Modeling of an Alternative Reimbursement Method for Palliative Care

2022-06-20 13:41:00 By : Mr. Fred Chen

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The authors modeled a version of the Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness alternative reimbursement structure for palliative care using data from the Statin Trial.

Objectives: Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness (PACSSI), a per-member per-month (PMPM) alternative reimbursement structure for palliative care (PC) services, has been described as overly generous by HHS. We developed a modified version, PACSSI-Flexible (PACSSI-F), by modeling reimbursement for PC based on the changes in patient functional status. We estimated reimbursement for the first year that an organization might implement the PACSSI-F for PC services.

Study Design: Secondary analysis using data from the Statin Discontinuation in Advanced Illness Trial.

Methods: We evaluated the PACSSI vs the PACSSI-F in 3 phases. In the first phase, we calculated variable-appropriate frequencies/relative frequencies or means/SDs for the study population’s available demographics and comorbidities, focusing on age, Charlson Comorbidity Index score, race and ethnicity, gender, and continued statin use. Exploratory analyses specific to reimbursement were conducted in a second phase. For each payment structure, we calculated the (1) mean (SD) total reimbursement and (2) number of weeks that a health care system would receive reimbursement, with both weekly and PMPM (4-week) averages. The third phase was designed to quantify any within-person (paired) differences in reimbursement between the original PACSSI and the PACSSI-F.

Results: PACSSI-F provides reimbursement for sustainable PC services and was cost-advantageous over PACSSI by $69.92 PMPM for 28.6% of the seriously ill population.

Conclusions: Modeling of the PACSSI-F using secondary data provides a novel example of economic forecasting for alternative reimbursement structures in PC. Alternative reimbursement payment policies are necessary to expand PC for the seriously ill population.

Am J Manag Care. 2022;28(6):In Press

Palliative care is primarily reimbursed by direct clinician encounters through fee-for-service (FFS) payment structures. Unfortunately, FFS covers only 20% to 60% of operating expenses. We modeled the Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness (PACSSI) reimbursement structure and a modified version (PACSSI-Flexible [PACSSI-F]) to estimate reimbursement for the first year that an organization implements this payment structure for PC services.

Patients who contend with serious, chronic, life-limiting illness are often not well served by the current fragmented health care system.1 Fragmentation occurs unintentionally when patients see multiple clinicians, each of whom may treat an isolated health care need without attending to other aspects of the patient (eg, physical, psychological/psychiatric, social, cultural, ethical, legal).2 Clinician inattention to the patient as a whole may result in care misaligned with the patient’s values, preferences, wishes, or goals and may exacerbate the patient’s emotional, spiritual, and financial distress.

Palliative care (PC), by virtue of its interdisciplinary nature and its broad focus on addressing symptoms and stress caused by serious illness, aims to bind the disparate fragments of health care delivery.3 PC is appropriate at any age and/or any stage of illness; it can partner with curative and interventional-based treatment.3 Unlike hospice, PC services are not dependent on a patient’s prognosis of 6 months or less. As a result, interdisciplinary PC has been shown to improve quality of life, prevent and alleviate patient pain and suffering,4-7 and improve caregiver quality of life.8 Furthermore, randomized clinical trials have demonstrated that patient and family satisfaction levels are higher when care delivery regimens incorporate PC.9-11 In fact, the body of evidence supporting the effectiveness of customized PC delivery continues to grow.12

PC Reimbursement in the Health Care System

The goal of any health care delivery system is to improve value13 by maximizing patient outcomes and minimizing patient costs. PC consultation teams in acute care settings effectively reduce length of stay, hospital charges and costs, and intensive care unit utilization.14-18 Additionally, studies addressing its economic impact in postacute care and ambulatory settings show a reduction in 30-day hospital readmissions, emergency department (ED) visits, and health care utilization.19-21 Further, PC has been shown to increase hospice use,20,21 which reduces health care costs. Finally, shared-risk population health reimbursement structures that include PC programs have shown promise in improving population health and economic outcomes.21

Despite evidence around the benefits of PC, expanding its application among the seriously ill requires changes in reimbursement payment policy.2,12 Health care consumers, purchasers, insurers, and providers in the United States express interest in moving from the current, prevalent fee-for-service (FFS) payment structure to alternative, value-based structures.22 However, there are few examples of alternative reimbursement structures for PC services.

