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2016 Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage Primary Care January 2016 (Released December 2015) Pay for Quality P R O G R A M G U I D E Table of Contents Introduction to the 2016 Primary Care Pay-for-Quality Program. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Program Eligibility and Enrollment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Program Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Target Dates & Deliverables. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Scoring Period. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Cozeva. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Pay-for-Quality Data Sources and Supplemental Data Process. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Inquiry and Request for Reconsideration of Pay-for-Quality Award Payment and Methodology. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Pay-for-Quality Measures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Preventive Health Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Childhood Immunizations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Immunizations for Adolescents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Heart Disease. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Comprehensive Diabetes Care. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Appropriate Respiratory Care. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Chronic Disease Review. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Patient Population and Member Eligibility. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Pay-for-Quality Payment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Payment Conditions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Quality Payments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Payment Philosophy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Commercial Maximum Payment Potential. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Commercial Performance Quality Report Example. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Commercial Quality Scoring Calculations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment Earned for Each Measure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Threshold Scale Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Quest Integration Maximum Payment Potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Quest Integration Performance Quality Report Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Quest Integration Quality Scoring Calculations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment Earned for Each Measure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Threshold Scale Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 HMSA Akamai Advantage Maximum Payment Potential. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 HMSA Akamai Advantage Performance Quality Report Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment Earned for Each Measure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 National Stars Threshold Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Step 4: Application of the RCC Adjuster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Appendix A - Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Appendix B - Patient Attribution Process. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 1 Introduction to the 2016 Primary Care Pay-for-Quality Program • Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/adolescents This is a new measure that includes the following assessments for children and adolescents aged 3-17 years: Thank you for your dedication to providing high quality care to HMSA members. Your hard work has improved the quality of health care and enhanced the patient experience. Together we’ve made important gains in clinical quality, patient safety, cost management, and well-being improvement. – BMI percentile documentation. In 2016, our P4Q programs will continue focusing on processes and outcomes that result in high-value primary care for our members. For your convenience, we’ve consolidated the details of our pay-for-quality programs, across Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage lines of business, into a single guide. The following program changes are effective January 1, 2016. – Counseling for nutrition. – Counseling for physical activity. The following measures were removed from the program: – Annual Monitoring for patients on ACEI or ARB. – Annual Monitoring for patients on Diuretics. Summary of Changes –A voidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis. COMMERCIAL – Medication Adherence for Cholesterol (Statins). • Advance Care Planning The following codes will be accepted for numerator credit: 1123F, 1124F, 1157F, 1158F, 99497, 99498, S0257. – Medication Adherence for Hypertension (RAS antagonist). – Medication Adherence for Oral Diabetes Medications. • Breast Cancer Screening Numerator specifications for the Breast Cancer Screening measure have been changed as follows: Patients who had one or more mammograms performed during the measurement period or the 15 months prior to the measurement period. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • Body Mass Index Assessment The Body Mass Index (BMI) Assessment measure denominator will include patients aged 18-74 years. • Breast Cancer Screening Numerator specifications for the Breast Cancer Screening measure have been changed as follows: Patients who had one or more mammograms performed during the measurement period or the 15 months prior to the measurement period. • Advance Care Planning The following codes will be accepted for numerator credit: 1123F, 1124F, 1157F, 1158F, 99497, 99498, S0257. • Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents This is a new measure that includes the following assessments for children and adolescents aged 3-17 years: • Body Mass Index Assessment The Body Mass Index (BMI) Assessment measure denominator will include patients aged 18-74 years. – BMI percentile documentation. • Review of Chronic Conditions The measure will display information from the “Cozeva Coding Specificity” tool. See “Review of Chronic Conditions” on page 68 for details. – Counseling for nutrition. – Counseling for physical activity. The following measures were removed from the program: The following measures were removed from the program: – Annual Monitoring for patients on ACEI or ARB. – Comprehensive Diabetes Treatment. – Annual Monitoring for patients on Diuretics. – Medication Adherence for Cholesterol (Statins). – Medication Adherence for Hypertension (RAS antagonist). – Medication Adherence for Oral Diabetes Medications. QUEST INTEGRATION • Breast Cancer Screening Numerator specifications for the Breast Cancer Screening measure have been changed as follows: Patients who had one or more mammograms performed during the measurement period or the 15 months prior to the measurement period. • Body Mass Index Assessment The Body Mass Index (BMI) Assessment measure denominator will include patients aged 18-74 years. 2 Program Eligibility and Enrollment Additional Eligibility Criteria Providers will automatically be enrolled in each 2016 Pay-forQuality Program for which he/she fulfills all eligibility criteria. Please note that some criteria apply uniquely to Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality programs. Note: Exceptions to eligibility criteria may be made at HMSA's sole discretion. COMMERCIAL 1. P articipation in HMSA’S PPO plan at the end of the measurement period. 2. Additional eligible specialty type: Pediatrics. Universal Eligibility and Enrollment Criteria 3. M ust belong to a Provider Organization (PO) (be participating in a Patient-Centered Medical Home program). The following universal eligibility criteria are applied across Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality programs: 1. P articipation in HMSA’S PPO plan at the end of the measurement period. QUEST INTEGRATION 2. Additional eligible specialty type: Pediatrics. 1. Practice in one of the following specialties: HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • Family medicine. 1. P articipation in HMSA Akamai Advantage at the end of the measurement period. • General practice. • Internal medicine. 2. M ust belong to a PO (be participating in a patient-centered medical home program). • Advanced practice registered nurses. • Physician assistants under the supervision of a pay-for-quality program-eligible primary care provider. 2. Exclusions Providers with the aforementioned specialties who are practicing as hospitalists or emergency care providers are excluded from the program. In addition, HMSA reserves the right to exclude other non-primary care specialists in accordance with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) standards. Enrollment Conditions Providers must agree to the following: • Participate fully in the pay-for-quality program and the quality improvement activities necessary to evaluate their performance and improvement. • Accept HMSA’s determination of the pay-for-quality score and understand that the score will serve as the basis for any payfor-quality award from HMSA. Providers may request reconsideration of their score and/or award, but must follow established procedures for reconsideration (see Inquiry and Request for Reconsideration section on page 8). • Providers, at their sole cost and expense, will maintain adequate records related to their obligations under the payfor-quality program. Providers agree that the Department of Health and Human Services, the comptroller general, and/or their designees will have the right of access and entry to this information and to providers’ facilities, including computer and other electronic systems, that pertain to any aspect of providers’ performance that results in payments from HMSA for the purposes of audit, evaluation, and/or inspection.1 Required by regulations promulgated under the Affordable Care Act, 45 C.F.R § 158.501. 1 3 Program Summary Target Dates and Deliverables As a pay-for-quality initiative, this program translates accepted evidence-based medicine into standards that can be objectively measured through analyses of claims and other verifiable data. Establishing measurable quality standards is a constantly evolving process as new clinical evidence is discovered and new treatments are developed. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION DATE Measurement Responsibility All providers (regardless of specialty) are scored on all measures for which their patient panels are eligible. COMMERCIAL & QUEST INTEGRATION MILESTONES January 1, 2016 2016 pay-for-quality program begins. April 2016 First-quarter claims runout. April 30, 2016 Deadline for supplemental data to be included in first-quarter performance, payment, and Requests for Reconsiderations. May 2016 Processing and scoring. June 2016 First-quarter performance report and payment. July 2016 Second-quarter claims runout. July 31, 2016 Deadline for supplemental data to be included in second-quarter performance, payment, and Requests for Reconsiderations. August 2016 Processing and scoring. September 2016 Second-quarter performance report and payment. October 2016 Third-quarter claims runout. October 31, 2016 Deadline for supplemental data to be included in third-quarter performance, payment, and Requests for Reconsiderations. November 2016 Processing and scoring. December 2016 Third-quarter performance report and payment. January 2017 Fourth-quarter claims runout. January 31, 2017 Deadline for supplemental data to be included in fourth-quarter performance, payment, and Requests for Reconsiderations. February 2017 Processing and scoring. March 2017 Fourth-quarter performance report and payment. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE DATE AKAMAI ADVANTAGE MILESTONES January 1, 2016 2016 pay-for-quality program begins. 4 May 2016 Performance quality report for period ending March 30, 2016. August 2016 Performance quality report for period ending June 30, 2016. September 30, 2016 End of the measurement period for the review of chronic conditions (RCC) measure and deadline for submission of RCC supplemental data. November 2016 Performance quality report for period ending September 30, 2016. January 31, 2017 Deadline for submission of supplemental data for the staying healthy and managing chronic conditions measures and Requests for Reconsiderations. February – March 2017 Processing and scoring. April 2017 Annual performance quality report and payment. Scoring Period Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/ Adolescents COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION SCORING PERIOD MEASUREMENT PERIOD BASELINE PERIOD First quarter 2016 April 1, 2015, through March 31, 2016 April 1, 2014, through March 31, 2015 Second quarter 2016 July 1, 2015, through June 30, 2016 July 1, 2014, through June 30, 2015 Third quarter 2016 October 1, 2015, through September 30, 2016 October 1, 2014, through September 30, 2015 Fourth quarter 2016 January 1, 2016, through December 31, 2016 January 1, 2015, through December 31, 2015 SCORING PERIOD MEASUREMENT PERIOD BASELINE PERIOD Measurement period for Chronic Disease Review Measure (i.e., Review of Chronic Conditions) January 1, 2016, to September 30, 2016 January 1, 2015, to September 30, 2015 Measurement period for Staying Healthy & Managing Chronic Conditions Measures (i.e., all other measures) January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2016 January 1, 2015, to December 31, 2015 First Quarter 2016 January 1, 2016 to March 31, 2016 Second Quarter 2016 January 1, 2016 to June 30, 2016 Third Quarter 2016 January 1, 2016 to September 30, 2016 Fourth Quarter 2016 January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016 There is no baseline for this measure and no improvements points will be awarded in 2016. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE SCORING PERIOD MEASUREMENT PERIOD 5 Cozeva • Care Planning Registry: A platform that you and your care teams can use to identify patients who may benefit from additional care as related to pay-for-quality program metrics. The Care Planning Registry is refreshed every week. Cozeva is a dynamic population health management tool that lets providers access their data in a meaningful, actionable, and supportive manner. HMSA strongly encourages the use of Cozeva to help you maximize the quality of your care and your pay-for-quality awards. • Supplemental Data: Allows you to supplement claims- based data with information from your clinical records and immediately updates your Care Planning Registry. The use of Cozeva over time gives you an integrated approach to managing each of your patient’s chronic conditions and comorbidities. Cozeva allows standards of care delivered by any and all providers caring for your patient to be reported and monitored accurately. It provides a care planning registry that identifies gaps in care in accordance with the best standards of care. You can track medication adherence by identifying prescriptions filled, display lab results when available, and add data from the medical record to demonstrate care in accordance with standards. Your ability to identify gaps in care and manage visits allows better engagement with your patients. Note: Supplemental data that doesn’t have a supporting claim (shown as “pending” in Cozeva) will be removed after 30 days. • Member Engagement: Helps you deliver appointment reminders, alerts, and secure messages to your patients. • You can also collaborate with your patients’ designated family members and friends to encourage better health care. • Performance Quality Report: A report to measure your performance for each quarter. You can access a detailed view of each measure, including national percentile target rate and estimated quality pay by percentile ranking. These and other tools and reports are described below: • Patient Panel: A monthly list of patients attributed to you by HMSA from all lines of business. 6 Pay-for-Quality Data Sources and Supplemental Data Process Pay-for-Quality Data Sources Supplemental Data Review: Methodology for the QI Review The pay-for-quality program uses claims data as the primary source to identify patients who meet the numerator and denominator criteria. The supplemental data review for measures excluding the review of chronic conditions measure is conducted by HMSA’s QI unit twice a year (second and fourth quarters). HMSA applies a randomized process, selecting 5 percent or 30 entries (whichever is less) for review (by measure). Requests are then sent to the PCP to provide medical record documentation that supports each entry. Claims data, on occasion, may not be adequate to meet numerator criteria or identify denominator exclusions. For example, claims data may indicate that a woman needs a breast cancer screening when the medical record indicates that she has had a bilateral mastectomy. For PCPs who don’t respond to a request for documentation during the initial review, the selected entries are deleted and no credit is awarded. For PCPs who are found to have one or more unsupported entries, such as when the date of service in the medical record doesn’t match the date of service provided in the entry, HMSA will conduct a second review to validate the accuracy of a larger sample of entries for the same measure that was found to be unsupported. For the second review, 10 percent or 10 entries (whichever is less) are selected. As a result, providers are able to submit supplemental data for certain measures via Cozeva to provide evidence for services that were rendered in the provider's medical record. Additionally, a provider can also submit a Request for Reconsideration to provide evidence that a patient isn't eligible for a given measure. See page 8 for details. Supplemental Data Review If the PCP doesn’t respond to a request in the second review or if two or more entries are found to be unsupported, all of the PCP’s entries for that measure are removed and the PCP’s pay-forquality score and payment is adjusted for the scoring period of these entries. The pay-for-quality program includes a supplemental data review to ensure the integrity of the supplemental data that the PCP submits during the year. The review will select supplemental data submissions and request medical records to support supplemental data submissions. HMSA’s Quality Improvement (QI) unit will conduct the supplemental data reviews for measures, excluding the review of chronic conditions. Supplemental data received for the review of chronic conditions may be reviewed by HMSA. As provided for in their participating provider agreement with HMSA, PCPs or group administrators may submit an inquiry or request for reconsideration of their pay-for-quality score and/or award by HMSA. PCPs are asked to provide any requested medical records by mail or fax by the date indicated in the request. HMSA won’t pick up records or perform on-site chart reviews. All self-reported information must be consistent with the information that was recorded in the patient’s medical record and must include the exact service and the date on which the service was performed. Supplemental Data Review: Methodology for the RCC Review HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE (ONLY) Appendix A identifies the supplemental data submission opportunities and requirements for each measure. The supplemental data review for the HMSA Akamai Advantage review of chronic conditions measure may be conducted by HMSA annually, following the measure’s deadline for supplemental data. If conducted, the review will identify supplemental data entries that cannot be confirmed or denied through research of claims history, past chart reviews, and other data sources. These supplemental data entries will be subject to a review of the supporting medical record documentation that was uploaded with the supplemental data entry. Each supplemental data entry that is found to be invalid will be deleted and the PCP’s pay-for-quality score and payment will be adjusted for the scoring period in which the entry was submitted. 7 Inquiry and Request for Reconsideration of Pay-for-Quality Award Payment and Methodology Inquiries – Date of service. – Diagnosis. An inquiry is defined as a request for additional information about the pay-for-quality program. – Lab result. General inquiries about the pay-for-quality program (not specific to scores or results) will be answered at any time throughout the year. Request for Reconsideration Process 1.Complete one Supplemental Request for Reconsideration form per patient. The form is on Cozeva. Send inquiries by: 2.Submit the form to HMSA. • Letter. Mail to: Fax: 948-6887 on Oahu Hawai‘i Medical Service Association Attn: POA – Rm. 503 P.O. Box 860 Honolulu, HI 96808-0860 Email: [email protected] Mailing address: Hawai‘i Medical Service Association Attn: POA – Rm. 503 P.O. Box 860 Honolulu, HI 96808-0860 • Phone. Please call HMSA. For assistance identifying your contact, please call 948-6820 on Oahu or 1 (877) 304-4672 toll-free on the Neighbor Islands. 