By Becky Niehus
No matter the time of year, payers and providers should work to agree on a shared source of truth when it comes to data. With the recent end of the year, it’s time to celebrate the new year (who isn’t ready to say goodbye to 2020?) and close the books, which includes the reconciliation of any shared savings or losses. To settle the year with a minimal amount of pain and frustration, payers and providers must have a shared acceptance of data and methodology. This most often means both draw information from the same source of data, which helps make end-of-the-year reconciliation easier to achieve.
Data Requirements
To successfully reconcile yearly performance, payers and providers should agree about the source of truth and make sure both draw information from the same place. Paid claims data (both medical and pharmaceutical) from the payer is likely the most complete, as providers may not have access to patient data from outside their walls. However, it is critical for successful programs that providers have ongoing access to this data (outside of year-end activity) to monitor their performance and make appropriate adjustments.
Additionally, it may be necessary to supplement paid claims data with encounter, lab results or EMR data to have a full look at performance against quality benchmarks.
Finally, patient attribution must be transparent so providers can engage their patient panel to lower the total cost of care and close gaps in care.
Setting New Targets
As part of the process, payers and providers may reconsider both cost and quality targets. In the COVID-19 era, for instance, previously agreed to targets may be unrealistic. Finding good benchmark data may be a challenge given the unprecedented decrease in healthcare utilization and spending in 2020 and the length of time it takes to compile comprehensive benchmarks. Given this, payers and providers may need to rely more on forecasts than history and plan for more flexibility in next year’s payment reconciliation process.
Considerations for future planning
To prepare this year and those ahead, I have four thoughts providers and payers can take into consideration to ensure both are on the same page when it comes to reconciliations, all of which can help ensure long-term success.
- Collaboration between payers and providers can help improve coding practices to hit hierarchical condition category targets, which can provide tangible financial benefits for both
- Confirm patient attribution methodologies and align these between payer and provider to appropriately target and manage high-need patients
- Payers and providers will need to evaluate the impact of foregone care in 2020 and the care anticipated in 2021. Providers will need to manage capacity and prioritization while payers may have to evaluate the impact on their reserves if utilization suddenly increases
- Payers should ensure providers understand their contracts and the limitations of risk-sharing. A discussion with key providers may be helpful to ensure year-end transitions go smoothly
With 2020 behind us and 2021 beginning, it’s time to consider the long-term advantages of using a data repository as a single source of truth for payers and providers.
Additional resources
https://www.chcs.org/media/CCIL-cost-and-utilization-paper_032317.pdf
https://www.naacos.com/overview-of-research-on-aco-performance
Get our take on industry trends
More Megatrends: Price Transparency, Telehealth, Individualized Medicine
By Scott Hampel, president of MedeAnalytics Now that we’ve dealt with Megatrends one through three, we’re approaching the next set.…
Read on...2020 Megatrends: Consumerism, Data Privacy and Security, AI
With 2020 two weeks old, it’s becoming clear the data produced in the healthcare industry by providers, consumers and payers will power and propel our 9 megatrends. Healthcare data is the foundation on which we’re building everything from healthcare outreach for the underserved to new Internet of Things-based healthcare programs to treatments designed just for you.
Read on...Why Unconventional Businesses Will Find Success in Healthcare: It’s the Data
It seems everyone is moving into healthcare. It’s a rapidly growing industry, historically dominated by large, well-embedded companies and organizations, and “pure tech” companies have had difficulty breaking in. That, however, is changing.
Read on...Data and Social Determinants of Health
By Scott Hampel – I think a lot–and I’m not the only one–about how we can improve the ways we pull information from data. Data on its own is inert: just waiting to be understood and then used. And that’s a major challenge for many organizations. Data is often trapped in different applications with no easy or convenient way to extract it.
Read on...