1st Engrossment - 90th Legislature (2017 - 2018) Posted on 03/02/2017 04:16pm
A bill for an act
relating to health; modifying provisions governing measures to assess the quality
of health care services offered by health care providers; amending Minnesota
Statutes 2016, sections 62U.02; 256B.072.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Minnesota Statutes 2016, section 62U.02, is amended to read:
(a) The commissioner of health shall develop a standardized
set of measures for use by health plan companies as specified in subdivision 5. As part of
the standardized set of measures, the commissioner shall establish statewide measures by
which to assess the quality of health care services offered by health care providers, including
health care providers certified as health care homes under section 256B.0751. Quality
measures must be based on medical evidence and be developed through a process in which
providers participate. The statewide measures shall be used for the quality incentive payment
system developed in subdivision 2 and the quality transparency requirements in subdivision
3. The statewide measures must:
(1) for purposes of assessing the quality of care provided at physician clinics, including
clinics certified as health care homes under section 256B.0751, be selected from the available
measures as defined in Code of Federal Regulations, title 42, part 414 or 495, as amended,
unless a particular diagnosis, condition, service, or procedure is not reflected in any of the
available measures;
(2) be based on medical evidence;
(3) be developed through a process in which providers participate and consumer and
community input and perspectives are obtained;
(1) (4) include uniform definitions, measures, and forms for submission of data, to the
greatest extent possible;
(2) (5) seek to avoid increasing the administrative burden on health care providers; and
(3) be initially based on existing quality indicators for physician and hospital services,
which are measured and reported publicly by quality measurement organizations, including,
but not limited to, Minnesota Community Measurement and specialty societies;
(4) (6) place a priority on measures of health care outcomes, rather than process measures,
wherever possible; and
(5) incorporate measures for primary care, including preventive services, coronary artery
and heart disease, diabetes, asthma, depression, and other measures as determined by the
commissioner.
The measures may also include measures of care infrastructure and patient satisfaction.
(b) By June 30, 2018, the commissioner shall develop a measurement framework that
identifies the most important elements for assessing the quality of care, articulates statewide
quality improvement goals, ensures clinical relevance, fosters alignment with other
measurement efforts, and defines the roles of stakeholders. By December 15, 2018, the
commissioner shall use the framework to update the statewide measures used to assess the
quality of health care services offered by health care providers, including health care
providers certified as health care homes under section 256B.0751. No more than six statewide
measures shall be required for single-specialty physician practices and no more than ten
statewide measures shall be required for multispecialty physician practices. Measures in
addition to the six statewide measures for single-specialty practices and the ten statewide
measures for multispecialty practices may be included for a physician practice if derived
from administrative claims data. Care infrastructure measures collected according to section
62J.495 shall not be counted toward the maximum number of measures specified in this
paragraph. The commissioner shall develop the framework in consultation with stakeholders
that include consumer, community, and advocacy organizations representing diverse
communities and patients; health plan companies; health care providers whose quality is
assessed; health care purchasers; community health boards; and quality improvement and
measurement organizations. The commissioner, in consultation with stakeholders, shall
review the framework at least once every three years.
(b) (c) Effective July 1, 2016, the commissioner shall stratify quality measures by race,
ethnicity, preferred language, and country of origin beginning with five measures, and
stratifying additional measures to the extent resources are available. On or after January 1,
2018, the commissioner may require measures to be stratified by other sociodemographic
factors or composite indices of multiple factors that according to reliable data are correlated
with health disparities and have an impact on performance on quality or cost indicators.
New methods of stratifying data under this paragraph must be tested and evaluated through
pilot projects prior to adding them to the statewide system. In determining whether to add
additional sociodemographic factors and developing the methodology to be used, the
commissioner shall consider the reporting burden on providers and determine whether there
are alternative sources of data that could be used. The commissioner shall ensure that
categories and data collection methods are developed in consultation with those communities
impacted by health disparities using culturally appropriate community engagement principles
and methods. The commissioner shall implement this paragraph in coordination with the
contracting entity retained under subdivision 4, in order to build upon the data stratification
methodology that has been developed and tested by the entity. Nothing in this paragraph
expands or changes the commissioner's authority to collect, analyze, or report health care
data. Any data collected to implement this paragraph must be data that is available or is
authorized to be collected under other laws. Nothing in this paragraph grants authority to
the commissioner to collect or analyze patient-level or patient-specific data of the patient
characteristics identified under this paragraph.
(c) (d) The statewide measures shall be reviewed at least annually by the commissioner.
(a) By July 1, 2009, the commissioner shall
develop a system of quality incentive payments under which providers are eligible for
quality-based payments that are in addition to existing payment levels, based upon a
comparison of provider performance against specified targets, and improvement over time.
The targets must be based upon and consistent with the quality measures established under
subdivision 1.