Currently, PC is reimbursed as a medical specialty under Medicare Part B (through FFS) and less commonly by commercial Medicare Advantage (MA) plans or accountable care organizations (ACOs). Recent changes in MA plans and ACOs make it more financially advantageous to offer PC.23 Regardless of insurer, patients may be left with out-of-pocket expenses. For example, Medicare Part B has a 20% co-pay for covered services, which often creates a financial burden, especially for those without additional supplemental insurance.

FFS-imposed financial burdens extend beyond patients and families. Nationally, FFS reimburses from 20% to 60% of a PC program’s operating expense.24 Funding for outpatient PC practices in the United States has been reported as 49% through FFS billing, 45% through institutional support, and 6% through philanthropy.25 PC structures (eg, 24/7 coverage, full interdisciplinary team), services (eg, time-intensive, repeated discussions with patients/families regarding care priorities), and specialized symptom management are mismatched to the FFS reimbursement structure through which most PC programs currently deliver care.26 Alternative reimbursement structures may provide PC programs an opportunity to be financially sustainable while encouraging expansion in acute, postacute, and ambulatory settings.

Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness

Recently, the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine proposed an alternative reimbursement structure for PC services: Patient and Caregiver Support for Serious Illness (PACSSI).1 PACSSI is a 2-tiered, per-member per-month (PMPM) reimbursement structure: Tier 1 (moderate complexity) is reimbursed at $450 PMPM, and tier 2 (high complexity) is reimbursed at $600 PMPM (Table 127). In addition to maximizing PC access, PACSSI was designed to replace FFS reimbursement and provide financial support to PC programs. PACSSI payments are based on a 6-month eligibility period wherein tier 1–level or tier 2–level payments are paid prospectively each month. In turn—and key to the PACSSI structure—PC programs are reimbursed for services at the appropriate level regardless of whether there are periods when the patient’s functional status improves or declines, and regardless of overall health care utilization. PACSSI eligibility is dependent on meeting all the following patient criteria1:

Serious illness. Patient has either (1) one or more designated diseases, disorders, or health conditions that have progressed to a stage at which patients frequently experience avoidable complications typically treated using expensive acute care services or (2) three or more chronic conditions.

Functional limitation. Patient has significant functional limitations indicated by physical performance on the Palliative Performance Scale or the ECOG Scale of Performance Status, or the need for assistance with activities of daily living; or, for the moderate complexity tier only, patient has a claim for specified durable medical equipment (ie, oxygen, a wheelchair, or a hospital bed).

Health care utilization. Patient has had unscheduled health care services, including inpatient hospitalizations, ED visits, or observation stays, in the past year.

Patients enrolled in PACSSI are assessed every 6 months for ongoing eligibility and placed into tier 1 or tier 2 based on specified criteria. Patients in hospice are not PACSSI eligible.

Any new reimbursement strategy requires time and testing. An example is the rollout of the Medicare & Medicaid Primary Care First reimbursement structure. This structure began accepting payer statements of interest and practice applications in fall 2019 and subsequently 2 cohorts of participating practices began in January of 2021 and January of 2022. However, data on the economic impact may not be realized until 2022-2023. Therefore, economic modeling will take approximately 3 years. To address this time-sensitivity in PACSSI economic forecasting, our novel study used secondary data for modeling purposes. Our intention was to model PACSSI and then contrast it with a new, modified version (PACSSI-Flexible [PACSSI-F]) by tracking the fluctuation of patient functional changes during the study period. We developed PACSSI-F to match reimbursement for patients who moved between moderate and high complexities (and vice versa) monthly during the 6-month eligibility period. This presented a theoretical opportunity to allocate the limited reimbursement-based resources to those patients in greatest need while benefiting insurers. In addition, we sought to estimate whether PACSSI-F may effectively respond to the critique of the former secretary of HHS, in which he categorized PACSSI as being overly generous in PC reimbursement.28

As a secondary analysis of deidentified data, this study was deemed “not human subjects research” by the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board. We employed a 3-step process to model PACSSI-F and evaluate its impact during the first year that a health care organization implements this payment structure.