3.HMSA will review and respond to your request no later than 60 days after receiving your request. • Web. Use the Contact Us feature on Cozeva. Requests for Reconsideration 4.If you’re dissatisfied with HMSA’s response to your request for reconsideration, additional dispute resolution remedies are available to you under your HMSA participating provider agreement. Reconsideration is defined as a request for HMSA to change a determination it has made regarding a provider’s reported scores and/or payment. Questions • Email. Send to [email protected]. If you have questions, please call 948-6820 on Oahu or 1 (877) 304-4672 toll-free on the Neighbor Islands. Note: When a particular service is shown as incomplete in the provider’s Care Planning Registry, Cozeva enables you to submit supplemental data for some measures to show that the service was performed. When a situation doesn’t match one of the Supplemental Data options listed on Cozeva, you may submit a Supplemental Data Request for Reconsideration. Request for Reconsideration will only be accepted until after the one-month run out period (per quarter). A request for reconsideration submitted within the criteria explained below should include supporting data, if available. (A request for reconsideration won’t be accepted verbally.) Requests for reconsideration must communicate: • Why the online supplemental data process didn’t enable the provider to record supplemental data that satisfies denominator exclusion criteria. • Clinical rationale and supporting citations for denominator exclusion. • Measure. • Patient. • Medical record information to support denominator exclusion such as: – Service/procedure. 8 Pay-for-Quality Clinical Measures Preventive Health Screening MEASURE • • ••• ••• Advance care planning HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION The percentage of patients 75 years and older at the end of the measurement period who had an advance care plan and/or an advance care planning discussion with their PCP documented during the measurement period. Body mass index assessment The percentage of patients 18–74 years of age who had an outpatient visit and whose body mass index was documented during the measurement period. Breast cancer screening The percentage of women 52–74 years of age who had one or more mammograms during the 27 months prior to the end of the measurement period. •• Cervical cancer screening The percentage of women 24–64 years of age who were screened for cervical cancer using either cervical cytology during the measurement year or the two years prior. If age 30–64, a cervical cytology and a human papillomavirus (HPV) test with service dates four or less days apart during the measurement period or the four prior measurement periods are also accepted. •• Chlamydia screening for women ••• •• •• •• The percentage of women 16–24 years of age who were identified as sexually active and who had at least one test for chlamydia during the current measurement period. (USPSTF guideline) Colorectal cancer screening The percentage of patients 51–75 years of age who had appropriate screening for colorectal cancer through one of these measures: fecal occult blood test (FOBT) during the current measurement period, flexible sigmoidoscopy during the measurement period or the four prior measurement periods, or colonoscopy during the current measurement period or the nine prior measurement periods. (USPSTF guideline) Well-child visits in the first 15 months of life The percentage of patients who turned 15 months old during the measurement period with six or more well-child visits with a PCP. Well-child visits in the The percentage of patients 3–6 years of age who received one or more well-child visits with third, fourth, fifth, and sixth a PCP during the current measurement period. years of life Weight assessment and counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents The percentage of patients 3–17 years of age who receive BMI, nutrition, and physical activity counseling during an annual visit. • COMMERCIAL INTEGRATION • QUEST • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE For more details, see Appendix A. 9 Pay-for-Quality Clinical Measures (continued) Childhood Immunizations Percentage of children having all of the following immunizations on or before their second birthday. •• •• •• •• •• •• •• INDIVIDUAL IMMUNIZATION HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION Diphtheria, Tetanus, and Acellular Pertussis (DTaP) At least four DTaP vaccinations with different dates of service on or before the child’s second birthday. DTaP administered prior to 42 days after birth can't be counted. Haemophilus Influenzae Type b (Hib) Hepatitis B (HepB) At least three Hib vaccinations with different dates of service on or before the child’s second birthday. Hib administered prior to 42 days after birth can't be counted. At least two outpatient HepB vaccinations with different dates of service on or before the child’s second birthday. Inactivated Poliovirus (IPV) At least three IPV vaccinations with different dates of service on or before the child’s second birthday. IPV administered prior to 42 days after birth can't be counted. Measles, Mumps, & Rubella (MMR) At least one MMR vaccination with a date of service on or before the child’s second birthday. Pneumococcal Conjugate (PCV) At least four PCV vaccinations with different dates of service on or before the child’s second birthday. PCV administered prior to 42 days after birth can't be counted. Varicella (VZV) At least one VZV vaccination with a date of service on or before the child’s second birthday. Immunizations for Adolescents Percentage of adolescents having all of the following immunizations on or before their 13th birthday. INDIVIDUAL IMMUNIZATION •• Meningococcal •• Tetanus, Diphtheria, and Acellular Pertussis (Tdap) or Tetanus and Diphtheria (Td) HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION One meningococcal vaccine on or between the adolescent’s 7th and 13th birthdays. One Tdap or one Td between the adolescent's 10th and 13th birthdays. • COMMERCIAL INTEGRATION • QUEST HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • For more details, see Appendix A. 10 Pay-for-Quality Clinical Measures (continued) Heart Disease MEASURE ••• HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION The percentage of patients 18–85 years of age who had a diagnosis of hypertension and whose blood pressure was adequately controlled during the measurement period based on the most recent blood pressure reading during the measurement period (after diagnosing Controlling blood pressure hypertension) according to the following criteria: – Members 18–59 years of age whose BP was <140/90 mm Hg. – Members 60–85 years of age whose BP was <150/90 mm Hg. • Medication adherence for cholesterol (statins) The percentage of patients 18 years of age or older who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy for statin cholesterol medications by meeting the proportion of days covered threshold of 80 percent during the measurement year. • Medication adherence for hypertension (RAS antagonist) The percentage of patients 18 years of age or older who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy for renin angiotensin system (RAS) antagonist medication by meeting the proportion of days covered threshold of 80 percent during the measurement year. Comprehensive Diabetes Care MEASURE ••• Blood pressure control <140/90 ••• Eye exam • HbA1c control (<8.0%) • HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION The percentage of patients with diabetes 18–75 years of age whose most recent blood pressure reading during the measurement period was <140/90 mm Hg. The percentage of patients with diabetes 18–75 years of age who received a retinal or dilated eye exam by an eye care professional (optometrist or ophthalmologist) in the current measurement period or a negative retinal exam (no evidence of retinopathy) by an eye care professional in the prior measurement period. (American Diabetes Association guideline) The percentage of patients with diabetes age 18–75 years whose most recent HbA1c test during the measurement period is <8.0 percent. • HbA1c in control (≤9) The percentage of patients with diabetes age 18–75 years whose most recent HbA1c test during the measurement period is ≤9.0 percent or whose HbA1c wasn't measured during the measurement period. • Medication adherence for oral diabetes medications The percentage of patients 18 years of age or older who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy across four classes of oral diabetes medications – biguanides, sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones, and dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibitors – by meeting the proportion of days covered threshold or 80 percent during the measurement period. Medical attention for nephropathy The percentage of patients with diabetes 18–75 years of age who had at least one test for microalbumin during the current measurement period or who had evidence of medical attention for existing nephropathy (diagnosis of nephropathy or documentation of microalbuminuria or albuminuria; ACE inhibitor/ARB therapy during the measurement period is also acceptable evidence). (American Diabetes Association guideline) ••• • COMMERCIAL INTEGRATION • QUEST • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE For more details, see Appendix A. 11 Pay-for-Quality Clinical Measures (continued) Appropriate Respiratory Care MEASURE HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION •• Appropriate testing for children with pharyngitis The percentage of children 2–18 years of age who were diagnosed with pharyngitis, prescribed an antibiotic, and received a group A streptococcus (strep) test for the episode. A higher rate represents better performance (i.e., appropriate testing). •• Appropriate treatment for children with upper respiratory infection The percentage of children 3 months–18 years of age who were given a diagnosis of upper respiratory infection and weren’t dispensed an antibiotic prescription. • Avoidance of antibiotic treatment in adults with acute bronchitis The percentage of patients 18–64 years of age with a diagnosis of acute bronchitis who weren't dispensed an antibiotic prescription. (This measure is reported as an inverted rate. A higher rate indicates appropriate treatment of adults with acute bronchitis.) •• Medication management for people with asthma The percentage of patients 5–85 years of age during the measurement year who were identified as having persistent asthma, dispensed appropriate medications, and were adherent during the treatment period. Chronic Disease Review • MEASURE HIGH-LEVEL DEFINITION Review of Chronic Conditions The percentage of chronic condition groupings or codes that were identified in the two years prior that are persistent during the measurement period as confirmed by claims or disconfirmed by provider attestation. Note: Information from the Cozeva Coding Specificity (CCS) tool will be displayed. See page 68 for details. • COMMERCIAL INTEGRATION • QUEST • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE 12 Patient Population and Member Eligibility Patient Population Identification Member Eligibility COMMERCIAL To be included in a provider’s performance rate calculations, members must be assigned to the provider’s patient panel and be eligible HMSA members for at least nine of the 12 months in the measurement period. HMSA’s Commercial plans (HMO and PPO) are eligible for the program. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE All members eligible for a measure, whether or not they meet this requirement, will contribute to a provider’s maximum payment potential for each of the months they are attributed to the provider. Only HMSA Akamai Advantage plans are currently eligible for the program. If a member participates in another plan in addition to HMSA Akamai Advantage, the member can only be counted under one of the pay-for-quality programs as follows: For the review of chronic conditions measure, however, additional criteria must be met for a member to contribute to maximum payment potential: • If a member under HMSA Akamai Advantage also has coverage under HMSA’s Commercial plan, the member will be counted under the Commercial pay-for-quality program. • Members must be assigned to the provider’s patient panel and be eligible HMSA members for at least six of the nine months in the measurement period. • If a member under HMSA Akamai Advantage also has coverage under The HMSA Plan for QUEST Integration Members, the member will be counted under the HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality program. • The eligible member must have at least one condition in the measure’s denominator; and QUEST INTEGRATION • The provider must render services to and/or submit at least one claim for the eligible member. HMSA's QUEST Integration plan is eligible for the program. Member Eligibility for Specific Measures COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION The childhood immunization status measure requires the following: • Members must have a PCP relationship with a pediatrician (as defined by the patient panel rules) and be eligible HMSA members during at least 11 of the 12 months prior to turning 2 years old, as well as during the month the member turns 2 years old. 13 Pay-for-Quality Payment Payment Conditions Examples of scoring are provided per line of business in subsequent sections of this program guide. To be eligible, a provider must meet all of the following criteria: • Participate in: Payment Philosophy –H MSA’s PPO plan, for Commercial and QUEST Integration pay-for-quality. Under the primary care pay-for-quality program, payment varies predictably with the provider’s performance and improvement within the quality measures based on a predetermined formula. The provider is paid for performance as well as improvement in a given measure. Points scored for performance and for improvement determine total points, which translate into monetary awards. – HMSA Akamai Advantage at the end of the measurement period, for HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality. • Participate in a PCMH program for Commercial and HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality. • Practice in the state of Hawaii at the end of each measurement period. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION The variable payment formula calculation for Commercial and QUEST Integration Pay-for-Quality will be based on: • Submit claims to HMSA that indicate a face-to-face encounter, during the measurement period. For example, at least one such Medicare Advantage claim must be submitted during the measurement period for HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality. • Patient panel count. • Pay-for-quality per member per month (PMPM) budget. (In 2016, the Commercial PMPM is $4.25 and the QUEST Integration PMPM is $2.75.) See, also, details under the Program Eligibility and Enrollment sections on page 3. If the provider or group administrator is eligible to receive an award, the award check and remittance report will be sent to the payee(s) that the provider or group administrator designated for HMSA claims payments as of the end of each measurement period. • Measure weighting. – Individual measure patient panel count. – Individual measure importance and effort. • Performance levels determine points earned per measure. • Points earned and weighting are factors that determine the actual portion of the potential award earned. Quality Payments For a more detailed explanation of payment formulas, see Example Quality Performance Report and Quality Scoring Calculations (Commercial, pages 18-25; QUEST Integration, pages 28-34). Pay-for-quality payments are based on your cumulative performance during the measurement period compared to your performance during the corresponding baseline period. See Scoring Period tables on page 5, for details on Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage 2016 pay-forquality programs’ performance and baseline periods. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE The variable payment formula calculation for HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality will be based on: Performance quality reports are sent out about two months after the end of each quarter. Commercial and QUEST Integration pay-for-quality performance payments will be included with these reports, while HMSA Akamai Advantage will be scored for payment at the end of the measurement year. The program schedule allows for a one-month claims run-out, one month for validation, and one month for processing. Reconciliations for Commercial and QUEST Integration pay-for-quality will be made quarterly. For detailed program schedules, see the Target Dates and Deliverables tables on page 4. • Patient panel count per measure. • The amount budgeted per member per measure for pay-for-quality per member per month (PMPM) depending on the measure. See PMPMs for the HMSA Akamai Advantage pay-for-quality program on page 36. • Measurement-period performance compared to baseline-period performance and performance Stars levels determine points earned per measure. The programs establish a maximum payment potential per line of business. See the Maximum Payment Potential section for Commercial (page 15), QUEST Integration (page 26), and HMSA Akamai Advantage (page 35) for details. The portion you earn — your annual pay-for-quality payment — is determined by a threshold scoring model. This model allocates points based on a provider’s performance compared to percentile levels (or Stars levels, for HMSA Akamai Advantage) and improvement over the levels achieved during the baseline period. • Points earned, which determine the actual portion of the maximum payment potential earned. For a more detailed explanation of payment formulas, see Example Quality Performance Report and Quality Scoring Calculations (pages 35-43). NOTE: New PCPs without a 2015 Performance Quality Report are eligible for performance points only, because there’s no baseline to compare against for improvement points. Similarly, PCPs only earn performance points on new measures, because there are no baselines for improvement points. 14 Commercial Pay-for-Quality Payment Commercial Total Maximum Payment Potential COMMERCIAL The primary care pay-for-quality program counts the eligible patients in the PCP’s primary care panel at the end of each month. The monthly values are added to generate a quarterly subtotal. Then, that count is multiplied by $4.25 to calculate the total maximum payment potential for that quarter. For example: On January 31, 2016, a provider has 1,063 eligible HMSA patients, 1,061 patients on February 28, 2016, and 1,065 patients on March 31, 2016. The provider’s estimated member months are 3,189 (1,063 + 1,061 + 1,065). The maximum payment potential = $13,553.25 (3,189 x $4.25). PRIMARY CARE PATIENT COUNT PMPM AMOUNT TOTAL MONTHLY POTENTIAL January 1,063 $4.25 $4,517.75 February 1,061 $4.25 $4,509.25 March 1,065 $4.25 $4,526.25 Quarter 1 Subtotal 3,189 April 1,063 $4.25 $4,517.75 May 1,061 $4.25 $4,509.25 June 1,065 $4.25 $4,526.25 Quarter 2 Subtotal 3,189 July 1,063 $4.25 $4,517.75 August 1,061 $4.25 $4,509.25 September 1,065 $4.25 $4,526.25 Quarter 3 Subtotal 3,189 October 1,050 $4.25 $4,462.50 November 1,150 $4.25 $4,887.50 December 1,200 $4.25 $5,100.00 Quarter 4 Subtotal 3,400 $14,450.00 Annual Total 12,967 $55,109.75 MONTH $ 13,553.25 $13,553.25 $13,553.25 15 Commercial 2016 Performance Quality Report Example COMMERCIAL To work through the following examples, consult the quarterly 2016 Performance Quality Report for Dr. Aloha Lee (internal medicine) on this page. Performance Period: Baseline Period: Provider: Lee, Aloha Est. Member Months: 3,189 4/1/2015 to 3/31/2016 4/1/2014 to 3/31/2015 † Total Max Pay Potential : $13,553.25 PERFORMANCE RATE BASELINE PERCENTILE 17 85% 90th 90th 12.5 $152.24 $190.30 5 4 80% 75th 25th 0.0 $38.06 $0.00 1 5 5 100% 90th 90th 12.5 $19.03 $23.79 1 30 27 90% 90th 90th 12.5 $114.18 $142.73 0.15 600 550 91.67% 75th 50th 4.0 $342.54 $137.02 Breast Cancer Screening 1 453 350 77.26% 75th 25th 0.0 $1,724.13 $0.00 Cervical Cancer Screening 1 671 541 80.63% 90th 50th 4.0 $2,553.84 $1,021.54 Childhood Immunization Status 4 4 4 100% 75th 90th 12.5 $60.90 $76.12 Chlamydia Screening for Women 1 16 16 100% 90th 90th 12.5 $60.90 $76.12 Colorectal Cancer Screening 1 756 721 95.37% 75th 90th 12.5 $2,877.35 $3,596.69 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) 2 92 80 86.96% 90th 90th 12.5 $700.31 $875.39 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 1 92 71 77.17% 75th 75th 8.0 $350.15 $280.12 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (≤9.0) 2 92 88 95.65% 90th 90th 12.5 $700.31 $875.39 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 1 92 88 95.65% 90th 90th 12.5 $350.15 $437.69 Controlling Blood Pressure 2 420 351 83.57% 75th 75th 8.0 $3,197.06 $2,557.65 Immunizations for Adolescents 1 11 6 54.55% <10th 10th 2.0 $41.87 $8.37 Medication Management for People with Asthma (75% Compliance) 3 10 10 100% 75th 90th 12.5 $114.18 $142.73 MEASURE WEIGHT DEMONINATOR Advance Care Planning 2 20 Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis 2 Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection Avoidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis Body Mass Index Assessment NUMERATOR † Total Max Pay Potential = Member Months x PMPM Rate. 16 PERCENTILE POINTS MAX PAYMENT PAYMENT EARNED PERFORMANCE RATE BASELINE PERCENTILE 75 75% 50th 50th 4 $57.09 $22.84 2 1 50% <10th <10th 0 $22.84 $0.00 2 10 8 80% 75th 50th 4 $76.12 $30.45 31.30 3,481 $13,553.25 $10,494.92 MEASURE WEIGHT DEMONINATOR 0.15 100 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of Life 3 Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of Life Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents Total NUMERATOR † Est. Max Quality Pay = Member Months x PMPM Rate. 17 PERCENTILE POINTS MAX PAYMENT PAYMENT EARNED Commercial Quality Scoring Calculations Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure COMMERCIAL a. Weigh the Patient Panel of the Measure • Divide the measure denominator by the total of all denominators. The result is the patient panel weight factor for the measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening is 453 / 3,481 = 0.1301350187. b. Weigh the Measure Importance and Effort. • Divide the measure importance weight by the total of all weights. Example: The breast cancer screening importance weight is 1. The total of all weights is 31.3. Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening adjustment factor is 1/31.3 = 0.0319488818. c. Combine Weight • Multiply the patient panel measure weight factor (from section a) by the importance and effort weight factor (from section b) for a combined weight factor for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening combined weight factor is 0.1301350187 x 0.0319488818 = 0.0041576683. d. Total Combined Weight Factors • Add the combined weight factors (from section c) of all measures for total combined weight. Example: Dr. Lee’s Total Combined Weight Factor is 0.0326831278. e. Normalize Combined Weight Factors • Divide the combined weight factor for each measure (from section c) by the total combined weight (from section d). This is the normalized combined weight factor. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening normalized weight factor is 0.0041576683 / 0.0326831278 = 0.1272114567. f. Calculate Max Payment for Each Measure • Multiply the normalized combined weight for each measure (from section e) by the Total Max Pay Potential (top section of the 2016 Performance Quality Report above) to calculate the Max Payment. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening max payment is 1272114567 x $13,553.25 = $1,724.13. † Est. Max Quality Pay = Member Months x PMPM Rate. 18 Commercial Calculating Measure Maximum Payment Example COMMERCIAL MEASURES COMBINED WEIGHT (DENOMINATOR/TOTAL DENOMINATORS) X (MEASURE WEIGHT/ TOTAL MEASURE WEIGHTS) COMBINED WEIGHT NORMALIZED WEIGHT CALCULATION (COMBINED WEIGHT/ TOTAL COMBINED WEIGHT) NORMALIZED WEIGHT MAX PAYMENT CALCULATION (NORMALIZED WEIGHT/ TOTAL MAX PAY POTENTIAL) MAX PAYMENT 1. Advance Care Planning (20/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0003671230 0.0003671230 / 0.0326831278 0.0112327980 0.0112327980 / $13,553.25 $152.24 2. Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis (5/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0000917808 0.0000917808 / 0.0326831278 0.0028081999 0.0028081999 / $13,553.25 $38.06 3. Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection (5/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0000458904 0.0000458904 / 0.0326831278 0.0014041000 0.0014041000 / $13,553.25 $19.03 4. Avoidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis (30/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0002753423 0.0002753423 / 0.0326831278 0.0084245998 0.0084245998 / $13,553.25 $114.18 5. Body Mass Index Assessment (600/3,481) x (.15/31.3) 0.0008260268 0.0008260268 / .0326831278 0.0252737995 0.0252737995 / $13,553.25 $342.54 6. Breast Cancer Screening (453/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0041576683 0.0041576683 / 0.0326831278 0.1272114567 0.1272114567 / $13,553.25 $1,724.13 7. Cervical Cancer Screening (671/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0061584888 0.0061584888 / 0.0326831278 0.1884302162 0.1884302162 / $13,553.25 $2,553.84 8. Childhood Immunization Status (All individual immunizations) (4/3,481) x (4/31.3) 0.0001468492 0.0001468492 / 0.0326831278 0.0044931199 0.0044931199 / $13,553.25 $60.90 9. Chlamydia Screening for Women (16/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0001468492 0.0001468492 / 0.0326831278 0.0044931199 0.0044931199 / $13,553.25 $60.90 10. Colorectal Cancer Screening (756/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0069386253 0.0069386253 / 0.0326831278 0.2122999158 0.2122999158 / $13,553.25 $2,877.35 11. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (92/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0016887659 0.0016887659 / 0.0326831278 0.0516708790 0.0516708790 / $13,553.25 $700.31 12. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam (92/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0008443830 0.0008443830 / 0.0326831278 0.0258354395 0.0258354395 / $13,553.25 $350.15 13. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HBA1c in Control (≤9) (92/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0016887659 0.0016887659 / 0.0326831278 0.0516708790 0.0516708790 / $13,553.25 $700.31 14. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy (92/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0008443830 0.0008443830 / 0.0326831278 0.0258354395 0.0258354395 / $13,553.25 $350.15 15. Controlling Blood Pressure (420/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0077095837 0.0077095837 / 0.0326831278 0.2358887953 0.2358887953 / $13,553.25 $3,197.06 16. Immunizations for Adolescents (All individual immunizations) (11/3,481) x (1/31.3) 0.0001009588 0.0001009588 / 0.0326831278 0.0030890199 0.0030890199 / $13,553.25 $41.87 17. Medication Management for People With Asthma (10/3,481) x (3/31.3) 0.0002753423 0.0002753423 / 0.0326831278 0.0084245998 0.0084245998 / $13,553.25 $114.18 18. Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/ Adolescents (100/3,481) x (.15/31.3) 0.0001376711 0.0001376711 / 0.0326831278 0.0042122999 0.0042122999 / $13,553.25 $57.09 19 Commercial Calculating Measure Maximum Payment Example COMBINED WEIGHT (DENOMINATOR/TOTAL DENOMINATORS) X (MEASURE WEIGHT/ TOTAL MEASURE WEIGHTS) MEASURES COMBINED WEIGHT NORMALIZED WEIGHT CALCULATION (COMBINED WEIGHT/ TOTAL COMBINED WEIGHT) NORMALIZED WEIGHT MAX PAYMENT CALCULATION (NORMALIZED WEIGHT/ TOTAL MAX PAY POTENTIAL) MAX PAYMENT 19. Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of life (2/3,481) x (3/31.3) 0.0000550685 0.0000550685 / 0.0326831278 0.0016849200 0.0016849200 / $13,553.25 $22.84 20. W ell-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of life (10/3,481) x (2/31.3) 0.0001835615 0.0001835615 / 0.0326831278 0.0056163999 0.0056163999 / $13,553.25 $76.12 TOTAL COMBINED WEIGHT: 0.0326831278 20 TOTAL MAXIMUM PAYMENT POTENTIAL: $13,553.25 Commercial Quality Scoring Calculations Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned COMMERCIAL To calculate performance and improvement points and the portion of the Max Payment that will be earned for each measure, follow these steps. The figures below use numbers from measures on Dr. Lee’s example 2016 Performance Quality Report. a.Determine the performance level that the current performance rate falls into (the level at which the performance rate is greater than or equal to, but less than the next highest percentile level). See the National Percentile Threshold Rates Table, page 23. Example: For breast cancer, Dr. Lee’s performance rate is 77.26 percent. The performance rate of 77 percent falls between the 25th (72.37 percent) and 50th (78.39 percent) percentile using the National Percentile Threshold Rates Table. The breast cancer performance rate is in the 25th percentile. b.The baseline percentile, along with the current performance percentile, is used to determine the performance and improvement points. (Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables, pages 24-25.) Examples: Dr. Lee’s baseline performance for advanced care planning was in the 90th percentile. Dr. Lee’s current performance percentile for advanced care planning is in the 90th percentile. Using the Performance and Improvement Points by Percentile Range Tables, Dr. Lee earned 10 performance points and 2.5 improvement points for a total of 12.5 points. Dr. Lee’s baseline performance for breast cancer screening was in the 75th percentile. Dr. Lee’s current performance percentile for breast cancer screening is in the 25th percentile. Using the Performance and Improvement Points by Percentile Range Tables, Dr. Lee earned 0 performance points and 0 improvement points for a total of 0 points. 21 Commercial Quality Scoring Calculations Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment for Each Measure COMMERCIAL Multiply the maximum payment for each measure by the total points earned. Divide the result by 10 to determine the actual payment earned for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s maximum payment for colorectal cancer screening was $2,877.35. Dr. Lee earned 12.5 total points for colorectal cancer screening. Dr. Lee’s actual payment earned for colorectal cancer screening is ($2,877.35 x 12.5 points) / 10 = $3,596.69. Each measure has a budget of 10 performance points. A provider may exceed the performance points by earning bonus points on individual measures. The total payment earned amount (total of all payments earned for all measures) is capped at 110 percent of the total maximum payment potential. Providers must score at least 40 percent overall in each program (Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage) to qualify for payment in the respective line of business. For example, if a provider scores 82 percent overall in Commercial and 31 percent overall in QUEST Integration, the provider will be awarded earned dollars for Commercial, but will not be awarded earned dollars for QUEST Integration. 22 COMMERCIAL National Percentile Threshold Rates – Clinical Measures† Threshold Scale Selection COMMERCIAL MEASURES 10TH 25TH 50TH 75TH 90TH Advance Care Planning 30.00 40.00 50.00 60.00 70.00 Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis 59.72 71.94 81.80 90.81 95.88 Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection 71.00 80.29 87.49 96.87 99.64 Avoidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis 16.15 20.74 25.99 45.64 60.20 Body Mass Index Assessment 64.77 76.18 87.21 93.94 99.02 Breast Cancer Screening 68.70 72.37 78.39 82.49 86.28 Cervical Cancer Screening 69.33 72.85 77.34 81.25 86.36 Childhood Immunization Status (All individual immunizations) 72.00 79.00 83.24 89.50 91.78 Chlamydia Screening for Women 32.97 36.37 43.43 55.08 70.60 Colorectal Cancer Screening 50.56 61.07 68.27 74.41 79.61 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 35.67 49.91 63.41 74.51 80.11 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c In Control ≤9 59.03 71.21 76.09 81.81 83.6 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 79.80 82.72 88.57 93.00 95.51 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control 58.91 65.40 72.34 78.46 85.94 Controlling Blood Pressure 52.82 63.07 68.78 76.70 88.86 Immunizations for Adolescents (All individual immunizations) 48.11 63.71 73.88 85.87 89.56 Medication Management for People with Asthma 34.51 39.02 43.80 52.31 60.72 Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents 3.97 43.82 62.36 75.09 95.76 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of life 66.57 73.00 81.86 87.94 92.09 Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of life 57.86 62.28 74.33 80.47 86.89 † Percentile ranks reflect the provider network performance for a large number of health plans (actual numbers vary by measure). These percentile levels are from NCQA Quality Compass®. Quality Compass® is a registered trademark of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). 23 COMMERCIAL Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables The following tables correspond to the six possible Baseline Period Performance levels and detail the performance and improvement points earned based on current measurement period performance. Select the table that corresponds to your baseline performance level for each measure. Locate the row that describes your current-period performance percentile level and note the total points earned for each measure. Table 1: Baseline Period Performance: < 10th Percentile MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 2 2 25 percentile 0 3 3 50th percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS th th th 90 percentile th Table 2: Baseline Period Performance: 10 Percentile th MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE <10th percentile 0 0 0 10th percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 2 2 50 percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS th th 90 percentile th Table 3: Baseline Period Performance: 25 Percentile th MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE <10th percentile 0 0 0 10th percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 90th percentile 10 2.5 12.5 th th 24 COMMERCIAL Table 4: Baseline Period Performance: 50th Percentile MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 0 0 25 percentile 0 0 0 50th percentile 4 0 4 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 90 percentile 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS th th th th Table 5: Baseline Period Performance: 75th Percentile MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE <10th percentile 0 0 0 10th percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 0 4 th 75 percentile 8 0 8 90th percentile 10 2.5 12.5 MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS SUSTAINED EXCELLENCE TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 0 0 25 percentile 0 0 0 50th percentile 4 0 4 75 percentile 8 0 8 90 percentile 10 2.5 12.5 th Table 6: Baseline Period Performance: 90th Percentile th th th th 25 QUEST Integration Quality Scoring Calculations Total Maximum Payment Potential QUEST INTEGRATION The primary care pay-for-quality program counts the eligible patients in the PCP’s primary care panel at the end of each month. The monthly values are added to generate a quarterly subtotal. That count is multiplied by $2.75 to calculate the total maximum payment potential. For example: On January 31, 2016, a provider has 1,063 eligible HMSA patients, 1,061 patients on February 28, 2016, and 1,065 patients on March 31, 2016. For the first quarter in 2016, the provider’s estimated member month total is 3,189 (1,063 + 1,061 + 1,065). The maximum payment potential = $8,769.75 (3,189 x $2.75). PRIMARY CARE PATIENT COUNT PMPM AMOUNT TOTAL MONTHLY POTENTIAL January 1,063 $2.75 $2,923.25 February 1,061 $2.75 $2,917.75 March 1,065 $2.75 $2,928.75 Quarter 1 Subtotal 3,189 April 1,063 $2.75 $2,923.25 May 1,061 $2.75 $2,917.75 June 1,065 $2.75 $2,928.75 Quarter 2 Subtotal 3,189 July 1,063 $2.75 $2,923.25 August 1,061 $2.75 $2,917.75 September 1,065 $2.75 $2,928.75 Quarter 3 Subtotal 3,189 October 1,063 $2.75 $2,923.25 November 1,061 $2.75 $2,917.75 December 1,065 $2.75 $2,928.75 Quarter 4 Subtotal 3,189 $8,769.75 Annual Total 12,756 $35,079.00 MONTH $8,769.75 $8,769.75 $8,769.75 26 QUEST Integration 2016 Performance Quality Report Example QUEST INTEGRATION To work through the following examples, consult the quarterly Performance Quality Report for Dr. Aloha Lee (internal medicine) on this page. Performance Period: 4/1/2015 to 3/31/2016 Baseline Period: 4/1/2014 to 3/31/2015 Provider: Lee, Aloha Est. Member Months: 3,189 Total Max Pay Potential: $8,769.75 MEASURE WEIGHT DEMONINATOR NUMERATOR PERFORMANCE RATE BASELINE PERCENTILE Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis 2 5 4 80.00% 75th 75th 8.0 $25.12 $20.10 Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection 1 5 5 100.00% 75th 90th 12.5 $12.56 $15.70 0.15 600 500 83.33% 50th 50th 4.0 $226.09 $90.44 Breast Cancer Screening 1 453 350 77.26% 90th 90th 12.5 $1,137.98 $1,422.48 Cervical Cancer Screening 1 671 541 80.63% 90th 90th 12.5 $1,685.62 $2,107.03 Childhood Immunization Status 4 4 4 100.00% 90th 90th 12.5 $40.19 $50.24 Chlamydia Screening for Women 1 16 16 100.00% 90th 90th 12.5 $40.19 $50.24 Colorectal Cancer Screening 1 756 500 66.14% 90th 25th 0.0 $1,899.15 $0.00 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) 2 92 80 86.96% 90th 90th 12.5 $462.23 $577.78 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 1 92 71 77.17% 90th 90th 12.5 $231.11 $288.89 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (<8.0) 2 92 85 92.39% 90th 90th 12.5 $462.23 $577.78 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 1 92 88 95.65% 90th 90th 12.5 $231.11 $288.89 Controlling Blood Pressure 2 420 250 59.52% 50th 50th 4.0 $2,110.17 $844.07 Immunizations for Adolescents 1 11 7 63.64% <10th 25th 3.0 $27.63 $8.29 Medication Management for People with Asthma (75% Compliance) 3 10 10 100.00% 90th 90th 12.5 $75.36 $94.20 Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents 0.15 100 75 75.00% 75th 75th 8.0 $37.68 $30.15 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of Life 3 2 1 50.00% <10th <10th 0.0 $15.07 $0.00 Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of Life 2 10 80.00% 50th 50th 4.0 $50.24 $20.10 28.30 3,431 $8,769.75 $6,486.37 Body Mass Index Assessment Total 8 27 PERCENTILE POINTS MAX PAYMENT PAYMENT EARNED Quest Integration Quality Scoring Calculations Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure QUEST INTEGRATION a. Weigh the Patient Panel of the Measure • Divide the measure denominator by the total of all denominators. The result is the patient panel weight factor for the measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening is 453 / 3,431 = 0.1320314777. b. Weigh the Measure Importance and Effort •Divide the measure importance weight by the total of all weights. Example: The breast cancer screening importance weight is 1. The total of all weights is 28.3. Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening adjustment factor is 1/28.3 = 0.0353356890. c. Combine Weight Factors •Multiply the patient panel measure weight factor (from section a) by the importance and effort weight factor (from section b) for a combined weight factor for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening combined weight factor is 0.1320314777 x 0.0353356890 = 0.0046654232. d. Total Combined Weight Factors • Add the combined weight factors (from section c) of all Dr. Lee’s measures for the total combined weight. Example: Dr. Lee’s total combined weight factor is 0.0359536258. e. Normalize Combined Weight Factors • Divide the combined weight factor for each measure (from section c) by the total combined weight (from section d). This is the normalized combined weight. