How to Find Patient Data for Value-Based Care Report Requirements

The increased emphasis on value-based care requires doctors and practices to compile detailed patient data for reporting. However, that’s much easier than it sounds! The technology needed to track patient data is available, but also expensive and time-consuming to use. The data that you need isn’t always easily accessible, as patients move from provider to provider (and system to system). How can you find the patient data you need for value-based care report requirements?

What Caused the Change?

The biggest push behind value-based care comes from the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), which requires doctors with over $90,000 in Medicare Part B charges or over 200 Part B beneficiaries to enroll in the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) or an Advanced Alternative Payment Model. MIPS includes a whopping 271 quality measures, and every doctor enrolled has to select 6 of them to report on. Private payers might have different requirements, but most require data collection and value-based care reporting.

The Challenge of Value-Based Care Reporting

Electronic health records are being changed and reconfigured to ease the new burden of reporting, but that doesn’t mean the learning curve has been easy. Unfortunately, the current value-based care metrics are not always easy to find or track, and there are plenty of issues with the system itself. Some doctors feel that tracking puts the emphases on electronic health records (EHR) and not treating patients. Other doctors are concerned that clinical quality is measured on process metrics, like whether or not preventative screenings take place, instead of actual outcomes.

How to Find the Data You Need

One approach involves tying your measurement to overall strategic priorities. One successful healthcare network encouraged all physicians and specialists to focus on 40 total metrics. While most of those metrics were tied to primary care, specialists received alerts at appointments when the patient they were seeing was also overdue for a pap smear or colonoscopy. By encouraging a team effort to meet tracking requirements, this network found great success.

Another successful strategy is creating your own internal metric definitions. One of the most common reporting issues is payers asking providers to report on measures that seem to be identical. However, the difference is usually in the details. To create standard internal metrics, look at the best-practice suggestions from industry leaders and work with the appropriate staff members at your practice. For example, before arriving at a standard definition for diabetes metrics, consult with primary care doctors, diabetes educators and endocrinologists.

While there is no magic way to track and report patient data yet, your practice should be engaged in constantly refining the process to get the best results for your patients. 

Partner with Vetters Enterprises Help with Your Value-Based Care Reporting

Vetters Enterprises specializes in practice management, private practice business support and revenue cycle optimization. We can perform in-depth assessments of your practice or facility and identify potential issues. Let us keep your business as healthy as you keep your patients! Give us a call at (443) 352-0088.

2018 Trends in Healthcare

It’s easy to get bogged down in the bustle of managing your practice—attracting new patients, keeping up with the latest in medical research and working hard to keep your current patients healthy. However, it’s essential to remain on top of the latest trends in healthcare and stay ahead of the curve. Here are the 2018 trends in healthcare your practice needs to know about.

Tackling the Opioid Epidemic

The leading cause of death for adults under 50 in the United States is now opioid overdoses. This epidemic is far too large for a single party to solve it, so everyone involved in the healthcare industry including prescribers, payers and the pharmaceutical industry, needs to band together to reverse this alarming trend.

A Focus on the Patient Experience

You’re probably sick of hearing about the importance of improving the patient experience, but this trend in healthcare isn’t going anywhere any time soon. As the healthcare market becomes more crowded and competitive, the efforts to improve the efficiency of the entire healthcare experience will dramatically increase.

Medicare Advantage on the Rise

Experts are projecting that Medicare Advantage will expand to cover a whopping 21 million people over the course of 2018, which is a 5% increase over the previous year. Your practice might see more patients with Medicare Advantage plans as a result.

Don’t Leave Mental Health Behind

As the social stigma around mental healthcare starts to dissipate, more and more patients will start to seek assistance for mental health struggles. Your practice should make a serious effort to understand the link between behavioral and mental health and tailor exams, including physicals, to address more than just the basics of patient health. Questions addressing technology use and the associated anxiety and depression, for example, are good screening tools for addressing the overall health of patients.

Using Wearables to Get the Bigger Picture

The wearable devices that many patients use, like Fitbits and other activity trackers, will start to be utilized by healthcare providers. Studies have shown that the most frequent users of wearable devices are less healthy than average and more likely to be hospitalized for health issues. These wearables can provide doctors with important information on patients and give a bigger picture of a patient’s health.

Partner with Vetters Enterprises for Information About the Latest Trends in Healthcare

Vetters Enterprises specializes in practice management, private practice business support and revenue cycle optimization. We can perform in-depth assessments of your practice or facility and identify potential issues. Let us keep your business as healthy as you keep your patients! Give us a call at (443) 352-0088.