The AHA submitted comments June 26 to the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Health for a hearing about improving value-based care. The AHA shared principles Congress should consider when designing alternative payment models to make participation more attractive for potential participants. Those principles include providing an adequate on-ramp and glidepath to transition to risk; including adequate risk adjustment; allowing voluntary participation and flexible design; balancing risk versus reward; and establishing guardrails to ensure participants don't compete against themselves when they achieve optimal cost savings and outcomes, among others. 

Additionally, the AHA was critical of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' newly proposed Transforming Episode Accountability Model — a mandatory bundled payment model — and suggested CMS make participation voluntary along with a host of other changes. The AHA also questioned design elements of CMS’ proposed Increasing Organ Transplant Access model, a mandatory payment model for kidney transplants. 

Related News Articles

Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services June 28 released a proposed rule on mitigating the impact of significant, anomalous and highly suspect (SAHS)…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services June 26 announced beneficiary coinsurance reductions for 64 prescription drugs available through Medicare Part B.…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services' Innovation Center has announced it will host a Rural Health Hackathon in August. The hackathon includes a…
Perspective
For too long and for too many patients, the process of obtaining prior authorization for a medical procedure or medicine has been a tangled web, as people are…
Headline
The AHA June 14 sent a letter to the Senate Finance Committee, responding to questions included in a white paper the committee wrote on chronic care through…
Headline
The Health Resources and Services Administration June 13 awarded more than $11 million to 15 organizations to strengthen the health care workforce in rural…