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FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT www.couriersun.com OCTOBER 22, 2015 • WELLNESS • The Courier sun 5 wellness s New Medicare program targets patients on dialysis FROM THE CENTERS FOR MEDICARE AND MEDICAID SERVICES More than 600,000 Americans have end-stage renal disease (ESRD), also known as kidney failure, and require life sustaining dialysis treatments several times per week. These individuals typically have many health problems, are at higher risk of hospital readmissions, and suffer from fragmented care. In 2012, ESRD beneficiaries comprised 1.1 percent of the Medicare population and accounted for an estimated 5.6 percent of total Medicare spending. As part of the Department of Health and Human Services’ approach to building a health care delivery system that results in better care while using taxpayer dollars more wisely, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced the participants for the Comprehensive ESRD Care (CEC) Model a new accountable care organization (ACO) model made possible by the Affordable Care Act and conducted by the CMS Innovation Center. The ACOs are groups of physicians and other health care providers who collectively take on responsibility for the quality and cost of care for a population of patients. The CEC Model is designed specifically for beneficiaries with ESRD and builds on experiences from other models and programs with ACOs, including the Pioneer ACO Model and the Medicare Shared Savings Program. In the CEC Model, dialysis facilities, nephrologists, and other providers have joined together to form ESRD Seamless Care Organizations (ESCOs) to coordinate care for ESRD beneficiaries. ESCOs will be financially accountable for quality outcomes and Medicare Part A and B spending, including all spending for dialysis services, for their ESRD beneficiaries. This model will encourage dialysis providers to think beyond their traditional roles in care delivery and support beneficiaries as they provide patientcentered care that will address beneficiaries’ health needs in and out of the dialysis facility. “This new ACO model represents a paradigm shift in care for beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease; it promotes a patient-centered approach to their dialysis and non-dialysis care needs that will help accomplish our delivery system reform goals of better care, smarter spending, and healthier people,” said Patrick Conway, M.D., MSc, acting deputy administrator and chief medical officer, CMS. The CEC Model includes separate financial arrangements for ESCOs with large and small dialysis organizations. ESCOs with participation by a dialysis facility or facilities owned by a large dialysis organization, which is an organization that owns 200 or more dialysis facilities, will be eligible to receive shared savings payments, but will also be liable for shared losses, and will have higher overall levels of risk compared with their smaller counterparts. ESCOs with participation by a dialysis facility or facilities owned by a small dialysis organization, which is an organization that owns fewer than 200 dialysis facilities, will be eligible to receive shared savings payments, but will not be liable for shared losses. The CEC Model is part of the department’s efforts to create opportunities for providers to enter into alternative payment models and meet the Secretary’s goal, announced on Jan. 26, to have 30 percent of traditional Medicare payments paid through alternative payment models by the end of 2016 and 50 percent by the end of 2018. CMS issued an open call for applications for the CEC Model in April 2014. The Rogosin Kidney Care Alliance is the ESCO for New York. For more information on the CEC Model, visit http://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/comprehensiveesrd care/.


SC10222015
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