More and more health plans are paying physicians for quality. Here’s what you need to know about these programs, and how to get involved.
Fam Pract Manag. 2004;11(3):45-48
Donald Robinson, MD, is a family physician in private practice in Hamburg, N.Y., a blue-collar suburb of Buffalo, and has been practicing medicine since 1977. For the past five years, he has participated with the three largest HMOs in the Buffalo area in pay-for-performance programs. From one managed care plan alone, Independent Health, he earned $20,000 in incentive bonus payments in 2002 for achieving targets in five areas: patient satisfaction, access to care, emergency room utilization, mammography rates and colorectal cancer screening rates.
To meet the quality targets of the managed care plans with which he works, Robinson has had to shift his way of practicing medicine and cultivate a new mindset and skill set. He has developed computerized patient registries to track his patients. He employs two part-time staffers to send reminder notices to patients and maintain his patient registry. He has also partnered with his managed care plans, which provide him with lists of his patients in need of services as well as flow sheets, guidelines, patient education material and other tools. Robinson monitors his own preventive care outcomes, such as colonoscopy and mammography rates, and has dedicated special attention to improving the outcomes of his adult patients with diabetes and his pediatric patients with asthma.
These changes in his practice have paid off. He receives bonuses from his managed care plans that have increased his earnings by approximately 6 percent. This additional money has enabled him to hire more staff, build and maintain a patient registry (the centerpiece of his practice improvement efforts), conduct a series of quality improvement projects in his practice and take home more money each year. He admits practice improvement is hard work, but it’s worth the effort. “It’s not the profit that interests me,” he says. “It’s the quality. I feel like I am stamping out disease.”
KEY POINTS
Thirty-five health plans covering some 30 million patients now offer pay-for-performance programs.
Participating physicians receive an average of 10 percent of annual income by meeting specified quality measures.
Practices that succeed at pay-for-performance programs continuously experiment with new ideas for improving their care, service and efficiency.
The basics of pay for performance
Current payment methods provide physicians with little incentive to improve quality of care. “Even among health professionals motivated to provide the best care possible, the structure of payment incentives may not facilitate the actions needed to systematically improve the quality of care, and may even prevent such actions,” according to the Institute of Medicine (IOM).1 The IOM has called for broad-based reform of the health care payment system and strengthening of existing payment methods that provide physicians with greater financial incentives for quality improvement.
Pay-for-performance programs have four essential elements that physicians should be aware of before participating. (See the tool for evaluating pay-for-performance programs.) The first element is the set of performance measures being used. Performance measures fall into several categories:
Utilization/cost management (e.g., average number of emergency department visits per patient per year),
Clinical quality/effectiveness (e.g., the percentage of patients with asthma on controller medications),
Patient satisfaction (e.g., the percentage of patients who would recommend the physician to a family member or friend),
Administrative (e.g., the practice’s level of information technology),
Patient safety (e.g., the percentage of patients questioned about allergic drug reactions).
These measures may be developed locally by the health plan or purchaser or may come from nationally recognized sources, such as Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set HEDIS (http://www.ncqa.org/programs/hedis/index.htm) or the Consumer Assessment of Health Plans (http://www.ahcpr.gov/qual/cahps/dept1.htm). A recent study by Med-Vantage found that 71 percent of health plans with pay-for-performance programs use some subset of HEDIS measures.2
The second element to be aware of is how the health plan collects the performance data. Performance data can be derived from the health plan’s administrative data, claims data for medical services or encounter data from the physician’s practice. Administrative and claims data have the advantage of ease of collection for the health plan; encounter data has the advantage of greater clinical detail, which improves validity of the measurement but can be difficult for physician offices to supply. Web-based electronic health records would enable family physicians to engage health plans more actively in performance measurement; however, some groups are finding creative solutions even without fully functioning electronic health records. For example, the Employers Coalition on Health (ECOH) in Rockford, Ill., has distributed to physicians a software system called “Project in a Box,” developed by the Illinois quality improvement organization (http://www.ifqhc.org). The software helps standardize the collection of data on diabetes and preventive care, which are used in ECOH’s pay-for-performance program.
