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Capitol Gains

The Hospitalist. 2007 June;2007(06):

Nine members of SHM’s Public Policy Committee (PPC), accompanied by several SHM staff members, paid a visit to Capitol Hill early this year.

The group spent Feb. 28 calling on senators, representatives, and congressional staff, as they participated in meetings similar to those included in SHM’s Legislative Advocacy Day, held during the 2006 Annual Meeting. In fact, many of the PPC members had second meetings with legislative staff they had met last May.

“We had already broken some ground with Legislative Day, so some people were familiar with us,” says Ron Angus, MD, Department of Medicine, Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas. “We had a little more time to talk about the issues.”

During their meetings, “We emphasized the different roles that SHM can play, and we tried to get a feel for what it means to have a Democrat-led Congress,” says Jack Percelay, MD, MPH, FAAP, Virtua Health, Ridgewood, N.J.

SHM’s senior adviser for advocacy and government affairs, Laura Allendorf, pronounces it “a very productive day.”

Back row from left to right: Chris Skinner, Eric Siegal, Felix Aguirre, Jack Percelay, Stephanie Jackson. Bottom row from left to right: Laura Allendorf, Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., Ron Greeno, Ryan Genzink.

Building on a Foundation

The PPC visits were successful partly because this was the second time SHM had visited representatives, allowing the hospitalists to build on their introductory meetings and spend more time discussing issues and offering help. The committee hopes to continue this trend.

“In the long term, we want to see if we can meet with the same people more frequently,” explains Dr. Angus. Allendorf agrees, saying, “The more often we’re up there, the better.”

There may be many more visits or communications. “I think we’re building something long-term, and it’s going to take a while to do that,” says Dr. Angus. “As we get more comfortable talking to these folks, we’ll work on getting them to contact us when issues first come up. Our goal is to be there at the beginning of the process, rather than the end, when it’s too late to have much impact.”

Another reason the February visits were deemed a success involves whom the PPC met with.

Policy Points

CMS Posts Information on the Physician Quality Reporting Initiative

Details on the 2007 Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) are available online. In this program, eligible physicians who successfully report a designated set of quality measures on claims from July 1 to Dec. 31 can earn a cash bonus of 1.5% of total allowed charges for covered Medicare physician fee schedule services.

The 74 quality measures to be used in the program are now listed on the Web, along with 50 frequently asked questions and other information, at www.cms.hhs.gov/PQRI.

SHM has been working with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the AMA’s Physician Consortium for Performance Improvement to ensure that measures are included that can be reported by hospitalists who decide to participate in this voluntary program. Pre-enrollment is not necessary to participate.

CMS/Premier P4P Project Gets 3 More Years

CMS has given the green light to a three-year extension of its first successful pay-for-performance (P4P) trial, the CMS/Premier Hospital Quality Incentive Demonstration.

The extension of the demonstration project will test new incentive models, including hospitals achieving a defined level of quality or quality threshold and hospitals making the most improvement in quality that also achieve the quality threshold.

The extension will continue to track hospital performance in the clinical areas of pneumonia, heart bypass, acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, and hip and knee replacement, with the flexibility to add quality measures and clinical conditions in the fifth and sixth years. New mortality and patient-safety measures are among those that may be included.