Report
Primary Care Clinician Participation in the CMS Quality Payment Program
Rural Policy Brief, 2019-3, RUPRI Center for Rural Health Policy Analysis
04/2019
Abstract
This brief examines primary care clinician participation in the Quality Payment Program (QPP), parsed by clinician type, clinician specialty, clinician practice location, and Advanced Alternative Payment Model (A-APM) or Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) program participation. We found that approximately 10% of primary care clinicians participate in A-APMs and less than 30% of primary care clinicians participate in MIPS. Thus, nearly 60% of primary care clinicians are exempt from MIPS and do not participate in an A-APM. Metropolitan primary care clinicians are more likely to participate in A-APMs than nonmetropolitan primary care clinicians. To realize QPP goals of improved health outcomes and smarter spending, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) could consider QPP updates that specifically advance primary care clinician participation. Furthermore, CMS could develop A-APMs and programs that specifically include nonmetropolitan primary care clinicians.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Primary Care Clinician Participation in the CMS Quality Payment Program
- Creators
- A Clinton MacKinneyFred UllrichKeith J Mueller
- Resource Type
- Report
- Publisher
- RUPRI Center for Rural Health Policy Analysis; Iowa City, Iowa. USA
- Series
- Rural Policy Brief; 2019-3
- Number of pages
- 6 pages
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 04/2019
- Academic Unit
- RUPRI Center for Rural Health Policy Analysis; Health Management and Policy; Public Policy Center (Archive)
- Record Identifier
- 9984221639302771
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