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening normalized combined weight factor is 0.0046654232 / 0.0359536258 = .1297622450. f. Calculate Max Payment for Each Measure •Multiply the normalized combined weight for each measure (from section e) by the Total Max Pay Potential (top section of the 2016 Performance Quality Report above) to calculate the Max Payment for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer screening max payment is .1297622450 x $8,769.75 = $1,137.98. † Est. Max Quality Pay = Member Months x PMPM Rate. 28 QUEST Integration Calculating Measure Maximum Payment Example QUEST INTEGRATION The importance of weight factors are determined by the degree of difficulty required to complete the particular clinical process for each measure and the importance of the measure on HMSA’s accreditation ranking. MAX PAYMENT CALCULATION (NORMALIZED WEIGHT/ TOTAL MAX PAY POTENTIAL) COMBINED WEIGHT CALCULATIONS (DENOMINATOR/TOTAL DENOMINATORS) X (MEASURE WEIGHT/TOTAL MEASURE WEIGHTS) COMBINED WEIGHT Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis (5/3,431) x (2/28.3) 0.0001029895 0.0001029895 / 0.0359536258 0.0028645087 0.0028645087 / $8,769.75 $25.12 Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection (5/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0000514947 0.0000514947 / 0.0359536258 0.0014322544 0.0014322544 / $8,769.75 $12.56 Body Mass Index Assessment (600/3,431) x (.15/28.3) 0.0009269053 0.0009269053 / 0.0359536258 0.0257805786 0.0257805786 / $8,769.75 $226.09 Breast Cancer Screening (453/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0046654232 0.0046654232 / 0.0359536258 0.1297622450 0.1297622450 / $8,769.75 $1,137.98 Cervical Cancer Screening (671/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0069105938 0.0069105938 / 0.0359536258 0.1922085362 0.1922085362 / $8,769.75 $1,685.62 Childhood Immunization Status (4/3,431) x (4/28.3) 0.0001647832 0.0001647832 / 0.0359536258 0.0045832140 0.0045832140 / $8,769.75 $40.19 Chlamydia Screening for Women (16/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0001647832 0.0001647832 / 0.0359536258 0.0045832140 0.0045832140 / $8,769.75 $40.19 Colorectal Cancer Screening (756/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0077860043 0.0077860043 / 0.0359536258 0.2165568605 0.2165568605 / $8,769.75 $1,899.15 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) (92/3,431) x (2/28.3) 0.0018950063 0.0018950063 / 0.0359536258 0.0527069608 0.0527069608 / $8,769.75 $462.23 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam (92/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0009475032 0.0009475032 / 0.0359536258 0.0263534804 0.0263534804 / $8,769.75 $231.11 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (< 8.0) (92/3,431) x (2/28.3) 0.0018950063 0.0018950063 / 0.0359536258 0.0527069608 0.0527069608 / $8,769.75 $462.23 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy (92/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0009475032 0.0009475032 / 0.0359536258 0.0263534804 0.0263534804 / $8,769.75 $231.11 Controlling Blood Pressure (420/3,431) x (2/28.3) 0.0086511159 0.0086511159 / 0.0359536258 0.2406187339 0.2406187339 / $8,769.75 $2,110.17 Immunizations for Adolescents (11/3,431) x (1/28.3) 0.0001132884 0.0001132884 / 0.0359536258 0.0031509590 0.0031509590 / $8,769.75 $27.63 Medication Management for People with Asthma (75% Compliance) (10/3,431) x (3/28.3) 0.0003089684 0.0003089684 / 0.0359536258 0.0085935262 0.0085935262 / $8,769.75 $75.36 Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children / Adolescents (100/3,431) x (.15/28.3) 0.0001544842 0.0001544842 / 0.0359536258 0.0042967631 0.0042967631 / $8,769.75 $37.68 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of Life (2/3,431) x (3/28.3) 0.0000617937 0.0000617937 / 0.0359536258 0.0017187052 0.0017187052 / $8,769.75 $15.07 Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of Life (10/3,431) x (2/28.3) 0.0002059790 0.0002059790 / 0.0359536258 0.0057290175 0.0057290175 / $8,769.75 $50.24 MEASURES TOTAL 0.0359536258 29 NORMALIZED WEIGHT CALCULATION (COMBINED WEIGHT/ TOTAL COMBINED WEIGHT) NORMALIZED WEIGHT MAX PAYMENT $8,769.75 QUEST Integration Quality Scoring Calculations Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned QUEST INTEGRATION To calculate performance and improvement points and the portion of the Max Payment that will be earned for each measure, follow these steps. The figures below use numbers from measures on Dr. Lee’s 2016 Quest Integration Performance Quality Report example. a.Determine the performance level than the current performance rate falls into (the level at which the performance rate is greater than or equal to, but less than the next highest percentile level) See the National Percentile Threshold Rates Table, page 32. Example: For the breast cancer measure, Dr. Lee’s performance rate is 77.26 percent. The performance rate of 77.26 percent is above the 90th percentile (73.35 percent). The breast cancer performance rate is in the 90th percentile. b.The baseline percentile, along with the current percentile, is used to determine the performance and improvement points. (See Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables, pages 33-34.) Example: Dr. Lee's breast cancer screening baseline percentile was in the 90th percentile. Dr. Lee’s current performance percentile for breast cancer screening is in the 90th percentile. Using the Performance and Improvement Points by Percentile Range Tables, Dr. Lee earned 10 performance points and 2.5 improvement points for a total of 12.5 points. 30 QUEST Integration Quality Scoring Calculations Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment Earned for Each Measure QUEST INTEGRATION Multiply the maximum payment for each measure by the total points earned. Divide the result by 10 to determine the actual payment earned for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s maximum payment for breast cancer screening is $1,137.98. Dr. Lee earned 12.5 total points for the breast cancer screening measure. Dr. Lee’s actual payment earned for the breast cancer screening measure is ($1,137.98 x 12.5 points) / 10 = $1,422.48. Each measure has a budget of 10 performance points. A provider may exceed the performance points by earning bonus points on individual measures. The total payment earned amount (total of all payments earned for all measures) is capped at 110 percent of the total maximum payment potential. Providers must score at least 40 percent overall in each program (Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage) to qualify for payment in the respective line of business. For example, if a provider scores 82 percent overall in Commercial and 31 percent overall in QUEST Integration, the provider will be awarded earned dollars for Commercial, but will not be awarded earned dollars for QUEST Integration. 31 QUEST INTEGRATION National Percentile Threshold Rates – Clinical Measures† Threshold Scale Selection QUEST INTEGRATION MEASURES 10TH 25TH 50TH 75TH 90TH Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis 51.84 61.82 71.30 79.97 87.09 Appropriate Testing for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection 78.03 82.57 87.11 93.21 96.39 Body Mass Index Assessment 65.35 72.54 79.81 87.23 92.82 Breast Cancer Screening 47.59 52.21 58.37 67.12 73.35 Cervical Cancer Screening 48.22 60.15 67.42 73.96 78.64 Childhood Immunization Status (All individual immunizations) 66.97 71.60 77.89 83.74 87.40 Chlamydia Screening for Women 48.62 53.70 59.40 65.89 70.83 Colorectal Cancer Screening 50.56 60.95 68.16 74.41 78.24 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control 48.02 55.48 64.50 72.07 77.44 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 38.23 47.25 55.31 65.14 70.04 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (≤8) 36.04 43.09 49.72 57.7 61.37 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 72.43 76.67 81.05 85.11 88.86 Controlling Blood Pressure 45.90 51.33 58.52 65.76 71.79 Immunizations for Adolescents (All individual immunizations) 54.94 62.70 72.29 82.90 88.46 Medication Management for People with Asthma 21.00 25.55 31.16 36.96 44.79 Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/ Adolescents 38.69 49.14 60.85 71.76 78.90 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 months of Life 50.70 56.95 66.16 72.90 79.44 Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth years of life 61.81 68.40 73.26 80.51 84.69 † Percentile ranks reflect the provider network performance for a large number of health plans (actual numbers vary by measure). These percentile levels are from NCQA Quality Compass®. Quality Compass® is a registered trademark of the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA). 32 QUEST INTEGRATION Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables The following tables correspond to the six possible Baseline Period Performance levels and detail the performance and improvement points earned based on current measurement period performance. Select the table that corresponds to your baseline performance level for each measure. Locate the row that describes your current-period performance percentile level and note the total points earned for each measure. Table 1: Baseline Period Performance: < 10th Percentile MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 2 2 25 percentile 0 3 3 50th percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS th th th 90 percentile th Table 2: Baseline Period Performance: 10 Percentile th MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE <10th percentile 0 0 0 10th percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 2 2 50 percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS th th 90 percentile th Table 3: Baseline Period Performance: 25 Percentile th MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE <10th percentile 0 0 0 10th percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 2 6 75 percentile 8 2.5 10.5 90th percentile 10 2.5 12.5 th th 33 QUEST INTEGRATION Table 4: Baseline Period Performance: 50th Percentile MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 0 0 25 percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 0 4 75th percentile 8 2.5 10.5 90th percentile 10 2.5 12.5 MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 th th th Table 5: Baseline Period Performance: 75th Percentile 10 percentile 0 0 0 25th percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 0 4 75 percentile 8 0 8 90 percentile 10 2.5 12.5 MEASUREMENT PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS SUSTAINED EXCELLENCE TOTAL POINTS <10th percentile 0 0 0 10 percentile 0 0 0 25 percentile 0 0 0 50 percentile 4 0 4 75th percentile 8 0 8 90 percentile 10 2.5 12.5 th th th th Table 6: Baseline Period Performance: 90th Percentile th th th th 34 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations HMSA Akamai Advantage Maximum Payment Potential HMSA Akamai Advantage Your actual monthly maximum payment potential for a measure may vary each month as the number of eligible members varies based on several factors, including enrollment, PCP selection, chronic conditions, and treatments. The calculation process will be repeated every month to determine your actual yearly maximum payment potential. The health status of individual HMSA Akamai Advantage members varies widely. You may have more patients with chronic diseases or comorbidities and therefore have more challenges in keeping your patients healthy. To align pay-for-quality payments with the unique number of care opportunities for your practice, the program counts the number of members in your primary care panel who meet the criteria for each measure each month (the patient panel count). This number is multiplied by a PMPM amount to calculate your monthly maximum payment potential for each measure. PMPM amounts are based on the approximate relative value of each measure for the current measurement period. Below is an example of the estimated yearly maximum payment potential for one PCP based on one month. DENOMINATOR PMPM MONTHLY MAXIMUM PAYMENT POTENTIAL EST. YEARLY MAXIMUM PAYMENT POTENTIAL Advance Care Planning 38 $2.00 $76.00 $912.00 Body Mass Index Assessment 56 $0.25 $14.00 $168.00 Breast Cancer Screening 13 $1.00 $13.00 $156.00 Colorectal Cancer Screening 56 $1.00 $56.00 $672.00 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Controlled 24 $2.00 $48.00 $576.00 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 24 $1.00 $24.00 $288.00 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (≤9%) 24 $2.00 $48.00 $576.00 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 24 $1.00 $24.00 $288.00 Controlling Blood Pressure 54 $2.00 $108.00 $1,296.00 Medication Adherence for Cholesterol (Statins) 94 $1.50 $141.00 $1,692.00 Medication Adherence for Hypertension (RAS Antagonist) 44 $1.50 $66.00 $792.00 Medication Adherence for Oral Diabetes Medications 38 $1.50 $57.00 $684.00 Review of Chronic Conditions 128 $6.50 $832.00 $7,488.00 $1,507.00 $15,588.00 MEASURE TOTAL Note that RCC is a nine month pay potential instead of 12 months. 35 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations Example Performance Quality Report HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE To work through the following examples, consult the 2016 Performance Quality Report for Dr. Aloha Lee below. Performance Period: Baseline Period: Provider: 1/1/2016 to 12/31/2016 1/1/2015 to 12/31/2015 LEE, ALOHA Est. Eligible Members: 580 Maximum Payment Potential: $15,588 DEMONINATOR NUMERATOR PERFORMANCE RATE BASELINE STARS EARNED PERFORMANCE STARS EARNED Advance Care Planning 38 17 44.74% 3 Body Mass Index Assessment 56 53 94.64% Breast Cancer 13 12 Colorectal Cancer 56 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control < 140/90 PERFORMANCE POINTS PMPM 2 0 $2.00 $912 $0 3 2 0 $0.25 $168 $0 92.31% 3 5 12.5 $1.00 $156 $195 46 82.14% 5 5 12.5 $1.00 $672 $840 24 15 62.50% 2 2 0 $2.00 $576 $0 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 24 20 83.33% 4 4 8 $1.00 $288 $230.40 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (≤9) 24 20 83.33% 3 3 4 $2.00 $576 $230.40 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Nephropathy 24 24 100% 5 5 12.5 $1.00 $288 $360 Controlling Blood Pressure 54 41 75.93% 4 3 4 $2.00 $1,296 $518.40 Medication Adherence – Cholesterol (Statins) 94 82 87.23% 5 5 12.5 $1.50 $1,692 $2,115 Medication Adherence – Hypertension (RAS Antagonist) 44 39 88.64% 5 5 12.5 $1.50 $792 $990 Medication Adherence – Oral Diabetes Medications 38 35 92.11% 4 5 12.5 $1.50 $684 $855 Review of Chronic Conditions= 128 118 92.19% 4 4 8 $6.50 $7,488 $5,990.40 TOTAL 617 MAX PAYMENT PAYMENT EARNED $15,588 $12,324.60 Earned RCC Adjuster: 100% Earned Total Quality Payment: $12,324.60 = The denominator and numerator counts for the review of chronic conditions measure is based on the number of conditions rather than patient panel count. 36 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations Step 1: Calculation of Maximum Payment for Each Measure HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE To calculate monthly maximum payment potential for each measure, multiply the number of patients eligible for each measure (denominator) by the designated PMPM. Repeat this calculation every month to determine your yearly maximum payment potential for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s breast cancer denominator is 13 patients. The breast cancer PMPM is $1.00. The monthly maximum payment potential for Dr. Lee’s breast cancer measure is $13.00. The yearly maximum payment for Dr. Lee’s breast cancer measure is $156.00 (13 patients x $1 PMPM x 12 months). Please note that monthly eligibitly may vary, see page 36 for more details. † Patients in the review of chronic conditions measure won’t contribute to the maximum payment potential for the entire measurement period if: • You didn’t provide services to and/or submit a claim for the patient during the measurement period. • The patient did not have any chronic conditions in the measure denominator after scoring adjustments at the end of the measurement period. 37 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations Step 2: Performance and Improvement Points Earned HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE To calculate performance and improvement points and the portion of the max payment that will be earned for each measure, follow these steps. a.Determine the performance level that the current performance rate falls into (the level at which the performance rate is greater than or equal to, but less than the next highest percentile level). See the National Percentile Threshold Rates Table, page 40. Example: For the breast cancer measure, Dr. Lee’s performance rate is 92.31 percent. The performance rate of 92.31 percent is above the five star rate (85 percent). The breast cancer performance rate is in the five star level. b.The baseline stars earned, along with the current stars earned, is used to determine the performance and improvement points. (See Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables, pages 41-42.) Example: Dr. Lee's breast cancer screening baseline stars earned was five stars. Dr. Lee’s current breast cancer screening stars earned is five stars. Using the Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables, (page 41), Dr. Lee earned 10 performance points and 2.5 improvement points for a total of 12.5 points. 38 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations Step 3: Calculation of Actual Payment Earned for Each Measure HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Multiply the maximum payment for each measure by the total points earned. Divide the result by 10 to determine the actual payment earned for each measure. Example: Dr. Lee’s maximum payment for breast cancer screening is $156. Dr. Lee earned 12.5 total points for the breast cancer screening measure. Dr. Lee's actual payment earned for the breast cancer screening measure is $195 ($156 x 12.5) / 10. Each measure has a budget of 10 performance points. A provider may exceed the performance points by earning bonus points on individual measures. The total payment earned amount (sum of all payments earned for all measures) is capped at 110 percent of the total maximum payment potential. Providers must score at least 40 percent overall in each program (Commercial, QUEST Integration, and HMSA Akamai Advantage) to qualify for payment in the respective line of business. For example, if a provider scores 82 percent overall in Commercial and 31 percent overall in QUEST Integration, the provider will be awarded earned dollars for Commercial, but will not be awarded earned dollars for QUEST Integration. 39 HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE National Percentile Threshold Rates HMSA Akamai Advantage Primary Care Pay-for-Quality Clinical Measures National percentile threshold rates are based on National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) HEDIS and CMS Medicare Advantage Stars program performance levels. ONE STAR TWO STARS THREE STARS FOUR STARS FIVE STARS Advance Care Planning 30.00% 40.00% 50.00% 60.00% 70.00% Body Mass Index Assessment 86.32% 91.19% 94.90 % 97.14% 98.70% Breast Cancer Screening 59.42% 66.57% 72.41% 80.27% 85.00% Colorectal Cancer Screening 51.00% 57.84% 66.45% 73.53% 79.86% Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) 55.50% 60.12% 67.06% 75.24% 82.33% Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam 56.79% 64.50% 70.84% 78.83% 84.69% Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (≤ 9.0) 58.18% 69.52% 78.76% 86.89% 91.69% Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy 87.43% 90.05% 92.31% 95.92% 98.11% Controlling Blood Pressure 53.22% 63.23% 73.32% 79.15% 83.52% Medication Adherence – Cholesterol (Statins) 47.95% 64.00% 69.40% 78.00% 85.00% Medication Adherence – Hypertension (RAS Antagonist) 51.48% 73.00% 77.00% 83.00% 87.00% Medication Adherence – Oral Diabetes Medications 52.30% 70.00% 74.00% 79.00% 83.00% Review of Chronic Conditions 60.00% 70.00% 80.00% 90.00% 95.00% HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE MEASURE 40 HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Performance and Improvement Points by Performance Level Tables The following tables correspond to the six baseline period ranges and detail the performance and improvement points earned based on current measurement period performance. Select the table that corresponds to your baseline performance level for each measure. Locate the row that describes your current-period star level and note the total points earned for each measure. Table 1: Prior-Period Performance: Below One-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 2 2 Two-star level 0 3 3 Three-star level 4 2 6 Four-star level 8 2.5 10.5 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 0 0 Two-star level 0 2 2 Three-star level 4 2 6 Four-star level 8 2.5 10.5 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 0 0 Two-star level 0 0 0 Three-star level 4 2 6 Four-star level 8 2.5 10.5 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 Table 2: Prior-Period Performance: One-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE Table 3: Prior-Period Performance: Two-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE 41 HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Table 4: Prior-Period Performance: Three-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 0 0 Two-star level 0 0 0 Three-star level 4 0 4 Four-star level 8 2.5 10.5 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS IMPROVEMENT POINTS TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 0 0 Two-star level 0 0 0 Three-star level 4 0 4 Table 5: Prior-Period Performance: Four-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE Four-star level 8 0 8 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 PERFORMANCE POINTS SUSTAINED EXCELLENCE TOTAL POINTS Below one-star level 0 0 0 One-star level 0 0 0 Two-star level 0 0 0 Three-star level 4 0 4 Four-star level 8 0 8 Five-star level 10 2.5 12.5 Table 6: Prior-Period Performance: Five-Star Level CURRENT-PERIOD PERFORMANCE 42 HMSA Akamai Advantage Quality Scoring Calculations Step 4: Application of the RCC Adjuster HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Step 4: Application of the RCC Adjuster To calculate the final payment, the performance period rate for the review of chonic conditions measure will be used as an adjuster. a.Using the RCC measure performance rate, refer to the table below to determine your performance adjuster. RCC Measure Performance Adjuster RCC PERFORMANCE RATE ADJUSTMENT RATE <60.00% 0% 60.00%–69.99% 75% ≥70.00% 100% Examples: For the RCC measure, Dr. Lee’s performance rate was 92 percent. The RCC adjuster rate for Dr. Lee is 100 percent. b.To calculate Earned Total Quality Payment, multiply the RCC adjuster rate by the total of all payments earned for all measures. Examples: Dr. Lee’s RRC adjuster rate was 100 percent. Dr. Lee's total payment earned was $12,324.60. Dr Lee's earned total quality payment is $12,324.60 (100 percent x $12,324.60). 