Third, physicians should understand how the health plan determines its performance targets or benchmarks. Some compare the participant group to itself and establish a defined subset as the target (e.g., two standard deviations from the mean, the top quartile or the 90th percentile). Others compare the participant group to an external benchmark (e.g., data from other health plans, national surveys or specialty society goals).
Finally, physicians should understand how the health plan will reward them for meeting or exceeding performance targets. Typically, health plans combine a physician’s performance ratings on individual measures into a single value to determine whether the physician qualifies for rewards. A number of financial incentives exist,3 but the two most common incentives are quality bonuses (in which physicians receive an annual payment for meeting performance targets) and reimbursement at risk (in which the health plan withholds 5 percent to 10 percent of reimbursement and pays it back to the physician for meeting minimum requirements). The most desirable programs will use bonuses, which physicians prefer because no financial risk is involved. The Med-Vantage study of pay-for-performance programs found that payments for performance ranged from 1 percent to 40 percent of a practice’s total annual revenue, with an average of a 10-percent bonus or withhold.
HEALTH PLANS OFFERING PAY-FOR-PERFORMANCE PROGRAMS
More than 35 health plans, covering some 30 million members, now offer pay-for-performance programs.
Plan Name | Program Name |
---|---|
Aetna | IHA Rewarding Results, Bridges to Excellence and Quality Enhancement |
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Hampshire | N/A |
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ohio | Bridges to Excellence |
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kentucky | Bridges to Excellence |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama | Bridges to Excellence |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Hawaii (HMSA) | Quality and Service Recognition Program |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois | Bridges to Excellence |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts | HMO Blue Group Performance Incentive Program and Bridges to Excellence |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan | Rewarding Results |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Missouri | Physician Group Partners Program |
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Western New York | Quality Incentives |
Blue Cross of California | IHA Rewarding Results and PPO Physician Quality and Incentive Program |
Blue Shield of California | IHA Rewarding Results |
Care First Blue Cross Blue Shield of the Mid-Atlantic | Primary Care Physician Recognition Program |
Cigna Healthcare of California | IHA Rewarding Results |
Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield of New York | N/A |
Excellus Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rochester | Rewarding Results and Value of Care (IPA) |
Harvard Pilgrim Healthcare | Quality Incentives and Bridges to Excellence |
Health Partners (Minnesota) | Outcomes Recognition Program |
Health Net of California | IHA Rewarding Results |
Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield of Pennsylvania | Quality Incentive Payment System |
HIP of New York | PCP Incentive Plan |
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey | N/A |
Humana | Bridges to Excellence |
Independence Blue Cross of Pennsylvania | Quality Incentive Payment System |
Independent Health of Buffalo, N.Y. | Quality Management Incentive Awards Program |
Massachusetts Health Quality Partners | Rewarding Results |
PacifiCare | IHA Rewarding Results |
Presbyterian Health Plan of New Mexico | N/A |
Priority Health | Physician Incentive Program |
Promina Cigna (Georgia) | Reward for Quality |
Touchpoint Healthplan of Wisconsin | N/A |
Trigon Blue Cross Blue Shield of Virginia | Performance Extra |
Tufts Health Plan of Massachusetts | Bridges to Excellence |
United Healthcare | Bridges to Excellence |
Univera/Excellus Blue Cross Blue Shield of Buffalo | N/A |
Western Health Advantage | IHA Rewarding Results |
National demonstration projects
Currently, two high-profile national demonstration projects are in the early stages of testing whether pay-for-performance programs significantly contribute to improved health care outcomes.
Rewarding Results is an $8.8 million initiative of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the California HealthCare Foundation. The grantees include Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, Blue Cross of California, Excellus Health Plan, Integrated Healthcare Association (IHA) and Massachusetts Health Quality Partners. The largest of these is IHA, a coalition of seven health care plans (Aetna of California, Blue Cross of California, Blue Shield of California, CIGNA Healthcare of California, Health Net of California, PacifiCare and Western Health Advantage). In early 2003, participating physicians submitted data on patient satisfaction, investment in information technology and six clinical indicators: childhood immunization status, cervical cancer screening, breast cancer screening, use of appropriate medication for people with asthma, LDLC screening after cardiovascular event, and A1c testing in diabetes. The first bonuses will be paid in mid-2004.
