SLU Researcher Dives Into Medicare's Merit-Based Incentive Payment System
Maggie Rotermund
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Kenton Johnston, Ph.D., an associate professor of health management and policy at Saint Louis University鈥檚 College for Public Health and Social Justice, recently conducted two studies into how Medicare鈥檚 Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) impacts clinicians.
The research was published online Sept. 8 in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and Health Affairs.
MIPS, which is authorized under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, is a mandatory pay-for-performance program for clinicians participating in Medicare in the outpatient setting. Clinician performance under MIPS looks at quality of care, meaningful use of electronic health records, improvement activities for patient care processes and cost.
JAMA
A team of researchers, led by Johnston, conducted a study investigating the association between health system affiliations of clinicians and their performance scores and payments under Medicare value-based reimbursement.
was published online Sept. 8 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The researchers found that clinicians who were affiliated with health systems had better performance scores and received fewer payment penalties and more payment bonuses under the Medicare Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) than clinicians not affiliated with health systems.
Health Affairs
Johnston and another team of researchers conducted a study to investigate how outpatient clinicians that treated disproportionately high caseloads of socially at-risk Medicare patients (safety-net clinicians) performed under Medicare鈥檚 Merit-Based Incentive Payment System.
Their findings, were published online Sept. 8 in Health Affairs.
The researchers found that clinicians treating high (top quintile) caseloads of Medicare patients dually-enrolled in Medicaid had performance scores 13.4 points lower than clinicians treating low (bottom quintile) caseloads of such patients, on a scale from 0-100. Clinicians with high caseloads of dually-enrolled patients were 99 percent more likely to receive a negative payment adjustment, and were 52 percent less likely to receive an exceptional performance bonus payment, than their peers with low caseloads of such patients.
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