I thought I would start putting together some of the ideas I've been talking about into more concrete forms. I know when I talk about about NCQA and Compliance I get some interesting looks. But the facts are they are tied together. Whether or not you tie in performance measurements to clinical or compliance they still impact you when reporting to the Federal government. Let's talk about HEDIS measures in the STARS program.
1. MEASURE: Breast Cancer Screening
NUMERATOR: % of Denominator
that had a mammogram during the measurement year or the year prior to the
measurement year.
DENOMINATOR: Number of female
enrollees aged 42 to 69
|
2. MEASURE: Colorectal Cancer Screening
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
that had an appropriate screening for colorectal cancer
DENOMINATOR: Number of
enrollees aged 51 to 75
|
3. MEASURE: Cholesterol Screening
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
who had LDL-C test during year (and for diabetics the year prior)
DENOMINATOR: Enrollees with
either ischemic vascular disease or diabetes
|
4. MEASURE: Glaucoma Testing
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
who had at least 1 glaucoma exam by an eye Dr. during year or year prior
DENOMINATOR: Enrollees aged
67 or older without a prior diagnosis of glaucoma
|
5. MEASURE: Access to Primary Care Doctor Visits
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
that had an ambulatory/preventive care visit during year
DENOMINATOR: All enrollees
|
6. MEASURE: Diabetes Care – Eye Care
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
who had a retinal or dilated eye exam by an eye care professional
DENOMINATOR: Diabetic
enrollees
|
7. MEASURE: Diabetes Care – Kidney Disease
Monitoring
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
who either had a urine microalbumin test during the measurement year, or who
had received medical attention for nephropathy during the measurement year
DENOMINATOR: Diabetic
enrollees
|
8. MEASURE: Diabetes Care – Blood Sugar Controlled
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
whose most recent HbA1c level is greater than 9, or who were not tested
during the measurement year.
DENOMINATOR: Diabetic
enrollees
|
9. MEASURE: Diabetes Care – Cholesterol Controlled
NUMERATOR: % of denominator
whose most recent LDL-C level during the measurement year was 100 or less
DENOMINATOR: Diabetic
enrollees
|
10. MEASURE: Diabetes Care – Cholesterol Screening
NUMERATOR: MA enrollees 18-75
with diabetes (type 1 and type 2) who had an LDL-C screening test performed
during the measurement year
DENOMINATOR: MA enrollees
18-75 with diabetes (type 1 and type 2)
|
11. MEASURE: Controlling Blood Pressure
NUMERATOR:
% of denominator whose most recent chart notation of systolic BP was 140 or
less and diastolic BP was 90 or less during the measurement year
DENOMINATOR:
Sampled MA enrollees with hypertension on or before June 30th of the
measurement year.
|
12. MEASURE: Rheumatoid Arthritis
Management
NUMERATOR:
% of denominator who received at least one prescription for a disease
modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD)
DENOMINATOR:
Enrollees diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis during year
|
13. MEASURE: Osteoporosis Management
NUMERATOR:
Female MA
enrollees 67 and older who suffered a fracture during the measurement year,
and who subsequently had either a bone mineral density test or were
prescribed a drug to treat or prevent osteoporosis in the six months after
the fracture.
DENOMINATOR:
Female MA
enrollees 67 and older who suffered a fracture during the measurement year
|
14. MEASURE: Adult BMI Assessment [Checking to See if Members are at a
Healthy Weight]
NUMERATOR: Members 18-74
years of age who had an outpatient visit and who had their body mass index
(BMI) documented during the measurement year or the year prior the
measurement year.
DENOMINATOR: Members 18-74
years of age
|
15. MEASURE: Care for Older Adults – Medication Review [Yearly Review of
All Medications and Supplements Being Taken]
NUMERATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older who received at least one medication review conducted by a prescribing practitioner or clinical pharmacist during the
measurement year and the presence of a medication list in the medical record.
DENOMINATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older.
|
16. MEASURE: Care for Older Adults – Functional Status Assessment [Yearly
Assessment of How Well Plan Members Are
Able to Do Activities of Daily Living]
NUMERATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older who received at least one functional status assessment during
the measurement year.
DENOMINATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older.
|
17. MEASURE: Care for Older Adults – Pain Screening [Yearly Pain Screening
or Pain Management Plan]
NUMERATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older who received at least one pain screening or pain management
plan during the measurement year.
DENOMINATOR: Medicare Advantage Special Needs Plan enrollees 66
years and older
|
18. MEASURE: Plan All-Cause Readmissions [Readmission to a Hospital within
30 Days of Being Discharged]
(Lower
percentages are better because it means fewer members are being readmitted)
NUMERATOR: Senior plan members discharged from hospital stays
who were readmitted to a hospital within 30 days, either for the same
condition as their recent hospital stay or for a different reason.
DENOMINATOR: Plan enrollees 66 years and older
|
All these measure are part of STARS and these are HEDIS. So who owns them? Clinical or Compliance? The reality is both. Sure these are clinical measures that are monitored and coached upon but these are also results that get reported to Federal agencies. Sure these get reported and audited and sent to NCQA but then they get used for medicare STARS scores which then affects how much money the HMO might receive. The lines are blurring between many groups. Also who actually pulls this information and puts them into a report?? It might be a group's IT department so maybe they own a chunk. It's going to become an increasingly complex world with blurred lines of responsibilities. Many things will fall through the cracks and you really need to be forward thinking.
I'm going to suggest bring back the old Tripartite Pact just replacing them with Clinical, Compliance and IT as the three partners. Anyone who works in the HIPAA world knows how important having IT and Clinical on board to be being successful. But I'm going to take it one step further that in order to be successful in Health Care Compliance you need this pact in the 21st century. Next I'm going to take a specific measure and break it down.
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