(b) To the extent possible, the payment system must adjust for variations in patient
population in order to reduce incentives to health care providers to avoid high-risk patients
or populations, including those with risk factors related to race, ethnicity, language, country
of origin, and sociodemographic factors.
(c) The requirements of section 62Q.101 do not apply under this incentive payment
system.
(a) The commissioner shall establish standards for
measuring health outcomes, establish a system for risk adjusting quality measures, and issue
annual periodic public reports on trends in provider quality beginning July 1, 2010 at the
statewide, regional, and community levels.
(b) Effective July 1, 2017, the risk adjustment system established under this subdivision
shall adjust for patient characteristics identified under subdivision 1, paragraph (b) (c), that
are correlated with health disparities and have an impact on performance on cost and quality
measures. The risk adjustment method may consist of reporting based on an
actual-to-expected comparison that reflects the characteristics of the patient population
served by the clinic or hospital. The commissioner shall implement this paragraph in
coordination with any contracting entity retained under subdivision 4.
(c) By January 1, 2010, Physician clinics and hospitals shall submit standardized
electronic information on the outcomes and processes associated with patient care for the
identified statewide measures to the commissioner or the commissioner's designee in the
formats specified by the commissioner, which must include alternative formats for clinics
or hospitals experiencing technological or economic barriers to submission in standardized
electronic form. In addition to measures of care processes and outcomes, the report may
include other measures designated by the commissioner, including, but not limited to, care
infrastructure and patient satisfaction. The commissioner shall ensure that any quality data
reporting requirements established under this subdivision are not duplicative of publicly
reported, communitywide quality reporting activities currently under way in Minnesota.
Nothing in this subdivision is intended to replace or duplicate current privately supported
activities related to quality measurement and reporting in Minnesota. The commissioner
shall ensure that any quality data reporting requirements for physician clinics are aligned
with the specifications and timelines for the selected measures as defined in subdivision 1,
paragraph (a), clause (1). The commissioner may develop additional data on race, ethnicity,
preferred language, country of origin, or other sociodemographic factors as identified under
subdivision 1, paragraph (c), and as required for stratification or risk adjustment.
The commissioner may contract with a private entity or consortium
of private entities to complete the tasks in subdivisions 1 to 3. The private entity or
consortium must be nonprofit and have governance that includes representatives from the
following stakeholder groups: health care providers, including providers serving high
concentrations of patients and communities impacted by health disparities; health plan
companies; consumers, including consumers representing groups who experience health
disparities; employers or other health care purchasers; and state government. No one
stakeholder group shall have a majority of the votes on any issue or hold extraordinary
powers not granted to any other governance stakeholder.
(a) By January 1, 2010, health plan companies shall use the
standardized quality set of measures established under this section and shall not require
providers to use and report health plan company-specific quality and outcome measures.
(b) By July 1, 2010, the commissioner of management and budget shall implement this
incentive payment system for all participants in the state employee group insurance program.
Minnesota Statutes 2016, section 256B.072, is amended to read:
(a) The commissioner of human services shall establish a performance reporting system
for health care providers who provide health care services to public program recipients
covered under chapters 256B, 256D, and 256L, reporting separately for managed care and
fee-for-service recipients.
(b) The measures used for the performance reporting system for medical groups shall
include measures of care for asthma, diabetes, hypertension, and coronary artery disease
and measures of preventive care services. The measures used for the performance reporting
system for inpatient hospitals shall include measures of care for acute myocardial infarction,
heart failure, and pneumonia, and measures of care and prevention of surgical infections.
In the case of a medical group, the measures used shall be consistent with measures published
by nonprofit Minnesota or national organizations that produce and disseminate health care
quality measures or evidence-based health care guidelines. In the case of inpatient hospital
measures, the commissioner shall appoint the Minnesota Hospital Association and Stratis
Health to advise on the development of the performance measures to be used for hospital
reporting. To enable a consistent measurement process across the community, the
commissioner may use measures of care provided for patients in addition to those identified
in paragraph (a). The commissioner shall ensure collaboration with other health care reporting
organizations so that the measures described in this section are consistent with those reported
by those organizations and used by other purchasers in Minnesota.
(c) The commissioner may require providers to submit information in a required format
to a health care reporting organization or to cooperate with the information collection
procedures of that organization. The commissioner may collaborate with a reporting
organization to collect information reported and to prevent duplication of reporting.
(d) By October 1, 2007, and annually thereafter, the commissioner shall report through
a public Web site the results by medical groups and hospitals, where possible, of the measures
under this section, and shall compare the results by medical groups and hospitals for patients
enrolled in public programs to patients enrolled in private health plans. To achieve this
reporting, the commissioner may collaborate with a health care reporting organization that
operates a Web site suitable for this purpose.
(e) Performance measures must be stratified as provided under section 62U.02,
subdivision 1, paragraph (b) (c), and risk-adjusted as specified in section 62U.02, subdivision
3, paragraph (b).