Value-Based Care aims to improve healthcare quality while lowering unnecessary costs.
Unlike traditional fee-for-service payments that pay providers based on the number of services done, VBC pays providers for getting better health results for patients.
It focuses on three main goals often called the “Triple Aim”: better care for individuals, healthier populations, and lower overall costs.
Almost 40% of employers have included some type of value-based incentives in their employee health plans, according to the National Business Group on Health.
This means medical practices need to be ready to measure and show how well they do compared to set standards.
Provider performance in value-based care is usually judged by three main parts: quality, efficiency, and cost.
These parts help give a full picture of the value that healthcare providers offer.
Quality measures look at the results and safety of the care given.
Groups like the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) create evidence-based measures (EBMs) that set the standards for judging providers.
For example, NCQA has several EBMs for different types of providers. There are 14 measures made just for primary care.
These can include how well patients manage long-term illnesses, preventive screenings, and checking on patients soon after they leave the hospital.
Quality measurements also use patient surveys such as the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS).
These surveys collect patient opinions about communication, access to care, and overall satisfaction.
In North Carolina, Medicaid uses similar measures and links them to financial rewards under managed care contracts.
Efficiency shows how well providers use the resources they have to give care.
This involves checking how often healthcare services are used and avoiding extra or repeated procedures.
Efficiency looks at the number and type of services, how long patients stay in the hospital, and how often patients are readmitted.
For example, hospitals might be judged on the average length of stay for certain conditions.
Primary care doctors might be checked on how often they provide preventive care.
The MedInsight Global Relative Value Units (RVUs) system is used to fairly compare efficiency among providers by adjusting for patient case mix and severity with tools like Milliman’s Advanced Risk Adjuster (MARA).
Programs from CMS, like the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program (HRRP), sometimes cut payments to hospitals with too many readmissions.
This encourages better discharge planning and patient follow-up.
Cost evaluation looks at the total money allowed for care and the price per service.
Value-based care tries to reduce wasteful spending by encouraging providers to deliver only needed services at fair costs.
CMS’s original value-based programs look at total allowed costs.
Commercial payers use similar approaches, also using risk adjustment tools like MARA to consider patient complexity.
This makes comparisons fairer for providers working with different patient populations.
Providers get overall scores in VBC that combine quality, efficiency, and cost to rank providers.
These scores help with making contracts and payment talks with payers.
Value-based contracts are often complex with many performance metrics and financial risks.
Providers need clear plans to handle these types of payment systems.
A recent model shows three main pillars for managing value-based contracts well: transparency, stability, and control.
By rating contracts on these pillars, medical practices can focus on negotiating parts that have the most risk or chances to improve.
Provider data is very important for checking and improving performance under value-based care.
Complete provider profiles include information about demographics, specialties, patient groups, service use, procedure counts, cost efficiency, quality scores, and referral patterns.
Access to data from multiple sources, including Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial claims, helps practices compare peers fairly.
Risk adjustment is needed to consider different patient health levels and prevent unfair judgments.
Some groups, like CareJourney, collect large national datasets to help providers and payers review provider performance in many areas.
This helps with making good referral choices, building networks, and coordinating care to improve patient outcomes and control costs.
As healthcare data grows and value-based contracts become more complex, artificial intelligence (AI) and workflow automation become useful tools for provider performance management.
AI can look at large datasets to find patterns that humans might miss.
For example, machine learning algorithms can study claims, patient results, and provider actions to spot risks or cost issues.
These findings help with clinical decisions and operational tasks by showing who delivers good and cost-effective care or who needs help to improve.
For healthcare managers, automating front-office jobs like scheduling appointments, patient check-in, and phone answering with AI tools improves efficiency and patient experience.
Some companies offer AI phone services that help reduce administrative work so practices can focus on care.
Automation also cuts errors, shortens wait times, and makes sure patient calls are answered quickly.
This can increase patient satisfaction, which is important in value-based care.
AI platforms can help providers manage value-based contracts by automatically tracking contract terms, calculating performance metrics, and making reports.
This helps maintain transparency, monitor financial stability, and control contracts without lots of manual work.
By adding AI to electronic health records (EHR) and management systems, healthcare groups can improve data accuracy and timeliness.
This lets them respond better to payers and regulators.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) plays an important role in pushing value-based care through programs that link provider performance to payment changes.
CMS has five original value-based programs: the End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program (ESRD QIP), Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program (VBP), Hospital Readmission Reduction Program (HRRP), Physician Value-Based Modifier (PVBM), and Hospital Acquired Conditions Reduction Program (HAC).
Other programs like Skilled Nursing Facility Value-Based Purchasing (SNFVBP) and Home Health Value-Based Purchasing (HHVBP) expand these ideas to more care settings.
CMS updates these programs regularly to keep quality measures current and aligned with new clinical evidence and healthcare goals.
By tying payments to results, these programs encourage providers to deliver care that is safe, effective, efficient, fair, and focused on patients.
State Medicaid programs, like North Carolina’s Medicaid, show how data-driven methods can improve quality and fairness in value-based care.
Medicaid managed care plans work on ongoing quality improvements using health disparity data across many groups.
By tracking quality in mental health, substance use, prenatal and postpartum care, and patient experience, Medicaid programs encourage providers to better outcomes for vulnerable groups.
Telehealth remains a key tool after the pandemic, helping expand access, especially for mental health care.
Financial rewards in Medicaid programs, such as North Carolina’s Standard Plan Withhold Program, motivate providers to meet quality goals and improve results each year.
Evaluating provider performance in value-based care needs a broad approach that focuses on quality, efficiency, and cost.
Providers should create contract plans based on transparency, stability, and control to manage financial risks and operation challenges well.
Complete provider data and analytics, especially when combined with AI and automation, help with decision-making and ongoing improvement.
These tools also help meet the demands of CMS programs and commercial payers while keeping patients satisfied.
Medical practice administrators, owners, and IT managers need to build strong data skills and good contract management to do well in the changing U.S. healthcare payment system.
By focusing on clear results and efficient operations, providers can give better care to patients, meet payer needs, and keep their financial health in the value-based care system.
Value-Based Care (VBC) is a healthcare delivery model that incentivizes providers based on patient health outcomes rather than the volume of services offered, aiming to enhance quality while reducing costs.
The three key components for evaluating provider value are quality, efficiency, and cost, which together help to determine the overall value a provider delivers.
Quality is assessed through evidence-based measures (EBMs) from organizations like NCQA and AHRQ, focusing on specific metrics relevant to the type of provider.
Efficiency is measured by evaluating resource utilization and the total number of healthcare services performed by a provider across various settings.
Cost is evaluated by assessing total allowed dollars and the unit price per service, factoring in the overall cost of care.
Risk adjustment is crucial as it accounts for the case-mix and severity of conditions of different patient populations, ensuring fair comparisons between providers.
Evaluation metrics vary based on provider type; for instance, hospitals focus on length-of-stay, while primary care evaluations emphasize preventive services provided.
Composite scoring aggregates quality, efficiency, and cost metrics into a single score that helps to categorize providers based on their performance and value.
Metrics include attributed member months, risk-adjusted relative cost of care, and relative resource use, helping to assess provider systems effectively.
A transparent evaluation framework instills confidence among stakeholders and allows payers and providers to collaboratively define and measure ‘value’ in care delivery.