Appendix 9: National Committee for Quality Assurance Presentation to the Subcommittee National Advisory Council Subcommittee: Identifying Quality Measures for Medicaid-eligible adults Sarah Hudson Scholle and Sepheen Byron made the following slide presentation to the Subcommittee entitled "Preparing for Measurement Selection: Landscape of Measures." Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (700 KB). Free PowerPoint® Viewer (Plugin Software Help).Slide 1Preparing for Measurement Selection: Landscape of MeasuresSarah Hudson ScholleSepheen ByronSlide 2OverviewPerformance Measurement in MedicaidQuality of Care for Adults in MedicaidMeasures InventoryKey ChallengesSlide 3Performance Measurement in MedicaidSlide 4State of Measurement in MedicaidThere is no national reporting of Medicaid quality data representing all different populations enrolled (that's why we are here...)Two new reports shed light on current efforts: Managed care: NCQA's Medicaid Benchmarking Project ReportFFS: CHCS' Performance Measurement in Fee-for-Service Medicaid: Emerging Best PracticesSlide 5NCQA Medicaid Benchmarking RepPurpose: Test the feasibility of collecting comparable performance measure results from state Medicaid agencies and combining these data with existing HEDIS data in NCQA's database to develop robust benchmarks for Medicaid.Why Focus on Managed Care and HEDIS? 71% of the Medicaid population in states that use managed care arrangements including PCCM and MCOs.37 states contract with MCOs.Nearly 90 percent of state Medicaid programs reported using HEDIS measures for evaluate quality of children's care: No comparable data available for adults.Slide 6How Do States Use HEDIS?States use HEDIS measures to meet the federal requirements for performance measurement in Medicaid.States may use the HEDIS data plans have submitted to NCQA, require plans to submit data directly to the state or the EQRO, or calculate performance rates themselves.Twenty-five Medicaid programs use or require NCQA Accreditation.Slide 7Medicaid Programs & HEDISMedicaid ProgramCountsStatesStates without Medicaid managed care plans (excluded from study)17Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Guam, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Virgin Islands and WyomingStates where all health plans submitted HEDIS data to NCQA11California, Colorado, District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska, New Mexico, Tennessee, Virginia and WashingtonStates where some health plans submitted HEDIS data to NCQA23Indiana, Minnesota, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode Island and West VirginiaStates where no health plans submitted HEDIS data to NCQA3Oregon, South Carolina, VermontTotal Medicaid Programs54* *Includes the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands.Slide 8Most Commonly Used MeasuresPediatric/AdolescentWell-Child Visits in the First 15 MonthsWell Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Years of LifeAdolescent Well-Care VisitsChildhood Immunization StatusWomenCervical Cancer ScreeningPrenatal and Postpartum CareChronic CareUse of Appropriate Medications for People With AsthmaComprehensive Diabetes Care (CDC) - HbA1c TestingCDC - Eye Exam (Retinal) PerformedCDC - LDL - C ScreeningMental HealthFollow-Up After Hospitalization for Metal IllnessSlide 9Most Common Differences Between State Measures and NCQA HEDIS dataSpecification changes Continuous enrollmentMeasurement yearData sourceNumerator changesData collection processValidationSlide 10CHCS Report: Performance Measurement in FFS Medicaid"Just do it"Key Themes: LeadershipMeasuresResourcesSlide 11LeadershipInvolve providers and other relevant stakeholdersClarify the purpose of measurement: Reporting and comparisons among delivery systemsQuality improvementSet clear goals for public reportingValue the role of leadership in the processSlide 12Measures and Data SourcesConsider measures that rely on administrative data for ease of capture.Consider business case with focus on overuse measures, such as hospital readmissions.Adapt HEDIS measures to fit the FFS environment: Look outside HEDIS for special populations like mental health.Consider other data sources: Patient/family surveys, Registries, Lab test results, Chronic disease and obstetrics assessment forms, Health information technology.Slide 13Resources and TimeConsider resources needed for development