43 Report Definition REPORT TERMS USED TERM DEFINITION Performance Period The past one year period of measurement for the current report. Baseline Period The measure period one year before the performance period of the current report. Estimated member months The number of eligible patients in the PCP's primary care panel at the end of each month. Sum each month’s eligible panel count for each month within the quarter. Max Payment Refers to each measure's maximum payment. Please see performance scoring calculation steps. The measure’s maximum earn potential without improvement points. With improvement points, the PCP may earn more than the max payment. Total Max Pay Potential (Commercial and QUEST Integration only) The quarter’s member months multiplied by $4.25 (Commercial) or $2.75 (QUEST Integration). The Payment Earned will be capped at 110 percent of Total Max Payment. Total Max Pay Potential (HMSA Akamai Advantage only) The sum of all measure max quality payments. Measure Weight (Commercial and QUEST Integration only) The degree of difficulty required to complete the clinical process for each measure and the importance of the measure to HMSA's accreditation ranking and/or regulatory requirements. Denominator All the patients of a PCP that the measure definition applies to during the performance period. Numerator All the patients of a PCP who achieved the measures definition of attainment. Performance Rate Divide the numerator by the denominator. Percentile The percentile group the PCP falls into based on current period performance. Using the measure performance rate, refer to the line of business threshold tables found in the Pay-for-Quality Guide to identify the percentile achieved. Baseline Percentile The percentile group the PCP falls in based on baseline period performance. Using the measure performance rate of the baseline period, the Pay for Quality Guide of the baseline year to identify the percentile achieved in the baseline period. Points The number of points earned based on performance in the baseline and current performance periods. Using the baseline percentile and current performance percentile, refer to the line of business point tables found in the Pay for Quality Guide to identify the points assigned to those levels of measure achievement. Payment Earned (HMSA Akamai Advantage only) For most measures, multiply the denominator by 12 months. Multiply the result by the PMPM of the measure. For the RCC measure, multiply the denominator by nine months. Multiply the RCC result by the RCC PMPM. Payment Earned (Commercial and QUEST Integration) For each measure, multiply the estimated maximum payment by the points earned. Divide the result by 10. 44 Appendix A - Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail Find the clinical measures indexed alphabetically below. • • • Advance Care Planning. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 • • • Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 • • • Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 • • Avoidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 • • • Body Mass Index Assessment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 • • • Breast Cancer Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 • • • Cervical Cancer Screening. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 • • • Childhood Immunization Status (All individual immunizations). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 • • • Chlamydia Screening for Women. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 • • • Colorectal Cancer Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 • • • Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 • • • Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 • • • Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (<8.0%) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 • • • Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c In Control (≤9%). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 • • • Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 • • • Controlling Blood Pressure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 • • • Immunizations for Adolescents (All individual immunizations). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 • Medication Adherence for Cholesterol (Statins). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 • Medication Adherence for Hypertension (RAS Antagonist) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 • Medication Adherence for Oral Diabetes Medications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 • • • Medication Management for People with Asthma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 • • • Review of Chronic Conditions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 • • • Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 • • • Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Years of Life . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 • • • Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/Adolescents. . . . . . . . . . . 73 • COMMERCIAL INTEGRATION • QUEST • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE 45 Primary Care Measures Advance Care Planning COMMERCIAL • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Description The percentage of patients 75 years of age and older at the end of the measurement period who had an advance care plan and/or an advance care planning discussion with their PCP documented during the measurement period. iv. Comfort care option. v. Advance directive decisions. vi.Durable power of attorney for health care/designated surrogate. vii. The patient’s key questions for further discussion. viii. The progression of their illness. Numerator Advance care discussion or plan documented in the medical record and a CPT code submitted during the measurement period. ix. Potential complications. x.Specific life-sustaining treatments that may be required if their illness progresses. Acceptable documentation: 1. Examples of an advance care plan: d.If your patient can't participate in the conversation (e.g., patient has Alzheimer's or isn't legally capable to make decisions), you should document the patient’s status. Providers can submit either through a CPT code submitted during the measurement period or supplemental data with documentation upload. a. Advance directive. Directive about treatment preferences and the designation of a surrogate who can make medical decisions for a patient who is unable to make them (e.g., living will, power of attorney, health care proxy). Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: b. Actionable medical orders. Written instructions regarding initiating, continuing, withholding, or withdrawing specific forms of life-sustaining treatment (e.g., Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment [POLST], Five Wishes). Denominator COMMERCIAL c. Living will. Legal document denoting preferences for life-sustaining treatment and end-of-life care. Patients 75 years of age and older at the end of the measure period. d. Surrogate decision maker. A written document designating someone other than the member to make future medical treatment choices. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Patients 75 years of age and older at the end of the measurement period. Executed documents completed by another provider (e.g., upon discharge) can be used to fulfill numerator criteria as long as there was evidence of review and validation of the content in the medical record. Exclusions Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: 2. Examples of an advance care planning discussion: a.Notation in the medical record of a discussion with a provider or initiation of a discussion by a provider during the measurement year. Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements b. Conversations with relatives or friends about life-sustaining treatment and end-of-life care, documented in the medical record. Patient designation of an individual who can make decisions on behalf of the patient. Evidence of oral statements must be noted in the medical record during the measurement year. To attest that a patient has an advance care plan or has had an advance care planning discussion, submit acceptable documentation (listed in the numerator). Supporting medical record documentation must be uploaded into Cozeva before the supplemental data will be accepted and scored. c.If your patient is uncomfortable or not ready to create an advance care plan document, the patient’s chart should document the patient’s current thinking about at least one of the following: i.CPR. ii.Goals of care for cardiopulmonary failure, including hospitalization. iii. Artificial nutrition and hydration. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 46 Appropriate Testing for Children with Pharyngitis Appropriate Treatment for Children with Upper Respiratory Infection COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Description Description Percentage of patients 2–18 years of age who were diagnosed with pharyngitis, prescribed an antibiotic, and received a group A streptococcus test for the episode. This measure is largely consistent with the Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement’s Health Care Guideline for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Respiratory Illness in Children and Adults (icsi.org/_asset/1wp8x2/RespIllness.pdf). Percentage of children 3 months to 18 years of age who were given a diagnosis of upper respiratory infection (URI) and weren’t dispensed an antibiotic prescription on or three days after the episode date. This measure is largely consistent with the Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement’s Health Care Guideline for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Respiratory Illness in Children and Adults (icsi.org/_asset/1wp8x2/RespIllness.pdf). Numerator Numerator A strep test administered in the seven-day period from three days prior through three days after the first eligible episode date. Codes* to identify group A streptococcus tests antigen detection: Patients who weren’t dispensed a prescription for antibiotic medication by their attributed PCP on or within three days after the episode date. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator Denominator Children 2 years of age as of the 183rd day of the prior measurement period to 18 years of age as of the 182nd day of the measurement period who had only a diagnosis of pharyngitis and a dispensed antibiotic for that episode of care by their attributed PCP visit during the intake period. All children age 3 months as of the 183rd day of the prior measurement period to 18 years as of the 182nd day of the measurement period who were diagnosed with non-specific URI by their attributed PCP. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Exclusions Exclusions Exclude episode dates where the patient had a claim/ encounter with a competing diagnosis (below) on or three days after the episode date. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Supplemental data won’t be accepted for this measure. Supplemental data won’t be accepted for this measure. Measure Status NQF # 0002 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Measure Status NQF # 0069 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. **Don't include Emergency Department visits that result in an inpatient admission. 47 Avoidance of Antibiotic Treatment in Adults with Acute Bronchitis COMMERCIAL Description Percentage of adult patients 18–64 years of age who were diagnosed with acute bronchitis and weren't dispensed an antibiotic prescription. The measure is reported as an inverted rate [1-(numerator/denominator)]. A higher rate indicates appropriate treatment (i.e., the proportion for whom antibiotics weren’t prescribed). Numerator Patients in the denominator who were prescribed an antibiotic by their attributed PCP on or within three days after the date of service (see antibiotic medication list on page 49). Denominator All patients 18 years of age as of the first day of the prior measurement period to 64 years of age as of the last day of the current measurement period who had a diagnosis of acute bronchitis by their attributed PCP on or between the first and the 348th day of the measurement period. This measure examines the earliest eligible episode per patient. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Exclusions 1.Any date of service with a principal or secondary diagnosis for a comorbid condition (see link) during the 12 months prior to and including the episode date. 2.Any date of service with a competing diagnosis (see link) during the period 30 days prior to the date of service through seven days after the episode date (inclusive). 3.Any date of service that meets these criteria: • No pharmacy claims for either new or refill prescriptions for any of the listed antibiotic drugs (see link) during the 30-day period prior to the episode date. • No prescriptions were filled more than 30 days before and weren't active on the episode date. Note: • A prescription is considered active if the “days supply” indicated on the date when the patient filled the prescription is the number of days or more between that date and the relevant service date. • T he 30-day look-back period for pharmacy data includes the 30 days before the first day of the measurement period. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 48 Antibiotic Medications DESCRIPTION PRESCRIPTION Aminoglycosides Amikacin, Gentamicin, Kanamycin, Streptomycin, Tobramycin Aminopenicillins Amoxicillin, Ampicillin Antipseudomonal penicillins Piperacillin Beta-lactamase inhibitors Amoxicillin-clavulanate, Ampicillin-sulbactam, Piperacillin-tazobactam, Ticarcillin-clavulanate First-generation cephalosporins Cefadroxil, Cefazolin, Cephalexin Fourth-generation cephalosporins Cefepime Ketolides Telithromycin Lincomycin derivatives Clindamycin, Lincomycin Macrolides Azithromycin, Clarithromycin, Erythromycin, Erythromycin ethylsuccinate, Erythromycin lactobionate, Erythromycin stearate Miscellaneous antibiotics Aztreonam, Chloramphenicol, Dalfopristin-quinupristin, Daptomycin, Erythromycin-sulfisoxazole, Linezolid, Metronidazole, Vancomycin Natural penicillins Penicillin G benzathine-procaine, Penicillin G potassium, Penicillin G procaine, Penicillin G sodium, Penicillin V potassium, Penicillin G benzathine Penicillinase resistant penicillins Dicloxacillin, Nafcillin, Oxacillin Quinolones Ciprofloxacin, Gemifloxacin, Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin, Norfloxacin, Ofloxacin Rifamycin derivatives Rifampin Second generation cephalosporins Cefaclor, Cefotetan, Cefoxitin, Cefprozil, Cefuroxime Sulfonamides Sulfadiazine, Sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim Tetracyclines Doxycycline, Minocycline, Tetracycline Third generation cephalosporins Cefdinir, Cefditoren, Cefixime, Cefotaxime, Cefpodoxime, Ceftazidime, Ceftibuten, Ceftriaxone Urinary anti-infectives Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin, Nitrofurantoin macrocrystals, Nitrofurantoin macrocrystals-monohydrate, Trimethoprim Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Supplemental data won't be accepted for this measure. Measure Status NQF # 0058 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 49 Body Mass Index Assessment Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE To attest that the BMI assessment was performed, medical record evidence of the following is required: Description For members younger than 21 years on the date of service, documentation in the medical record must indicate the height, weight, and BMI percentile, dated during the measurement year or year prior to the measurement year. The height, weight, and BMI percentile must be from the same data source. The percentage of patients 18-74 years of age who had an outpatient visit and whose body mass index (BMI) was documented during the measurement period. Numerator For BMI percentile, the following documentation meets criteria: The number of patients whose BMI was reported either through claims or through supplemental data. For claims, use the following codes, which indicate numerator compliance for this measure. • BMI percentile documented as a value (e.g., 85th percentile). • BMI percentile plotted on an age-growth chart. • For patients 18–20 years of age: BMI percentile plotted on an age growth chart OR medical note that indicates the date that the BMI assessment was performed and the BMI value along with weight documented in the same record during the measurement period. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator For patients 21+ years of age: Medical note that indicates the date the BMI assessment was performed and the value along with weight documented in the same record during the measurement period. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Patients 18-74 years of age who had an outpatient visit during the measurement period. You must upload supporting medical record documentation to Cozeva before the supplemental data will be accepted and scored. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Note: A distinct BMI value or percentile, if applicable, is required to meet the criteria of the numerator. Patients 18-74 years of age who had an outpatient visit during the measurement period. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration Exclusions To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required. Patients who have a diagnosis of pregnancy during the measurement period. • A note indicating diagnosis of pregnancy during the measurement period. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 50 Breast Cancer Screening Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE To attest that a breast cancer screening was performed, medical record evidence of the following is required: Description • Mammogram – one or more mammograms within the measurement period of the 15 months prior to the measurement period. The percentage of women 52–74 years of age as of the end of the measurement period who had one or more mammograms to screen for breast cancer during the measurement period or the 15 months prior to the measurement period. The purpose of this measure is to evaluate primary screening; claims for biopsies, breast ultrasounds, or MRIs won't count toward this measure because they aren’t considered appropriate methods for primary breast cancer screening. This measure currently follows 2002 recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) (uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Topic/ recommendation-summary/breast-cancer-screening). Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: • Bilateral mastectomy – operative note indicating the date that a bilateral mastectomy was completed. • Unilateral mastectomy – operative note indicating two different occurrences on two different dates of service that are 14 days or more apart from each other. Numerator Measure Status Patients who had one or more mammograms performed during the measurement period or the 15 months prior to the measurement period. NQF # 0031 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA The following codes* identify services that satisfy the measure: Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator Women 52–74 years of age as of the end of the measurement period. Exclusions Exclude women who had a bilateral mastectomy and for whom administrative data doesn't indicate that a mammogram was performed. Look for evidence of bilateral mastectomy as far back as possible in the patient’s history, through either administrative data or medical record review. The bilateral mastectomy must have occurred by the end of the measurement period. (Exclusionary evidence in the medical record must include a note indicating a bilateral mastectomy.) If there is evidence of two unilateral mastectomies, this patient may be excluded from the measure. The unilateral mastectomies must have two separate occurrences on two different dates that are 14 days or more apart from each other. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify exclusions. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 51 Cervical Cancer Screening Supplemental Data Requirements COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION To attest that a cervical cancer screening was performed, medical record evidence of one of the following is required. Description • Cervical cytology The percentage of women 24–64 years of age who were screened for cervical cancer using either of the following criteria: – A note indicating the date when the cervical cytology was performed. • Women ages 24–64 who had cervical cytology performed every three years. – The result or finding. • Cervical cytology and HPV screening • Women ages 30–64 who had cervical cytology and human papillomavirus (HPV) co-testing performed every five years. – A note indicating the date when the cervical cytology and the HPV test were performed. This measure follows the USPSTF guidelines for cervical cancer screening (uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/ uspscerv.htm). – The result or finding. Note: Lab results that explicitly state that the sample was inadequate or that “no cervical cells were present” isn’t appropriate screening. Biopsies aren’t accepted because they’re diagnostic and therapeutic only and aren’t valid for primary cervical cancer screening. Numerator Patients who were screened for cervical cancer using either of the following criteria: • Patients 24–64 years of age who had cervical cytology during the measurement year or the two years prior to the measurement period. