CMS encourages EHR use for Medicare quality reporting

By Mary Mosquera
Monday, November 02, 2009

Healthcare providers will have the option to use electronic health record systems to report Medicare quality and electronic prescribing measures to CMS in some of its pay-for-performance programs next year, according to an announcement by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The revisions are designed “to promote adoption and use of electronic health records and to provide both eligible professionals and CMS with experience on EHR-based reporting,” CMS said in the Oct. 30 announcement.

They run parallel to efforts by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT to set up additional incentives for providers to measure and submit data measuring the quality of their treatments.

According to CMS, providers could use EHRs to submit information for the CMS’s Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) program, which pays an incentive to eligible physicians and other healthcare professionals who report on specific quality measures for care for Medicare patients.

Providers also will be able to report e-prescribing usage through qualified EHR systems or registries, according to CMS. Currently, providers’ reports about e-prescribing are based on patient medical claims.

Under the fee schedule rule, providers for the first time will be able to count quality data submitted through electronic health record systems toward their eligibility for a PQRI incentive payment, CMS said.

Next year, those payments will be equal to 2 percent of their total estimated allowed charges for the reporting periods, CMS said. The final rule will appear in the Nov. 25 Federal Register

The rule also streamlines reporting of e-prescribing and focuses on the actual use of e-prescribing by the provider. In 2010, providers will use one code for e-prescribing, but they “need to report this code at least 25 times during the reporting period to be considered a successful electronic prescriber,” CMS said. 

The Medicare fee schedule puts into practice provisions of the Medicare Improvement for Patients and Providers Act of 2008, which established a program for incentive payments for e-prescribing over five years. In 2012, CMS will impose penalties on providers who are not “successful e-prescribers.”

Once CMS publishes the rule, it said it will accept comments on designated provisions of the final rule until Dec. 29. The policies become effective Jan. 1, 2010.

A copy of the final rule is online.



Please use the space provided below to write your comments to our editorial staff. We will respond to your comments and input via e-mail.

Your Name: (optional)


Your Email: (optional)


Your Location: (optional)


Comment:
 
 
  

Cover Story

magazine coverCover Story
Uncle Sam Wants Usability
Feds say usability standards are essential for accelerating health IT adoption and ensuring safety
Read more

NEW enhanced Digital Edition of GHIT

eSeminar

Mitigate Communication Breakdowns in VA Healthcare Facilities to Improve Patient Flow for a Better Patient Experience

August 31, 2010
12:00 Noon Eastern / 11:00 AM Central / 10:00 AM Mountain / 9:00 AM Pacific

Communication breakdowns in hospitals are a major cause for sentinel events. Veterans Affairs hospitals, like most care facilities, primarily rely on multiple, inefficient tools for communications including pagers, overhead paging, and desk phones. With the deployment of an instant communications solution, healthcare workers have more time with patients, experience better patient flow, and create a better patient experience for veterans and their families. In this one-hour webinar you will learn how communications systems restore the human connection to healthcare with instant communication at the critical points of care.

Register online >>