Step 1: Search for a suitable data source. We sought a data source that contained representative data elements of the PC population, with data aligned with PACSSI criteria. We identified the Statin Discontinuation in Advanced Illness Trial, or Statin Trial (ST),29 designed to evaluate the safety and clinical impact of discontinuing statin medications for patients in the PC setting. Data were collected from June 3, 2011, to May 2, 2013, and this multicenter, parallel-group, unblended, randomized, pragmatic clinical trial (NCT 01415934) was conducted at 15 Palliative Care Research Cooperative Group member sites in the United States.29 Inclusion and exclusion criteria are described in eAppendix A (eAppendices available at ajmc.com). For purposes of the current study, we operated under the assumption that all patients in the ST had at least 1 significant health care utilization event (eg, ED visit, observation stay, and/or inpatient hospitalization) in the 12 months prior to enrollment. In addition, because PACSSI criteria do not provide reimbursement for patients in hospice, we excluded the ST hospice patients from our study.

Step 2: Identify PACSSI criteria. We extracted data including recorded patient primary diagnosis, International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision codes, and Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) scores to determine eligibility for serious illness and prospective tiering criteria based on the PACSSI reimbursement structure. Functional status in the ST was determined by scores on the Australian-modified Karnofsky Performance Status (AKPS).30 Using a deterministic approach coupled with statement derivation,31 we concluded that the AKPS scoring was aligned with the Palliative Performance Scale. Because PACSSI does not penalize PC programs that are effective in reducing unnecessary utilization during a patient’s 6-month enrollment period,1 we operated under the assumption that all patients continued to meet the health care utilization criterion.

Step 3: Model the PACSSI and PACSSI-F reimbursement structures. We modeled both the PACSSI and PACSSI-F reimbursement structures during the course of a 6-month eligibility period, the primary difference being that PACSSI-F allows movement in reimbursement tiers month by month based on changes in patient functional status. For the specific modeling, we began by identifying the first eligible tier 1 or tier 2 week for each patient. The first week began at the start of the 6-month (24-week) period, and payment is prospective for each month within this period (or until death). Within the 6-month period, we assumed each month was equal to 4 weeks and paid at least at the tier 1 level. The process repeated itself until the 6-month period ended or until the end of the ST. Patients with a primary diagnosis of dementia were restricted to tier 1.1 We imputed missing functional status data using the previously recorded AKPS score on record.

We analyzed the PACSSI and PACSSI-F reimbursement structures using R version 3.6.3 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing) in 3 phases: demographic, exploratory, and differential analyses. For the demographic phase, we calculated frequencies or means/SDs for the available demographics and comorbidities, focusing on age, CCI score, race and ethnicity, gender, and continued statin use. During the exploratory analyses, for each payment structure, we calculated the mean (SD) total reimbursement and number of weeks that a health care system would receive reimbursement, with both weekly and PMPM averages during the study period.

The third phase quantified any differences in reimbursement between the PACSSI and PACSSI-F structures. We calculated reimbursement under the 2 payment structures, the paired (within-person) differences in reimbursement between the 2 structures, then the association between reimbursement differences and demographic variables. Analysis of the reimbursement comparisons for the paired data required modeling with either true zeros (as opposed to assumed truncated zeros) or positive values representing reimbursement reductions from PACSSI-F. The cost distribution, estimated means and propositions, and statistical approach for this study are detailed in eAppendix B.