Bridges to Excellence, funded by Robert Wood Johnson and supported by the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services, is an initiative of large employers (General Electric Company, Procter and Gamble, Verizon Communications, Raytheon Company, UPS, Humana, Ford Motor Company and Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center), health plans (Aetna, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Ohio and Kentucky, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, Alabama and Massachusetts, Tufts Health Plan, United Healthcare, Harvard Pilgrim Healthcare and Humana) and physician groups in the three large urban markets of Boston, Cincinnati and Louisville. It seeks improvements in three areas: diabetes care, cardiovascular care and patient care management systems. The diabetes component of this initiative is modeled on the American Diabetes Association/National Committee for Quality Assurance’s Physician Recognition Program. Incentives of up to 10 percent of annual income will be paid to physicians who achieve targets in these three areas.
IMPROVEMENT IDEAS FROM THE FPM ARCHIVES
To achieve the required outcomes for pay-for-performance programs, your practice may need to improve its current care processes. You can find improvement ideas through the Family Practice Management archives.
Quality improvement
System redesign
Chronic disease care improvement
Practice measurement/assessment
Getting involved with pay for performance
If you are ready to change your mind-set and skill set, pay-for-performance programs are a rapidly growing opportunity to work on your practice, deliver the highest attainable quality of care to your patients and strengthen your financial performance. As Dr. Robinson described, attaining new levels of performance in your practice can be hard work but well worth the effort.
Step 1: Decide whether pay for performance is right for you. Do you have the commitment, staff and resources to devote to improving quality of care in your practice? Is your practice free from relationships that would impair your improvement efforts (e.g., being owned by a larger health system not committed to quality improvement)? Are the typical pay-for-performance measures applicable to your patient population (e.g., pneumococcal immunization rates in a younger population)? Does your practice have adequate information systems or data collection capacity, or are you willing to acquire it? Do you have the patience to achieve the outcomes that reap higher financial bonuses? Don’t underestimate how much hard work it will take.
Step 2: Look for health plans offering pay-for-performance programs. The table lists more than 35 health plans that reported pay-for-performance programs in the Med-Vantage study. Discuss these programs with representatives from the health plans with which you currently contract, and talk with your colleagues about their experiences. If your health plans do not currently offer pay-for-performance programs, let them know you are interested and look for opportunities to shape these programs in your area.
Step 3: Evaluate the pay-for-performance programs available to you. Pay-for-performance programs are not “one size fits all.” Available programs in your local health care market may vary and may not fit your practice’s needs and capabilities for performance improvement. Use the spreadsheet tool to assess how a health plan’s pay-for-performance program fits with your practice’s needs. The key criteria to look for include financial incentives of adequate size to be worthwhile, incentives based on well-tested and valid measures, and health plan assistance in improving care.
PAY-FOR-PERFORMANCE EVALUATION TOOL
This spreadsheet, which can be downloaded below, can help you evaluate pay-for-performance programs available to you. The best programs will offer financial bonuses of adequate size to be worthwhile, incentives based on well-tested and valid measures, and assistance in collecting data and improving care.
Step 4: Find improvement opportunities to help you reach your performance goals. Opportunities include improvement projects and collaboratives sponsored by local health plans, national health care organizations such as the AAFP (https://www.aafp.org) or the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (http://www.ihi.org), or your state quality improvement organization (for a directory, visit http://www.medqic.org/content/qio/qio.jsp?pageID=4).
You can also initiate your own improvement projects. Continuously look for new ideas that will help you improve patient care, service or efficiency. (See the FPM reading list for some ideas.) Test the ideas on a small scale, adapt them as needed and keep only what works. When you find good ideas, steal shamelessly and share openly.
Step 5: Get started now.