VIRTUAL VALUE-BASED PAYMENT SUMMIT ANNOUNCES TWO COMPLIMENTARY LISTENING
SESSIONS ON CMMI PAYMENT MODELS
- Sessions will Provide Input for
CMMI Staff on Key Policy Issues
- CMMI staff will join in
watch/listen-only mode
- Listening Session I: How Can ACO
and Specialty Models Co-exist?
- Monday, September 20, 2021
from 3:30 pm to 5 pm EDT
- Listening Session II: Supporting
Primary Care Practices in Value-Based Care: Improving Primary and
Specialty Care Collaboration within Federal Initiatives
- Wednesday, September 22,
2021 from 3:30 pm to 5 pm EDT
- Listening Sessions supported by a
Grant from the Commonwealth Fund
- Media Partner: Health Affairs
-
https://www.ValueBasedPaymentSummit.com
PRESS RELEASE
Phone: 800-503-7414
Email: registration@hcconferences.com
Website:
https://www.ValueBasedPaymentSummit.com
MODESTO CA -- AUGUST 23, 2021: The Virtual Collocated
Value-based Care Summit is pleased to announce that it will be offering
tow listening sessions on CMMI payment models which will provide input
for CMMI staff on key policy issues. CMMI staff will join in
watch/listen-only mode. Registrants my participate at no cost. Please
see details below.
REGISTRATION DETAILS
-
Click
here to register for Listening Session I
-
Click
here to register for Listening Session II
- When registering you may express a
preference for "Video Participation" or "Chat Participation"
- Requirements for "Video
Participation":
- Agree to fully participate,
- Join session with video on,
and
- Participate on mute unless
called to comment by moderators
- Video Participation will be
extremely limited (no more than 25 for each Listening Session).
Accordingly, the great majority of attendees will be assigned to
listen/watch-only mode Chat Participation
- To register individuals will
provide basic personal information and be required to provide brief
written comments on the Listening Sessions discussion
issues/questions
- Note that CMMI a staff will
receive copies of all registration comments and text messages shared
during the Listening Sessions
PARTICIPATION ALTERNATIVES
- Individuals may register to
participate for either or both sessions at no cost
- To register individuals will
provide basic personal information and be required to provide brief
written comments on the Listening Sessions discussion
issues/questions set forth below
- Listening Sessions will be held on
Zoom Webinar
- Each Listening Session will be
moderated
- Two participation alternatives:
- Approximately 25 attendees
will join an interactive, moderated video discussions of issues
set forth below (Video Participation)
- All other attendees will
participate on listen/watch-only mode with opportunity to
participate via chat on Zoom platform (Chat Participation)
- CMMI staff will join in
watch/listen-only mode
LISTENING SESSION I: HOW CAN ACO AND SPECIALTY MODELS CO-EXIST?
- Monday, September 20, 2021 from
3:30 pm to 5 pm EDT
- Moderated by Francois de Brantes,
MBA, SVP, Signify Health & Valinda Rutledge, MBA, EVP Federal
Affairs, America's Physician Groups (APG)
- Issues to be discussed:
- Have you had success
involving specialists? If not, what barriers have you
experienced integrating single specialty and/or multi-specialty
practices? If so, what does success look like?
- Are there certain specialty
areas where you can influence costs as opposed to others, where
you can't? If so, which areas and why?
- Does this differ for
procedure episodes (eg hip or knee surgery) compared to complex,
chronic medical conditions (eg cardiac care, oncology care)?
- How would you handle overlap
if a distinct specialty model co-exists with an ACO? How would
you avoid duplicate payments, as well as disincentives to join
the models?
- Have any barriers prevented
your involvement in total cost of care initiatives? If so, what
would need to change to facilitate your involvement?
- If a specialty-focused model
co-exists with a total cost of care model, how would you handle
overlap? Do you have concerns with sharing risk?
- Is it possible to
appropriately incentivize or encourage participation from both
specialists and TCOC entities to engage in an integrated care
model, such that sharing risk is not a point of competition? Or
Can the specialty care models be replaced by total cost of care
models?
- What examples exist of TCOC
entities doing exceptional work to align clinical and financial
incentives with specialty care?
LISTENING SESSION II: SUPPORTING PRIMARY CARE PRACTICE IN
VALUE-BASED CARE: PRIMARY CARE ACCOUNTABILITY FOR SPECIALTY CARE WITHIN
FEDERAL INITIATIVES
- Wednesday, September 22, 2021 from
3:30 pm to 5 pm EDT
- Moderated by Richard J. Baron, MD,
President & CEO, ABIM Foundation & Valinda Rutledge, MBA, EVP
Federal Affairs, America's Physician Groups (APG)
- Issues to be discussed:
- When have advanced primary
care initiatives had success involving specialists? What did
that success look like and how did they overcome the many known
barriers to integrating care?
- In which specialty areas are
advanced primary care practices more likely to influence costs
and utilization effectively? Which specialty areas show less
ability to be influenced by primary care, and should that be
changed?
- Does this differ for
procedure episodes (e.g. hip or knee surgery) compared to
complex, chronic medical conditions (eg cardiac care,
oncology care)? How about regions and practice types (IPAs,
multi-specialty orgs, hospital-based health systems)?
- How does being part of
an ACO make this work more or less effectively?
- Are there specific
components of existing specialty-focused models that impair
incentives to coordinate a beneficiary's care with primary care?
- How would you handle overlap
if a distinct CMMI specialty model co-exists with an advanced
primary care model?
- How would you avoid
duplicate payments?
- How to handle
disincentives to participate in the models?
- Do you have concerns
with sharing risk?
- Do the models need more
coordination between them, and how would that happen?
- Should we avoid building new
specialty-focused care models in favor of more broad or global
organizational models? What are the trade-offs?
- Is it possible to
appropriately encourage participation from both specialists and
advanced primary care models to engage in an integrated care
model? How does that differ from ACO models?
- What quality metrics provide
incentives for better primary/specialty care coordination?
- What flexibilities in
Medicare program/payment rules would help improve coordination
between primary and specialty care?
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