The Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program did not result in meaningful improvements in clinical process or patient experience measures during its first four years, because performance improved similarly for hospitals not exposed to the program, according to a study reported last week in the New England Journal of Medicine. The program was associated with reduced mortality among patients admitted for pneumonia, but not among patients admitted for heart attack or heart failure. Nancy Foster, AHA vice president for quality and patient safety policy, said the findings “should not be surprising for two important reasons. First, the measures used in the VBP program, especially those used in the first few years, had been publicly reported for several years. Many of the improvements that could be achieved had already occurred. Second, hospitals view the inclusion of a measure in the Hospital VBP program as a strong signal from Medicare that high performance on the measure is important. Thus, hospitals seek to achieve high levels of performance on the chosen measures regardless of whether they are subject to a payment penalty or not.”

Headline
A blog by Noah Isserman, AHA director of health insurance and coverage policy, explains why a recent analysis by the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission…
Blog
Public
Medicare Advantage now covers more than half of eligible Medicare beneficiaries, making its impact on hospitals, health systems and patients impossible to…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services released a proposed rule June 12 seeking to codify the…
Headline
The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission June 15 released its June report to Congress that estimated the association between Medicare Advantage enrollment and…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services June 12 issued a final rule revising how the agency conducts oversight of accrediting organizations that…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General June 11 released two reports on high rates of coverage denials by Medicare Advantage…