets” to management of population health. How do we get there? What can we as physicians and providers do?
I am part of a 40-person, single-specialty private cardiology practice in the Washington, D.C., suburbs. In the coming years, the CMS will reward (the euphemism for payment) practices that meet their definitions for quality and penalize those that don’t meet those metrics.
We have participated in PQRS/PQRI, Meaningful Use (MU), and other Medicare programs for which we are compensated. But how do you truly determine what are quality metrics and what is truly meaningful use of health system resources? How do we impact health on an individual and population view?
For us to be compliant with the Medicare rules and get paid, we have had to heavily invest in not only EHRs (we were an early adopter around 2000), but personnel costs to make sure all of the paperwork is completed appropriately for submission and for the audit that precedes the CMS payment for MU.
So how do we proceed going forward? In my opinion, what is clear is that private practice has been irreparably changed. The notion of an individual physician or a small practice surviving without some arrangement with a health system, an ACO, or a Clinical Integrated Network (CIN) is rapidly dwindling.