and implementation of the measurement system: Many variations exist depending on structures and resources available within states:Be patient: Expect it to take a year from the start of developing a new measure to reporting it, depending on the complexity of the measure and the availability of analytic capacity.Devote resources to auditing measures.Slide 14Performance in MedicaidSlide 15Status of Health Care Quality in Medicaid2009 HEDIS provides window on national performance among managed care organizations (MCOs).HEDIS performance rates for Medicaid MCOs are often lower than for Commercial and/or Medicare MCOs.There are a few exceptions...Slide 162009 HEDIS Performance for Medicaid vs Other MCOs MedicaidMedicareCommercialAdult BMI Assessment34.638.841.3Breast Cancer Screening52.469.371.3Cervical Cancer Screening65.8NA77.3Postpartum Visit64.1NA83.6Initiation of Alcohol/Drug Treatment44.346.242.7Follow After Mental Health Hosp (30 days)60.254.876.8Persistent Beta Blocker Use After Heart Attack76.682.674.4Diabetes: A1c Screening80.689.689.2Diabetes: Poor A1c Control (>9.0%) (lower=better)44.928.028.2Diabetes: Cholesterol Screening74.287.385.0Diabetes: Cholesterol <10033.550.047.0Hypertension: Blood Pressure <140/9055.359.864.1Asthma: Appropriate Medications88.6NA92.7Slide 17Childhood Immunization Retreat in Private Plans, But Not in MedicaidImage: A line chart shows the rise in childhood immunizations for both private insurance and Medicaid from 1999-2009, until 2008-2009 when the percentage of immunizations for private insurance drops of by several percentage points.Notes: The most surprising result was a disturbing 4% drop in childhood immunization rates among private plans that primarily serve kids in middle-class families. This did not happen in Medicaid plans that serve low-income kids, where we saw a 3% rise, continuing the steady improvement they've been making.Slide 18Big Gains in Chlamydia Screening—with Medicaid Plans LeadingImage: A line chart shows a large increase in chlamydia screening from the period 2001-2009 for both private insurance and Medicaid plans. Medicaid plans have a consistently higher percentage of screening than private insurance.Notes: We are also seeing big gains in chlamydia screening, especially in Medicaid plans. This is a common and often silent STD that, left untreated, can cause irreversible damage, including infertility. We're also seeing better scores for diabetic care, prenatal and postpartum care, controlling high blood pressure and other measures.YearCommercialMedicaid200123.140.4200225.440.9200329.744.9200432.247.2200534.950.7200637.352.4200738.150.7200841.754.9200943.156.7Slide 19Using the Inventory to Identify Potential MeasuresSlide 20Creating Measures InventorySources of measures: Measures endorsed by National Quality ForumMeasures nominated by CMSMeasures submitted by 15 Medicaid medical directorsMeasures suggested by Panel co-chairs and membersWe attempted to "de-duplicate" the list..."Slide 21Contents of Measure InventoryMeasuresPivot Table (allows identifying groups of measures)Definitions of descriptorsAcronymsSourcesSlide 22Measures ListMeasures: Sorted by Measure StewardAll measures have unique "ID number" for searching (NQF ID provided if relevant)Contents: Measures characteristicsInformation on current useCategory in Revised IOM frameworkPopulation of interestExcel makes sorting and filtering of measures possibleSlide 23Characteristics of Each MeasureMeasure IDNQF IDMeasure owner/stewardMeasure nameMeasure descriptionSpecific conditionsCondition typeMeasure typeData sourcesUnit of measurementSlide 24From the Legislation....The Secretary shall identify and publish a recommended core set of adult health quality measures for Medicaid eligible adults in the same manner as the Secretary identifies and publishes a core set of child health quality measures under section 1139A, including with respect to identifying and publishing existing adult health quality measures that are in use under public and privately sponsored health care coverage arrangements, or that are part of reporting systems that measure both the presence and duration of health insurance coverage over time, that may be applicable to Medicaid eligible adults.Slide 25Descriptors of Current UseMedicaid: in use by Medicaid programs or health plans in the stateOther: in use by other federal programs (VA, Medicare Advantage, PQRI, etc)Any: in use in either Medicaid or other programStates: list of states in which the measures are usedSlide 26Measures FrameworkDomainsPopulationsReproductive HealthAdult <65 yrsComplex Health NeedsMental Health and Substance AbuseSafe Timely Effective Efficient Access Patient & Family Centered Care Coordination Health Systems Infrastructure Slide 27Information for Each MeasureIOM FrameworkSafeTimelyEffectiveEfficientAccessPatient & Family centeredCare coordinationHealth systems infrastructurePopulationCondition TypeFemale OnlyReproductive HealthAdults <65MH & Sub Abuse In UseFunctional statusSlide 28Starting Lists for Each WorkgroupMaternal/reproductive health: Female only and in use at allAdult health: Adults <65 and in use in MedicaidMental Health/Substance Use: MH&SA and in use anywhereComplex conditions: Cross cutting measures that are in use at all: functional status, care coordination, health system infrastructure, avoidable hospitalizationsSlide 29Key Challenges in Measuring Quality for Adult Medicaid PopulationsCurrent measures do not address needs of complex populationsExamples of measure concepts and issues in selecting measures for the core set: Avoidable hospitalizationsCare CoordinationFunctional statusSlide 30Avoidable HospitalizationsAvoidable hospitalization measures, including hospital readmissions and admissions for ambulatory care-sensitive conditions (ACSC), are important markers of waste.Slide 31Examples of Avoidable Hospitalization MeasuresStewardMeasure NameNCQAPlan All-Cause Readmission (new for 2011)CMS30-Day All-Cause Risk Standardized Readmission Rate Following Heart Failure Hospitalization (risk adjusted)State of CONumber of admissions for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions for waiver and Medicaid clientsAHRQDiabetes Short-Term Complications Admission Rate/100,000Slide 32Avoidable HospitalizationsKey issues for Re-admission measures: Population: all age groups, adults only, etcHospitalizations: specific-cause discharges versus all-cause discharges.Counting of readmissions: all-cause readmissions or specific-cause readmissionsReadmission timeframe: 30 days versus 3, 7, 14, 90, ...Risk adjustmentContinuous enrollmentKey issues for ACSC Admissions: Eligible populationRisk adjustmentContinuous enrollmentSlide 33Outcomes/Functional StatusOutcome measures include mortality and functional status.Patients/families value these measures in particular.These measures may reflect the net result of care for multiple conditions and care received from multiple providers and settings.Slide 34Outcomes/Functional StatusStewardMeasure NameCMSImprovement in bathing among home-based care recipientsFocus on Therapeutic Outcomes, IncFunctional status change for patients with knee impairmentsCREcareChange in Basic Mobility as Measured by the AM-PACCMS, NCQAMedicare Health Outcomes Survey (HOS)AHRQIQI 11: Abdominal Aortic Artery (AAA) Repair Mortality Rate (risk adjusted)AHRQIQI 17: Acute Stroke Mortality RateSlide 35Outcomes/Functional StatusKey Issues: Population/Site of care/Population sizeCross section versus longitudinal assessmentRisk adjustmentData source and completenessAttributionSlide 36Care CoordinationNQF (2006) identified dimensions of care coordination including: The need for a medical home,Proactive plan of care and follow-upStrategy for communication,Availability of information systems to support careProcess for transitions or "hand-offs" (across providers and settings)Slide 37Care CoordinationStewardMeasure NameCMS30-Day Post-Hospital AMI Discharge Evaluation and Management Service Measure (In proposed IPPS rule May 2010)NCQACare for Older Adults (COA): Functional Status AssessmentNCQAMedication Reconciliation Post-Discharge (MRP)IPROManagement plan for people with asthmaAMA-PCPI, NCQAAdvance Care PlanCMSDocumentation and Verification of Current Medications in the Medical RecordSlide 38Care CoordinationKey issues: Availability and use of measuresData sources/completenessFeasibility and cost of measurementReturn to ContentsProceed to Next Section Current as of December 2010 Internet Citation: Appendix 9: National Committee for Quality Assurance Presentation to the Subcommittee: National Advisory Council Subcommittee: Identifying Quality Measures for Medicaid-eligible adults. December 2010. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/news/events/nac/reports/background/quality/appendix9.html