1. Community-based, Hospital-Affiliated Medical Group Becomes a Successful Accountable Care Organization.
- Author
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Madden K, DoRosario A, O'Connell R, Aberizk W, Brown K, Guttman C, Goldstein R, Logue P, and Varkey P
- Subjects
- United States, Humans, Reimbursement, Incentive, Medicare, Leadership, Hospitals, Community, Cost Savings, Accountable Care Organizations
- Abstract
Leadership of a multispecialty group practice within a health system recognized in 2015 that population health management requires quality performance improvement and organizational culture change. While blueprints for building successful Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) exist in the literature, few describe the journey to achieving both shared savings and high quality outcomes achieved by a medical group within an academic health system. Clinician education and engagement, prioritizing prevention and achieving benchmarks, developing supportive roles, more precise documentation of accurate diagnostic coding, and risk stratification constituted the approach. When first participating as an ACO, the medical group built programs and teams to improve quality, while CMS simultaneously changed quality measurements from pay-for-reporting to pay-for-performance. Quality scores initially dipped, though scores have since risen to 98.44% in 2020. Between 2015 and 2017, financial results were more than $10 million below the threshold, while in performance years 2018 to 2020, Northeast Medical Group achieved $24 million in aggregate in shared savings., (Copyright © 2022 the American College of Medical Quality.)
- Published
- 2022
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