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: • Patients 30–64 years of age who had cervical cytology and a human papillomavirus (HPV) test with service dates four or less days apart during the measurement period or the four prior measurement periods. • Documentation of “complete,” “total,” or “radical” abdominal or vaginal hysterectomy meets the criteria for hysterectomy with no residual cervix. The measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify cervical cancer screening. • Documentation of “vaginal Pap smear” in conjunction with documentation of “hysterectomy” meets the exclusion criteria, but documentation of hysterectomy alone doesn’t meet the criteria because it doesn’t indicate that the cervix was removed. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator Measure Status Women 24–64 years of age during the measurement period. NQF # 0032 Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Status: Endorsed Steward(s): NCQA Exclusions Evidence of a hysterectomy with no residual cervix at any time in the patient’s history. The hysterectomy must have occurred by the end of the measurement period. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 52 Childhood Immunization Status (All individual immunizations) Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION For MMR, hepatitis B, and VZV, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: Description • Evidence of the antigen or combination vaccine. Percentage of children 2 years of age who had four diphtheria, tetanus, and acellular pertussis (DTaP); three polio (IPV); one measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR); three Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib); two hepatitis B (HepB); one chicken pox (VZV); and four pneumococcal conjugate (PCV) by their second birthday. • Documented history of the illness. • A seropositive test for each antigen. For DTaP, IPV, Hib, and pneumococcal conjugate, medical record evidence of the following is required: • Evidence of the antigen or combination vaccine. This measure follows the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) guidelines for immunizations. The measure implements changes to the guidelines (e.g., new vaccine recommendations) after three years to account for the measure’s retrospective period and to allow the industry time to adapt to new guidelines. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: For all antigens, count any of the following: • Contraindications – a medical record note about contraindications specific to applicable immunizations that occurred before the patient’s second birthday. Documentation should also describe tests performed and the results. • Evidence of the antigen or combination vaccine. Measure Status • Documented history of the illness. NQF # 0038 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Numerator • A seropositive test result. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims data to identify immunizations. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator Children who turn 2 years of age during the measurement period. Exclusions Children who had a contraindication for a specific vaccine will be excluded. Exclude patients for contraindication only if the administrative data don’t indicate that the contraindicated immunization was rendered. The exclusion must have occurred by the second birthday. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 53 Chlamydia Screening for Women Prescriptions to Identify Contraceptives DESCRIPTION COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Contraceptives Description PRESCRIPTION Desogestrel-ethinyl estradiol Dienogest-estradiol multiphasic Percentage of eligible women 16–24 years of age who were identified as sexually active and had at least one test for chlamydia during the measurement period. The chlamydia screening measures follow the USPSTF guidelines (uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Topic/recommendationsummary/chlamydia-and-gonorrhea-screening). Drospirenone-ethinyl estradiol Drospirenone-ethinyl estradiol-levomefolatebiphasic Estradiol-medroxyprogesterone Ethinyl estradiol-ethynodiol Numerator Ethinyl estradiol-etonogestrel Documentation in the medical record of at least one chlamydia test during the measurement period. A woman is counted in the numerator if there is documentation of a chlamydia trachomatis or species test with a service date during the measurement period. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify chlamydia screening. Ethinyl estradiol-levonorgestrel Ethinyl estradiol-norelgestromin Ethinyl estradiol-norethindrone Ethinyl estradiol-norgestimate Ethinyl estradiol-norgestrel Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Etonogestrel Levonorgestrel Medroxyprogesterone Denominator Mestranol-norethindrone Women 16–24 years of age as of the end of the measurement period who are sexually active. Two methods are provided to identify sexually active women: pharmacy data and claims/ encounter data. Both methods are used to identify the eligible population, although a patient must appear in only one method to be eligible for the measure. Norethindrone Diaphragm Diaphragm Spermicide Nonxynol 9 Exclusions Patients who were dispensed prescription contraceptives (including diaphragm, spermicide) during the measurement period qualify for this measure. (See prescriptions to identify contraceptives table.) Exclude patients who had a pregnancy test during the measurement period followed within seven days (inclusive) by either a prescription for isotretinoin or an X-ray. This exclusion doesn’t apply to patients who qualify for the denominator based on services other than the pregnancy test alone. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Medications to Identify Exclusions DESCRIPTION Retinoid PRESCRIPTION isotretinoin Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 54 Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Denominator Patients 51–75 years of age during the measurement period. To attest that a chlamydia screening was performed, medical record evidence of the following is required: Exclusions Patients with a diagnosis of colorectal cancer or total colectomy. Look for evidence of colorectal cancer or total colectomy as far back as possible in the patient’s history through either administrative data or medical record review. Exclusionary evidence in the medical record must include a note indicating a diagnosis of colorectal cancer or total colectomy, which must have occurred by the end of the measurement period. • Chlamydia screening test – lab results or state note (free chlamydia screening) indicating the date on which the test was performed. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence must indicate the patient had a pregnancy test during the measurement period followed within seven days by one of the following: Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: • Isotretinoin prescription. Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements • Radiology/X-ray note confirming that the service was completed. Measure Status To attest that a colorectal cancer screening was performed, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: NQF # 0033 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA • FOBT – lab results/report for guaiac (gFOBT) or immunochemical (iFOBT). Depending on the type of FOBT test, the following is the required number of samples: Colorectal Cancer Screening 1. gFOBT – three consecutive stools 2. iFOBT – one stool • Flex sigmoidoscopy – performed during the measurement period or four years prior to the measurement period. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • Colonoscopy – performed during the measurement period or nine years prior to the measurement period. Description Percentage of adults 51–75 years of age who had appropriate screening for colorectal cancer. The colorectal cancer screening measure follows the USPSTF guidelines (uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/uspscolo.htm). Note: A result isn’t required if the documentation is clearly part of the “medical history” section of the record. However, if this isn’t clear, the result or finding must also be present to ensure that the screening was performed and not merely ordered. A digital rectal exam doesn’t count as evidence of a colorectal screening because it isn’t specific or comprehensive enough to screen for colorectal cancer. Numerator Patients who had one or more screenings for colorectal cancer. Appropriate screenings are defined by any one of the three criteria below: Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration • Fecal occult blood test (FOBT) during the measurement period. To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: • Flexible sigmoidoscopy during the measurement period or the four prior measurement periods. • Colorectal cancer. • Colonoscopy during the measurement period or the nine prior measurement periods. • Total colectomy – including the date of the procedure. Measure Status This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify colorectal cancer screening. The following codes* identify services that satisfy the measure: NQF # 0034 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 55 Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Blood Pressure Control (<140/90) Denominator Patients 18–75 years of age at the end of the measurement period who had a diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) by a provider qualified to make the diagnosis of diabetes for this measure. Patients with diabetes can be identified during the measurement period or the prior measurement period through: COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Description • Pharmacy data: Prescriptions that identify patients with diabetes include insulin prescriptions (drug list available) and oral hypoglycemics/antihyperglycemics prescriptions (drug list available). Note: Glucophage/metformin isn’t included because it’s used to treat conditions other than diabetes; patients with diabetes on these medications are identified through diagnosis codes only. Percentage of patients with diabetes, 18–75 years of age, whose blood pressure was adequately controlled (less than 140/90) during the measurement period based on the most recent blood pressure reading during the measurement period. The comprehensive diabetes care – blood pressure controlled measure is approved by NQF (qualityforum.org) and follows American Diabetes Association guidelines (care.diabetesjournals. org/content/33/Supplement_1/S11.full.pdf). • A diagnosis of diabetes by a PCP as indicated on the problem list or at least two visits with diabetes listed as a diagnosis. Numerator Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: The number of patients in the denominator whose blood pressure is adequately controlled during the measurement period. For a patient’s blood pressure to be controlled, both the systolic and diastolic blood pressure must be less than 140/90 (adequate control). You must report the actual blood pressure reading to satisfy measure reporting requirements. Exclusions To describe systolic and diastolic blood pressures, each must be reported separately. If there are multiple blood pressures on the same date of service, use the lowest systolic and lowest diastolic blood pressure on that date as the representative blood pressure. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries on the problem list who didn’t also have a diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or steroid-induced diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period. Your medical records must support the diagnosis for the denominator and identify the actual blood pressure reading for the numerator. The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the year prior to the measurement period. The following blood pressure readings don’t meet the criteria for the numerator: Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: • Blood pressure reading from an acute inpatient stay or an emergency department visit. Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements • Blood pressure reading from an outpatient visit, the sole purpose of which was to have a diagnostic test or surgical procedure performed. To attest that the patient’s blood pressure is controlled, medical record evidence of the following is required: • Blood pressure reading done on the same day as a major diagnostic or surgical procedure. • Blood pressure test – medical note that indicates the date the blood pressure test was performed and the systolic and diastolic values that were collected. • Blood pressure reading reported or taken by the patient. If there are no blood pressure readings that meet the criteria after the diagnosis of hypertension, the patient can’t be included in the numerator. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the prior measurement period and have one of the following diagnoses: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 56 • Polycystic ovaries – note indicating a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries, in any setting, any time in the patient's history prior to the end of the measurement period. Denominator Patients 18–75 years of age at the end of the measurement period who had a diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) by a provider qualified to make the diagnosis of diabetes for this measure. Patients with diabetes can be identified during the measurement period or the prior measurement period through: • Gestational or steroid-induced diabetes – note indicating a diagnosis of gestational or steroid-induced diabetes, in any setting, during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. • Pharmacy data: Patients who were prescribed insulin or oral hypoglycemics/antihyperglycemics on an ambulatory basis. Prescriptions to identify patients with diabetes include insulin prescriptions (drug list is available) and oral hypoglycemics/ antihyperglycemics prescriptions (drug list is available). Measure Status NQF # 0061 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Note: Glucophage/metformin isn’t included because it’s used to treat conditions other than diabetes; members with diabetes on these medications are identified through diagnosis codes only. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Eye Exam • A diagnosis of diabetes by a primary care physician as indicated on the problem list or at least two visits with diabetes listed as a diagnosis. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Description Percentage of diabetes patients 18–75 years of age who received a dilated eye exam, seven standard field stereoscopic photos with interpretation by an ophthalmologist or optometrist, or imaging validated to match diagnosis from these photos during the measurement period. A negative dilated eye exam (negative for retinopathy) in the prior measurement period also meets criteria for the eye exam indicator. Exclusions Blindness isn’t an exclusion for a diabetic eye exam because it's difficult to distinguish between individuals who are legally blind but require a retinal exam and those who are completely blind and therefore don’t require an exam. The eye exam measure is approved by the National Quality Forum (qualityforum.org/) and follows American Diabetes Association guidelines (care.diabetesjournals.org/content/33/ Supplement_1/S11.full.pdf). Exclude patients with a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries on the problem list who didn’t also have a diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or prior measurement period. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or steroid-induced diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period. The patient must not have a face-toface encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the year prior to the measurement period. Numerator This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify eye exams. The following codes* identify services that satisfy the measure. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Eye exams provided by eye care professionals are a proxy for dilated eye examinations because there is no administrative way to determine that a dilated exam was performed. Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements To attest that an eye exam screening was performed, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: • Dilated eye exam – documentation of a retinal or dilated eye exam by an optometrist or ophthalmologist during the measurement period. • Negative retinal eye exam – documentation of a negative eye exam (no evidence of retinopathy) from an ophthalmologist/ optometrist in the year prior to the measurement period. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 57 Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration Denominator Patients 18–75 years of age as of the end of the measurement period who had a diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) by a provider qualified to make the diagnosis of diabetes for this measure. Patients with diabetes can be identified during the measurement period or the prior measurement period through pharmacy data or diagnosis. To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the prior measurement period and have one of the following diagnoses: • P harmacy data: Prescriptions that identify patients with diabetes include insulin prescriptions (drug list available) and oral hypoglyemics/antihyperglycemics prescriptions (drug list available). Note: Glucophage/metformin isn’t included because it’s used to treat conditions other than diabetes; patients with diabetes on these medications are identified through diagnosis codes only. • Polycystic ovaries – note indicating a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries, in any setting, any time in the patient’s history prior to the end of the measurement period. • Gestational or steroid-induced diabetes – note indicating a diagnosis of gestational or steroid-induced diabetes, in any setting, during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. • Diagnosis: A diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list or at least two visits with diabetes listed as a diagnosis. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Measure Status NQF # 0055 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Exclusions Exclude patients with a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries on the problem list who didn’t also have a diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or steroid-induced diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period. Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c Control (<8.0%) QUEST INTEGRATION Excluded patients must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the year prior to the measurement period. Description Percentage of patients with diabetes, 18–75 years of age, whose most recent HbA1c level was less than 8.0 percent (in control). Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: The comprehensive diabetes care – blood sugar controlled measure is approved by NQF (qualityforum.org) and follows American Diabetes Association guidelines (care.diabetes journals.org/ content/33/Supplement_1/S11.full.pdf). Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Numerator This measure will use the most recent HbA1c test performed during the measurement period with a result of less than 8.0 percent. If the result for the most recent HbA1c test is greater than 8.0 percent, missing, or wasn’t performed during the measurement period, the patient won’t be included in the numerator. To attest that the patient’s blood sugar is controlled, medical record evidence of the following is required: Actual lab values for the most recent HbA1c test must be provided to satisfy measure reporting requirements. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: To attest that a member should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: • HbA1c Test – a lab report, medical note, or in-house lab printout that indicates the date the HbA1c test was performed and the value that was collected. The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the prior measurement period and have one of the following diagnoses: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. **Code isn't limited to optometrist or ophthalmologist. 58 • Pharmacy data: Patients who were prescribed insulin or oral hypoglycemics/antihyperglycemics on an ambulatory basis. Prescriptions to identify patients with diabetes include insulin prescriptions (drug list is available) and oral hypoglycemics/ antihyperglycemics prescriptions (drug list is available). Note: Glucophage/metformin isn’t included because it’s used to treat conditions other than diabetes; members with diabetes on these medications are identified through diagnosis codes only. Polycystic ovaries – note indicating a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries, in any setting, any time in the patient’s history prior to the end of the measurement period. • Gestational or steroid-induced diabetes – note indicating a diagnosis of gestational or steroid-induced diabetes, in any setting, during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. • A diagnosis of diabetes by a PCP as indicated on the problem list or at least two visits with diabetes listed as a diagnosis. Measure Status NQF # 0059 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Exclusions Comprehensive Diabetes Care – HbA1c in Control (≤9) Exclude patients with a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries on the problem list who didn’t also have a diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or steroid-induced diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or prior measurement period. The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the year prior to the measurement period. COMMERCIAL • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Description The percentage of patients with diabetes 18–75 years of age whose most recent HbA1c level during the measurement period was less than or equal to 9.0 percent (in control). The comprehensive diabetes care – HbA1c in control measure is approved by NQF (qualityforum.org) and follows American Diabetes Association guidelines (care.diabetesjournals.org/ content/33/Supplement_1/S11.full.pdf). Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Numerator Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements The number of patients whose most recent HbA1c test performed during the measurement period had a result less than or equal to 9.0 percent, was missing a result, or the last test was not performed during the measurement period. If the result for the most recent HbA1c test during the measurement period is greater than 9.0 percent, the patient won't be included in the numerator. To attest that the patient’s HbA1c is in control, medical record evidence of the following is required: • HbA1c test – a lab report, medical note, or in-house lab printout that indicates the date the HbA1c test was performed and the value that was collected. Actual lab values for the most recent HbA1c test must be provided to satisfy measure reporting requirements. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the prior measurement period and have one of the following diagnoses: Denominator Patients 18–75 years of age at the end of the measurement period who had a diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) by a provider qualified to make the diagnosis of diabetes for this measure. Patients with diabetes can be identified during the measurement period or the prior measurement period through: Polycystic ovaries – note indicating a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries, in any setting, any time in the patient’s history prior to the end of the measurement period. • Gestational or steroid-induced diabetes – note indicating a diagnosis of gestational or steroid-induced diabetes, in any setting, during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 59 • A diagnosis of diabetes by a PCP as indicated on the problem list or at least two visits with diabetes listed as a diagnosis. Measure Status NQF # 0059 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: Exclusions Comprehensive Diabetes Care – Medical Attention for Nephropathy Exclude patients with a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries on the problem list who didn’t also have a diagnosis of diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. Exclude patients with a diagnosis of gestational diabetes or steroid-induced diabetes on the problem list during the measurement period. The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the year prior to the measurement period. COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Description Percentage of diabetes patients 18–75 years of age with at least one test for microalbumin during the measurement period or evidence of medical attention for existing nephropathy (diagnosis of nephropathy or documentation of microalbuminuria or albuminuria). Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: This measure is approved by the National Quality Forum (qualityforum.org/) and follows American Diabetic Association guidelines (care.diabetesjournals.org/content/33/ Supplement_1/S11.full.pdf). Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements To attest that the patient has a diagnosis of nephropathy, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: Numerator • Diabetic nephropathy screening test – lab report or medical record note indicating the date when a urine microalbumin test was performed and the results. Patients who had any one of the following: • Screening for nephropathy. • Evidence of nephropathy – documentation of a visit to a nephrologist, renal transplantation, or medical attention for diabetic nephropathy, ESRD, CRF, CKD, renal insufficiency, proteinuria, albuminuria, renal dysfunction, acute renal failure (ARF), or dialysis. • Evidence of nephropathy. • Evidence of ACE inhibitor/ARB therapy. This measure will use pharmacy claims data to identify evidence of ACE inhibitor or ARB therapy. This measure will also use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify screening for nephropathy and evidence of nephropathy. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: • Positive urine macroalbumin test – lab report or medical record note indicating the date when the macroalbumin test was performed and a positive result. Trace urine macroalbumin test results aren’t considered valid documentation for this measure. Denominator • Evidence of ACE inhibitor/ARB medication therapy – at minimum, a note indicating that the member received an ambulatory prescription for ACE inhibitors/ARBs in the measurement period. Patients 18–75 years of age at the end of the measurement period who had a diagnosis of diabetes (type 1 or type 2) by a provider qualified to make the diagnosis of diabetes for this measure. Patients with diabetes can be identified during the measurement period or the prior measurement period through: Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of the following is required: • Pharmacy data: Patients who were prescribed insulin or oral hypoglycemics/antihyperglycemics on an ambulatory basis. Prescriptions to identify patients with diabetes include insulin prescriptions (drug list is available) and oral hypoglycemics/ antihyperglycemics prescriptions (drug list is available). Note: Glucophage/metformin isn’t included because it’s used to treat conditions other than diabetes; patients with diabetes on these medications are identified through diagnosis codes only. The patient must not have a face-to-face encounter in any setting with a diagnosis of diabetes during the measurement period or the prior measurement period and have one of the following diagnoses: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 60 • Polycystic ovaries – note indicating a diagnosis of polycystic ovaries, in any setting, any time in the patient’s history prior to the end of the measurement period. The following blood pressure readings don’t meet the criteria for the numerator: • Blood pressure reading from an acute inpatient stay or an emergency department visit. • Gestational or steroid-induced diabetes – note indicating a diagnosis of gestational or steroid-induced diabetes, in any setting, during the measurement period or the prior measurement period. • Blood pressure reading from an outpatient visit, the sole purpose of which was to have a diagnostic test or surgical procedure performed. Measure Status • Blood pressure reading done on the same day as a major diagnostic or surgical procedure. NQF # 0062 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA • Blood pressure reading reported or taken by the patient. If there are no blood pressure readings that meet the criteria after the diagnosis of hypertension, the patient can’t be included in the numerator. Controlling Blood Pressure For patients with Medicare primary coverage and HMSA Commercial secondary coverage: COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Medicare does not recognize these CPT II codes, and claims forwarded by Medicare to HMSA won't result in numerator credit for the blood pressure measure. Description The percentage of members 18–85 years of age who had a diagnosis of hypertension and whose BP was adequately controlled during the measurement year based on the following criteria: To get numerator credit, report compliant blood pressures through Supplemental Data on Cozeva or submit a secondary claim with the blood pressure codes to HMSA. • Patients 18–59 years of age whose BP was <140/90 mm Hg. Note: There are no procedure codes to describe a systolic pressure of 140 to 149 mm Hg. Therefore, controlled blood pressure for a patient between 60 to 85 years of age (i.e., one with a systolic pressure of 140 to 149 mm Hg and a diastolic pressure of <90 mm Hg) must be reported using Cozeva supplemental data. • Patients 60–85 years of age with a diagnosis of diabetes whose BP was <140/90 mm Hg. • Patients 60–85 years of age without a diagnosis of diabetes whose BP was <150/90 mm Hg. Numerator Denominator The number of patients in the denominator whose most recent blood pressure is adequately controlled during the measurement period as reported from a visit where hypertension was addressed. Patients 18–85 years of age who had a diagnosis of hypertension. Patients are considered hypertensive if they have at least one outpatient encounter with a diagnosis of hypertension during an 18-month window (the 12 months prior to the start of the measurement period and the first six months of the measurement period). Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: You must report the actual blood pressure reading to satisfy measure reporting requirements. To describe systolic and diastolic blood pressures, each must be reported separately. If there are multiple blood pressures on the same date of service, use the lowest systolic and lowest diastolic blood pressure on that date as the representative blood pressure. Exclusions Your medical records must support the diagnosis for the denominator and identify the representative blood pressure reading for the numerator. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Exclude all patients who have evidence of ESRD (including dialysis or renal transplant), are pregnant, or who had a non-acute inpatient encounter during the measurement period. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 61 Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Denominator Adolescents who turn 13 years of age during the measurement period. To attest that the patient’s blood pressure is controlled, medical record evidence of the following is required: Exclusions • Blood pressure test – medical note that indicates the date the blood pressure test was performed and the systolic and diastolic values that were collected. Adolescents who have a contraindication for one of these vaccines. Exclusion must have occurred before the adolescent's 13th birthday. Documentation Requirements for Request for Reconsideration Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: To attest that a patient should be excluded, medical record evidence of one of the following is required: Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements • A note indicating a diagnosis of ESRD during the measurement period. Documentation of dialysis or renal transplant also meets the criteria for evidence of ESRD. To attest that a patient received the proper vaccinations, medical record evidence must include the following: • A note indicating a diagnosis of pregnancy during the measurement period. • A note indicating a non-acute inpatient encounter during the measurement year. • A medical record documentation showing evidence of the antigen or combination vaccine for meningococcal vaccine and Tdap or Td. Measure Status Measure Status NQF # 0018 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 10, 2009 Steward(s): NCQA NQF # 1407 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 15, 2011 Steward(s): NCQA Immunizations for Adolescents (All individual immunizations) COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Description The percentage of adolescents 13 years of age who had one dose of meningococcal vaccine and one tetanus, diphtheria, and acellular pertussis vaccine (Tdap) or one tetanus and diphtheria toxoids vaccine (Td) by their 13th birthday. The measure calculates a rate for each vaccine and one combination rate. Numerator Adolescents who receive both: • One meningococcal conjugate or meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine on or between their 7th and 13th birthdays. • One Tdap or one Td on or between their 10th and 13th birthdays. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 62 Medication Adherence for Cholesterol (Statins) Denominator Number of patients with at least two fills of either the same statin medication or medications in the same drug class during the measurement period. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Description The percentage of patients (18 years of age or older) who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy for statin cholesterol medications. Supplemental data won’t be accepted for this measure. Measure Status Numerator NQF # 0541 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 5, 2009 Steward(s): Pharmacy Quality Alliance Number of patients with a proportion of days covered of 80 percent or over for statin cholesterol medications during the measurement period. A patient with a proportion of days covered threshold of at least 80 percent is considered to be adherent. The steps used to calculate the numerator are below. Step 1:Determine the patient’s measurement period in days, starting at the date of the first fill and ending at the end of the measurement period, disenrollment, or death. Step 2:Within the measurement period, count the number of days the patient was “covered” by at least one drug in the therapeutic area based on the prescription fill date and days of supply. If prescriptions for the same drug (same generic code number) overlap, adjust the prescription start date to be the day after the previous fill ends. Step 3: Divide the number of days found in Step 2 by the number of days found in Step 1 to determine the proportion of days covered. Step 4: Count the number of patients whose proportion of days covered was greater than or equal to 0.80. Statin cholesterol medications • atorvastatin • fluvastatin • lovastatin • pitavastatin • pravastatin • rosuvastatin • simvastatin Statin combination products • atorvastatin & amlodipine • ezetimibe & atorvastatin • ezetimibe & simvastatin • niacin & lovastatin • niacin & simvastatin • sitagliptin & simvastatin Note: Active ingredients are limited to oral formulations only (includes all dosage forms). * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 63 Medication Adherence for Hypertension (RAS Antagonist) • quinapril & HCTZ • trandolopril-verapamil HCL ARB combination products HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • aliskiren & valsartan Description • amlodipine & olmesartan The percentage of patients (18 years of age or older) who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy for RAS antagonists. • amlodipine & valsartan • amlodipine & valsartan & HCTZ Numerator • azilsartan & chlorthalidone Number of patients with a proportion of days covered of 80 percent or over for RAS antagonist medications during the measurement period. A patient with a proportion of days covered threshold of at least 80 percent is considered to be adherent. The steps used to calculate the numerator are below. • candesartan & HCTZ Step 1: Determine the patient’s measurement period in days, starting at the date of the first fill and ending at the end of the measurement period, disenrollment, or death. • olmesartan & amlodipine & HCTZ • eprosartan & HCTZ • irbesartan & HCTZ • losartan & HCTZ • olmesartan & HCTZ • telmisartan & amlodipine Step 2: Within the measurement period, count the number of days the patient was “covered” by at least one drug in the therapeutic area based on the prescription fill date and days of supply. If prescriptions for the same drug (same generic code number) overlap, adjust the prescription start date to be the day after the previous fill ends. • telmisartan & HCTZ • valsartan & HCTZ ARB hypertension medications • azilsartan • candesartan Step 3: Divide the number of days found in Step 2 by the number of days found in Step 1 to determine the proportion of days covered. • eprosartan • irbesartan • losartan Step 4:Count the number of patients whose proportion of days covered was greater than or equal to 0.80. • olmesartan • telmisartan ACEI medications • valsartan • benazepril Direct renin inhibitor medications • captopril • aliskiren • enalapril Direct renin inhibitor combination products • fosinopril • lisinopril • aliskiren & amlodipne • moexipril • aliskiren & amlodipine & HCTZ • perindopril • aliskiren & HCTZ • quinapril • aliskiren & valsartan • ramipril Note: Active ingredients are limited to oral formulations only. Excludes nutritional supplement/dietary management combination products. • trandolopril ACEI combination products • amlodipine & benazepril • benazepril & HCTZ • captopril & HCTZ • enalapril & HCTZ • fosinopril & HCTZ • lisinopril & HCTZ • moexipril & HCTZ * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 64 Denominator Oral diabetes medications: Number of patients with at least two fills of either the same medication or medications in the same drug class during the measurement period. Biguanide medications • alogliptin & metformin • glipizide & metformin COMMERCIAL • glyburide & metformin Scoring will exclude members who don't have an HMSA drug plan and will only include those members with both HMSA medical and drug plans. • linagliptin & metformin Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements • pioglitazone & metformin Supplemental data won’t be accepted for this measure. • rosiglitazone & metformin • metformin • repaglinide & metformin • saxagliptin & metformin SR Measure Status • sitagliptin & metformin IR & SR NQF # 0541 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 5, 2009 Steward(s): Pharmacy Quality Alliance Note: Active ingredients are limited to oral formulations only (includes all dosage forms). Excludes nutritional supplement/ dietary management combination products. DPP-IV inhibitor medications Medication Adherence for Oral Diabetes Medications • alogliptin • alogliptin & metformin • alogliptin & pioglitazone HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE • linagliptin Description • linagliptin & metformin The percentage of patients (18 years of age or older) who adhered to their prescribed drug therapy across the following classes of oral diabetes medications: biguanides, sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones, and DPP-IV inhibitors. • saxagliptin Numerator • sitagliptin & metformin IR & SR • saxagliptin & metformin SR • sitagliptin • sitagliptin & simvastatin Number of patients with a proportion of days covered of 80 percent or more across the classes of oral diabetes medications during the measurement period. A patient with a proportion of days covered threshold of at least 80 percent is considered to be adherent. The steps used to calculate the numerator are below. Incretin mimetic agents • exenatide • liraglutide Meglitinides Step 1:Determine the patient’s measurement period in days, starting at the date of the first fill and ending at the end of the measurement period, disenrollment, or death. • nateglinide • repaglinide • repaglinide & metformin Step 2:Within the measurement period, count the number of days the patient was “covered” by at least one drug in the therapeutic area based on the prescription fill date and days of supply. If prescriptions for the same drug (same generic code number) overlap, adjust the prescription start date to be the day after the previous fill ends. Sulfonylurea medications • chlorpropamide • glimepiride • glipizide • glipizide & metformin Step 3:Divide the number of days found in Step 2 by the number of days found in Step 1 to determine the proportion of days covered. • glyburide • glyburide & metformin • pioglitazone & glimepiride Step 4:Count the number of patients who had a proportion of days covered greater than or equal to 0.80. • rosiglitazone & glimepiride * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 65 Medication Management for People with Asthma • tolazamide • tolbutamide Note: Active ingredients are limited to oral formulations only (includes all salts and dosage forms). COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Description Thiazolidinedione medications • pioglitazone & glimepiride The percentage of patients 5–85 years of age during the measurement year who were identified as having persistent asthma, filled prescriptions for appropriate medications, and adhered to their medication during the treatment period. • pioglitazone & metformin Numerator • alogliptin & pioglitazone • pioglitazone • rosiglitazone Medication compliance 75 percent – The number of patients who achieved PDC of at least 75 percent for their controller medications during the measurement year. (See Asthma Controller and Reliever Medication table on page 67.) • rosiglitazone & glimepiride • rosiglitazone & metformin Note: The active ingredients are limited to oral, inhaled, and injectable formulations only (includes all dosage forms). Excludes nutritional supplement/dietary management combination products. Steps to Identify Numerator Compliance: 1.Identify the index prescription start date (IPSD), which is the earliest dispensing event for any asthma controller medication during the measurement year. Denominator 2.To determine the treatment period, calculate the number of days from the IPSD (inclusive) to the end of the measurement year. Number of patients with at least two fills of medication(s) in any of the drug classes during the measurement period. Exclusions 3.Count the days covered by at least one prescription for an asthma controller medication during the treatment period. Subtract any days supply that extends beyond December 31 of the measurement year; days after the measurement year shouldn’t be counted. Exclude patients who were prescribed one or more prescriptions for insulin during the measurement period. Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements 4.Calculate the patient’s PDC using the following equation (round [using the 0.5 rule] to two decimal places): Supplemental data won’t be accepted for this measure. Measure Status Total Days Covered by a Controller Medication in the Treatment Period NQF # 0541 Status: Endorsed Original Endorsement Date: August 5, 2009 Steward(s): Pharmacy Quality Alliance Total Days in Treatment Period Denominator All patients 5–85 years of age by the end of the measurement year who were identified as having persistent asthma. Patients are identified as having persistent asthma when they have one or more of the following during both the measurement year and the year prior: • At least one emergency department visit or acute inpatient visit with asthma as the principal diagnosis. • At least four outpatient asthma visits on different dates of service and at least two asthma medications. • At least four asthma medication dispensing events. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. **Use ICD-9-CM Diagnosis code 999.4 (without fifth digit) to identify anaphylactic reaction prior to October 1, 2011. 66 Asthma Controller and Reliever Medications ASTHMA CONTROLLER MEDICATIONS DESCRIPTION PRESCRIPTIONS Antiasthmatic combinations Dyphylline-guaifenesin Antibody inhibitors Omalizumab Guaifenesin-theophylline Inhaled steroid combinations Budesonide-formoterol Fluticasone-salmeterol Mometasone-formoterol Inhaled corticosteroids Beclomethasone Budesonide Ciclesonide Flunisolide Fluticasone CFC free Mometasone Leukotriene modifiers Montelukast Zafirlukast Zileuton Mast cell stabilizers Cromolyn Methylxanthines Aminophylline Dyphylline Theophylline ASTHMA RELIEVER MEDICATIONS DESCRIPTION Short-acting, inhaled beta-2 agonists PRESCRIPTIONS Albuterol Levalbuterol Pirbuterol Exclusions Exclude patients who had any diagnosis below any time during the patient’s history through the end of the measurement year. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Supplemental data won't be accepted for this measure. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 67 Review of Chronic Conditions Claims processing logic will also give providers credit for coding conditions of greater severity to a higher level of specificity. When a more severe diagnosis is reported, any gap(s) on a condition of lesser severity will automatically be closed. HMSA AKAMAI ADVANTAGE 2016 Modifications Denominator • The Review of Chronic Conditions (RCC) measure will be subject to a measurement period of January 1, 2016, to September 30, 2016, with supplemental data due by September 30, 2016, and a one-month claims run-out. The cumulative number of persistent conditions for all HMSA Akamai Advantage members in the PCP’s patient panel identified during the 24 months prior to the start of the measurement period. Persistent conditions are identified through diagnosis codes in medical claims from the PCP and/or from the specialty and facility types on the inclusion lists in Tables 2a and 2b, only when these codes have been recoded in the measurement period. These lists exclude specialty and facility types that would submit medical claims that aren’t used for RAPS/EDPS submissions (e .g., lab, durable medical equipment, and a subset of specialists). In addition, supplemental data will be used (e .g., electronic medical record, retrospective chart audit RAPS/ EDPS return files, patient assessment form RAPS/EDPS return files) when available. Suspect conditions identified by CCS will not be included in the denominator. • Measure will be displayed in the Cozeva Coding Specificity (CCS) tool. CCS analytics identifies acute as well as chronic conditions that may not have been coded in the past or may not have been coded specifically. It identifies suspect conditions by taking into account all of the data available to Cozeva, including: – Prescriptions indicative of certain acute conditions. – Abnormal lab results and frequency of certain lab tests. – Frequency of visits to specialists. – Hospital stays and/or ER visits. Refer to the crosswalk in Cozeva to view which codes fall into each diagnosis group (HCC). –P otential progression of certain chronic conditions from previous years. To help inform you why a patient qualifies for a particular persistent condition, Cozeva will display all medical claims that support the condition and the details of each supporting medical claim, including: – Coding habits of providers as evident in the practice patterns. Description HMSA Akamai Advantage patients often have conditions that persist from year to year. The review of chronic conditions measure encourages you to review each of your patients’ persistent conditions and care plans. The measure groups all patient diagnoses identified over two calendar years prior to the measurement period into clinically meaningful condition groupings or codes called Hierarchical Condition Categories (HCC). You must review and confirm the persistence of each clinical condition group or code every calendar year. HMSA will audit provider reviews because they will be used for Risk Adjustment Processing System (RAPS) and Encounter Data Processing System (EDPS) submissions.1 See Table 1 for a list of the persistent conditions included in this measure. • Name of the diagnosing provider. • Diagnosis. • Reimbursement specialty description of the diagnosing provider. • Service date. Exclusions In the final performance scoring, all numerator negative conditions that were exclusively coded by ED physicians, the hospital, and hospitalists during the two year look-back period for the measure will be removed. If these exclusions eliminate all chronic conditions of any given member, that member won’t contribute to the PCP’s scoring or max potential for the measure. The RCC measure will be scored on the chronic conditions coded in the previous two years by a patient’s attributed PCP and treating specialist(s). New manifestations or complications of persistent conditions for medical claims received in 2015 won’t be included in the denominator for this measure. Numerator The cumulative number of persistent conditions that were confirmed by medical claims (from both providers and facilities) submitted with dates of service within the measurement period. Suspect conditions identified by CCS that were confirmed by medical claims submitted with dates of service within the measurement period will also be awarded numerator credit. To receive credit for the confirmation, you must have a face-to-face visit with your patient during the measurement period. If an audit finds that you didn’t have a face-to-face visit with your patient, the patient won’t be counted toward your maximum payment potential and all confirmed conditions for the patient will be removed from the numerator and denominator. CMS instituted a Risk Adjustment Payment Model in 2004 to align payment to health plans with the disease burden and associated potential cost of the plan’s beneficiaries. Data collected from this measure will be used to supplement our risk adjusted score through RAPS/EDPS submissions to CMS. 1 68 Supplemental Data Primary care providers may request that the persistent condition be excluded from the measure for one of the following rationales: • Disconfirm – Condition has improved (e.g., the patient has been diagnosed with a condition of lesser severity) –A n upload of the patient’s pertinent medical record is required. –D ocumentation must include a face-to-face visit in the calendar year (service date) that clearly demonstrates that the patient’s condition has been managed/monitored, evaluated, assessed, or treated and that the patient’s symptoms, labs, medication, and treatment are consistent with a condition of lesser severity (diagnosis and diagnosis code) than what is currently reported on Cozeva. • Disconfirm – Condition has resolved (e.g., the patient’s care is no longer affected by the condition) –A n upload of the patient’s pertinent medical record is required. –D ocumentation must include a face-to-face visit in the calendar year (service date) that clearly demonstrates that the patient’s symptoms, labs, and other diagnostic work indicate that the condition no longer needs to be managed/monitored, evaluated, assessed, or treated. • Disconfirm – Insufficient evidence of the condition –M edical record documentation is not required for this rationale/option. Instead, an attestation (e.g., note or memo uploaded into Cozeva or text entered into Cozeva) is required. –T he attestation must demonstrate that the provider reviewed the pertinent clinical information (such as medical record notes, consult reports, lab results, or imaging over the past two years) and on the basis of those results, finds: • Insufficient evidence to support the diagnosis; OR • Clinical information to the contrary of the diagnosis. –T he attestation should be specific to the patient and condition, and provide clinical rationale to the extent possible. Example attestation: “I, Dr. Aloha Lee, do hereby attest that this patient does not have the diagnosis of chronic renal disease. The patient has had normal creatinine levels seen over the past two years. Based on this history and my physical examination, this patient does not have the diagnosis of chronic renal disease.” All supplemental data are subject to audit. All disconfirm submissions that pass audit will result in the removal of the condition from the denominator, which will be reflected in your Cozeva registry automatically. All supplemental data for the Review of Chronic Conditions measure must be submitted by September 30, 2015. 69 Table 1: Persistent Conditions 1 Amputation Status, Lower Limb/Amputation Complications 42 Pneumococcal Pneumonia, Emphysema, Lung Abscess 2 Angina Pectoris/Old Myocardial Infarction 43 Polyneuropathy 3 Artificial Openings for Feeding or Elimination 44 Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy and Vitreous Hemorrhage 4 Aspiration and Specified Bacterial Pneumonias 45 Protein-Calorie Malnutrition 5 Bone/Joint/Muscle Infections/Necrosis 46 Quadriplegia, Other Extensive Paralysis 6 Breast, Prostate, Colorectal, and Other Cancers and Tumors 47 Renal Failure 7 Cardio-Respiratory Failure and Shock 48 Respirator Dependence/Tracheostomy Status 8 Cerebral Palsy and Other Paralytic Syndromes 49 9 Chronic Hepatitis Rheumatoid Arthritis and Inflammatory Connective Tissue Disease 10 Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease 50 Schizophrenia 11 Chronic Ulcer of Skin, Except Decubitus 51 Seizure Disorders and Convulsions 12 Cirrhosis of Liver 52 Severe Hematological Disorders 13 Coma, Brain Compression/Anoxic Damage 53 Specified Heart Arrhythmias 14 Congestive Heart Failure 54 Spinal Cord Disorders/Injuries 15 Cystic Fibrosis 55 Traumatic Amputation 16 Decubitus Ulcer of Skin 56 Vascular Disease 17 Diabetes with Neurologic or Other Specified Manifestation 57 Vascular Disease with Complications 18 Diabetes with Ophthalmologic or Unspecified Manifestation 19 Diabetes with Renal or Peripheral Circulatory Manifestation 20 Diabetes without Complication 21 Dialysis Status 22 Disorders of Immunity 23 Drug/Alcohol Dependence 24 Drug/Alcohol Psychosis 25 End-Stage Liver Disease 26 Extensive Third-Degree Burns 27 Hemiplegia/Hemiparesis 28 Inflammatory Bowel Disease 29 Lung, Upper Digestive Tract, and Other Severe Cancers 30 Lymphatic, Head and Neck, Brain, and Other Major Cancers 31 Major Complications of Medical Care and Trauma 32 Major Depressive, Bipolar, and Paranoid Disorders 33 Major Organ Transplant Status 34 Metastatic Cancer and Acute Leukemia 35 Multiple Sclerosis 36 Muscular Dystrophy 37 Nephritis 38 Opportunistic Infections 39 Pancreatic Disease 40 Paraplegia 41 Parkinson’s and Huntington’s Diseases 70 Table 2a. Acceptable Specialty Types for Risk Adjustment Data Submission ALLERGY GASTROENTEROLOGY NEUROLOGY PHYS MED/REHAB ANESTHESIOLOGY GENERAL HOSPITAL NEUROSURGERY PHYSCN ASSISTANT APRN GENERAL PRACTICE NON-SUBMIT PROVDR PHYSICAL THERAPY AUDIOLOGY GERONTOLOGY NURSE PRACTITIONE PODIATRY CARDIAC REHAB HB AMB SURG CNTR OB/GYN PSYCHIATRY CARDIOLOGY HB DIALYSIS FACIL OCCUP THERAPY PSYCHOLOGY CHILD PSYCHIATRY HOME HEALTH AGEN ONCOLOGY PULMONARY DISEASE CHIROPRACTOR HOME IV THERAPY OPHTHALMOLOGY RHEUMATOLOGY CLINIC HOSP OUTPT MEDICL OPTOMETRY SLEEP MEDICINE CLINIC CLINIC EMERG SVCS HOSPICE OSTEOPATHY SOCIAL WORKER CLINIC PSYCH HOSPITAL PSYCH OTHER SPEECH LANG PATH CRNA IN VITRO OTHER FS FACILITY SPEECH THERAPY DERMATOLOGY INFECT DISEASES OTOLARYNGOLOGY SUBSTANCE ABUSE DIET/NUTRTNL PROF INTERNAL MEDICINE OUTPT CLINIC SVCS SURGERY EMERGENCY MED LONG TERM CARE PATHOLOGY SURG-ORAL ENDOCRINOLOGY MARRGE FAM THRPST PED NEUROLOGY SURG-ORTHOPEDIC FACILITY SERVICES MENTAL HLTH CNSLR PED ONCOLOGY SURG-PLASTIC FAMILY PHYSICIAN MIDWIFE PED SPECIALIST URGENT CARE CLINIC FS AMB SURG CNTR NEPHROLOGY PEDIATRICS UROLOGY FS DIALYSIS FACIL Table 2b. Acceptable Facility Bill Types for Risk Adjustment Data Submission 011X 012X 013X 041X 071X 073X 074X 075X 076X 011X 085X 71 Well-Child Visits in the First 15 Months of Life COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Well-Child Visits in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Years of Life Description COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION Percentage of patients who turned 15 months old during the measurement period and who had six or more well-child visits with a PCP during their first 15 months of life. This measure is based on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT) visits. Description Percentage of patients 3–6 years of age as of the end of the measurement period who received one or more well-child visits with a PCP during the measurement period. This measure is based on the CMS and American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for EPSDT visits. Refer to the American Academy of Pediatrics Guidelines for Health Supervision at aap.org and Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents (published by the National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health) at brightfutures.org for more detailed information on what constitutes a well-child visit. Refer to the American Academy of Pediatrics Guidelines for Health Supervision at aap.org and Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents (published by the National Center for Education in Maternal and Child Health) at brightfutures.org for more detailed information on what constitutes a well-child visit. Numerator Numerator The six well-child visits must occur with a PCP, but the PCP doesn’t have to be the provider assigned to the child. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify well-child visits. Children 3–6 years of age who received at least one well-child visit with a PCP during the measurement period. The well-child visit must occur with a PCP, but the PCP doesn’t have to be the provider assigned to the child. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify well-child visits. Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: Denominator Children who turned 15 months old during the measurement period. Denominator Exclusions Patients at least 3 years old and not more than 6 years old as of the end of the measurement period. Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Exclusions Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements To attest that a patient had a well-child visit, medical record evidence of all of the following is required: To attest that a patient had a well-child visit, medical record evidence of all of the following is required: • Health and developmental history (physical and mental). • Physical exam. • Health education/anticipatory guidance. • Health and developmental history (physical and mental). • Physical exam. • Health education/anticipatory guidance. In accordance with HEDIS definitions, the 15th month birth date will be calculated as the patient’s first birthday plus 90 days. Note: The annual well-child visit is generally scheduled every 12 months. HMSA recognizes that families and providers need flexibility in scheduling well-child visits and will cover well-child visits that are at least nine months apart. * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. 72 Weight Assessment and Counseling for Nutrition and Physical Activity for Children/ Adolescents Supplemental Data Option Documentation Requirements To attest that a patient had BMI percentile documentation, counseling for nutrition, and counseling for physical activity, medical record evidence of all of the following is required: BMI COMMERCIAL • QUEST INTEGRATION • BMI percentile. Description • BMI percentile plotted on an age-growth chart. Percentage of patients 3-17 years of age who had an outpatient visit and who had evidence of the following during the measurement year: Counseling for Nutrition • BMI percentile documentation.*** • Discussion of current nutrition behaviors (e.g., eating habits, dieting behaviors). • Counseling for nutrition. • Checklist indicating nutrition was addressed. • Counseling for physical activity. • Counseling or referral for nutrition education. Numerator • Member received educational materials on nutrition during a face-to-face visit. Patients age 3-17 years of age who had a recorded BMI, counseling for nutrition, and counseling for physical activity from their PCP. This measure will use the billing codes from submitted claims to identify WCC credit. • Anticipatory guidance for nutrition. • Weight or obesity counseling. Counseling for Physical Activity Please click the icon below for allowable numerator codes: • Discussion of current physical activity behaviors (e.g., exercise routine, participation in sports activities, exam for sports participation). Denominator • Checklist indicating physical activity was addressed. Children 3-17 years of age who had an outpatient visit during the measurement period. • Counseling or referral for physical activity. • Member received educational materials on physical activity during a face-to-face visit. Please click the icon below for allowable denominator codes: • Anticipatory guidance specific to the child’s physical activity. • Weight or obesity counseling. Exclusions Please click the icon below for allowable exclusion codes: * Note: The codes listed in links and under various headings in Appendix A: Pay-for-Quality Measure Detail are a summary set for each measure and don’t comprise an exhaustive list of all codes applicable to the pay-for-quality program, which by default adheres to HEDIS specifications. *** Because BMI norms for youth vary with age and gender, this measure evaluates whether the BMI percentile is assessed rather than an absolute BMI value. 73 Appendix B - Patient Attribution Process 1. K eep the PCP selection for the patients who have selected a PCP. The patient attribution process aims to reflect our members’ preference for a provider as a PCP based on their office visit pattern. HMSA’s HMO and QUEST Integration members are included in the PCMH patient panel of the PCP they selected upon enrolling. All other HMSA members are attributed to a PCP based on the provider they’ve seen most frequently or most recently, based on a review of HMSA claims for a specified period. 2. F or all other patients, attribute them to a PCP using a 16-month claims window. (A 37-month claims window was used for the initial attribution.) For eligible PCP specialties, the claims used represent face-to-face encounters between the provider and patient. 3. S elect the PCP who was most frequently seen or, in cases of a tie, most recently seen. The attribution process includes members of HMSA plans including HMO and PPO plans, HMSA QUEST Integration, HMSA Akamai Advantage plans, and The HMSA Children’s Plan. 4. Confirm that the patient has valid eligibility for that month. An initial attribution using the process described as follows was completed when HMSA launched its PCMH and pay-for-quality programs. Thereafter, the same attribution process has been completed after the close of every calendar month after HMSA has posted all the claims processed and eligible members for that month. If there’s no change to the attribution for a patient, the previous month’s attribution results will apply for the current month. Attribution results will be available as an updated patient list on Cozeva. Providers are encouraged to view their patient lists and follow the update process described on Cozeva. Providers may add patients to their patient lists through Cozeva. Providers will need to sign an attestation to complete the process. Their attestations will supersede claims-based attributions. 74 1177-4406 12.15 FN