The ST included 381 patients, with 137 (35.9%) enrolled in hospice. We excluded the 137 hospice patients as well as 10 additional nonhospice patients for not meeting the PACSSI serious illness criterion. This resulted in a sample size of 234 (Table 2). The mean (SD) baseline age was 70.8 (10.7) years (range, 47-90), and the mean (SD) CCI score was 5.1 (2.8). Men comprised 57.7% (n = 135), 75.6% were non-Hispanic White, and 49.1% had statin use. Age was truncated at 90 years.

Comparison of PACSSI and PACSSI-F

For the PACSSI and PACSSI-F reimbursement structures, the mean (SD) for total cost and PMPM cost (4-week averages) were calculated. Reimbursement was computed for a mean (SD) of 6.5 (4.4) months. The PMPM cost was $23.54 lower, on average, for the PACSSI-F structure. Beyond a shift in the mean payment, Figure 1 demonstrates reimbursement under the PACSSI-F structure to be skewed lower than the original PACSSI.

Using the fitted Tweedie distribution plotted with a dotted line in Figure 2, an estimated 71.4% (95% CI, 65.5%-77.0%) of the PC population will not derive cost reductions under PACSSI-F. For the remaining 28.6% (95% CI, 23.0%-34.5%), the expected PMPM cost reduction is estimated to be $69.92 (95% CI, $59.45-$81.75) PMPM. This estimated proportion that would have a PMPM cost reduction matched the observed proportion in our study, in which 67 of the 234 participants (28.6%) had a PMPM cost reduction under the PACSSI-F reimbursement structure. Interestingly, the expected $69.92 PMPM reduction calculated from our Tweedie model for this 28.6% who had a reduction represented a conservative estimate compared with the mean (SD) cost reduction observed in our data, which was $82.21 ($50.34) PMPM. For context, the PACSSI-F estimated proportion with reduced reimbursement and resulting expected mean PMPM reduction translates to $19,985.44 per 1000 members in cost reduction every month.

We tested for associations between the cost reduction from using PACSSI-F and any of the 5 considered covariates: age, CCI score, race and ethnicity, gender, and continued statin use (Table 3). In addition, we tested for associations between cost reduction and squared age or squared CCI score. No covariates showed evidence of an effect on the PMPM cost reduction (all 95% CIs included 0 or no effect). Finding no candidate covariates individually with a clear association with the PMPM mean cost reduction, no combinations of covariates were further studied. Model diagnostics revealed generally reasonable fits for all linear models. The linear models including the squared age or CCI terms did show potential for excess influence on fit from a small number of points as measured by leverage and Cook’s distance. However, as the respective models with only age or CCI as the main effects did not have this concern and did not show evidence of an association between the covariate and cost reduction, we believe this reinforces that the squared terms were not useful in explaining PMPM cost reduction.

The findings from modifications to PACSSI (ie, PACSSI-F) suggest that tier reclassification provides payers cost savings for 28.6% of the PC population (mean savings of $69.92 PMPM). We identified cost savings to PACSSI by allowing payment to lower from tier 2 to tier 1 when a patient’s functional status improved. Overall, we believe that PACSSI-F may be more acceptable to payers while providing improved reimbursement for sustainable PC structures and services.

Most FFS PC billing is time based due to the intensity of counseling, advanced communications, and anticipatory guidance. We reviewed the general CMS Physician Fee Schedule for outpatient time-based reimbursement and determined that a new patient seen for between 60 and 74 minutes would result in a mean reimbursement of $229.30.32 We assumed that follow-up visits (40-54 minutes each) would occur once within the initial month and then monthly thereafter (reimbursed at $204.89 per visit).33 Under the FFS structure, the mean (SD) reimbursement for professional PC services for our study is estimated to be $1602.24 ($754.43) per patient enrolled in equal time of PACSSI and PACSSI-F, or $248.37 ($28.44) PMPM. Although our estimates do not take into consideration geographical and contractual agreement differences, PACSSI and PACSSI-F provide additional reimbursement of approximately $2005.45 and $1822.76, respectively, for PC services on a per-patient basis. PACSSI and PACSSI-F are a substantial and necessary improvement for PC reimbursement when considering the need for individualized care for patients with serious illness. Under the alternative reimbursement structure, PC services will be reimbursed appropriately to provide the necessary physical, psychological, social, spiritual, and cultural care for patients and their family contending with a serious illness.

PACSSI-F still maintains the 6-month evaluation window of guaranteed reimbursement used by the original PACSSI structure. There could be further reductions in reimbursement from modifications such as (1) allowing no payment for months within the 6-month evaluation period when patients are at the highest function level or (2) fully eliminating the 6-month evaluation window and evaluating reimbursement monthly. Our findings of reduced reimbursement in the PACSSI-F structure represent a potential response addressing the former secretary of HHS’ critique that the original PACSSI design is overly generous and challenging to account for patient’s functional status.28 PACSSI-F attempts to mirror the changing severity of illness using functional status as a proxy, resulting in potential allocation of appropriate and timely PC services for individualized care. In doing so, PACSSI-F attempts to account for the population’s changes in tier status monthly (eg, dynamic movement between high to moderate tiers and vice versa) while pragmatically matching reimbursement with allocated resources.

A potential barrier to implementing PACSSI-F is the burden on PC teams to continuously reclassify patients in aligned tiers. This may cause an increase in administrative workload that offsets some of the potential cost reduction.28 A solution to this barrier is to ensure that the electronic health record has an embedded algorithm capable of computing data points entered by the PC team to automatically assign the patient to the appropriate tier. This straightforward approach requires minimal data entry on behalf of the PC team while recording their visit note. In addition, this solution may help billers to easily identify the tier for charging the payer source.

Interestingly, our study also revealed little evidence of an economic impact on potential reimbursement changes from variables such as comorbidities. Future work is needed to identify other patient characteristics, qualities, or behaviors that may affect utilization of PC resources and services. Key to this discussion is the importance of the support that the seriously ill and their families will obtain from a specialized, trained interdisciplinary PC team at an estimated overall annual cost range of $6500.

This study has several limitations. First, in performing a secondary analysis, we are limited to the set of previously collected data. Second, despite originating from a randomized pragmatic approach, our sample size is relatively modest in scope. Also, our seriously ill population was specifically derived from the ST, which is not representative of the entire PC population. Finally, although the CCI is commonly used to classify patients with comorbid diseases and associated risk for death, it does not account for changes in disease severity.34 Disease severity is key to understand the individual’s PC needs and match those needs with appropriate patient-centered resources. Although we attempt to capture these needs based on the CCI score and functional status, our study is limited in representing the entire PC population.

Our modification to the PACSSI provided a novel exemplar of economic forecasting for alternative reimbursement structures in PC. Use of PMPM reimbursement structures could be a viable way to expand PC in the acute, postacute, and ambulatory settings.

Author Affiliations: College of Nursing (SMR) and School of Medicine (KC, LMS, JSK), University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO; College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Colorado, Denver (EA), Denver, CO.

Source of Funding: This study was supported in part by the National Institute of Nursing Research (award numbers: UC4-NR012584 and U24-NR014637) (Dr Jean Kutner) and the National Institute on Aging (award number: 5T32AG044296) (Dr Jean Kutner). None of the funders had any role in the conduct, collection, management, analysis, or interpretation of data or in the preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript.

Author Disclosures: The authors report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.

Authorship Information: Concept and design (SMR, EA, LMS, JSK); acquisition of data (SMR, JSK); analysis and interpretation of data (SMR, EA, KC, LMS); drafting of the manuscript (SMR, EA, KC, LMS); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (EA, KC, LMS, JSK); statistical analysis (EA, KC); provision of patients or study materials (JSK); obtaining funding (JSK); administrative, technical, or logistic support (SMR, EA); and supervision (KC, LMS).

Address Correspondence to: Sean M. Reed, PhD, APRN, College of Nursing, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, ED 2 North, Room 4317, 13120 E 19th Ave, Aurora, CO 80045. Email: Sean.Reed@cuanschutz.edu.

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