ACO Insider

How to harness value-based care codes


 


There’s a wide range of primary care physicians who are seizing opportunities offered by VCCs.

A family physician friend of mine who practices in a rural area generated more than 50% of his revenue from value-based care coding last year. And he has personally generated more than $350,000 in additional annual revenue, not counting the revenue from additional medically necessary procedures revealed by this more proactive wellness assessment activity and early diagnoses.

On the other hand, because busy physicians have a hard time wading through all these regulations and implementing the required staff and technology changes, it is reported that only about 8% of physicians are employing even the chronic care management codes. And when they do, they only achieve an 18% eligible patient penetration. My friend has broken the code, so to speak; he has protocolized and templated the process, has happy patients, has an ongoing 93% penetration rate, and actually has more free time.

While you are busy saving lives, I have had the luxury of looking from a high level at these tectonic, value-based payment shifts. To me, it’s a no-brainer for a primary care physician to leverage their ACO to maximize all three revenue streams. Look at MACRA MIPS, MIPS-APM, and AAPM measures anew, and see how well they play into integrated care.

Recommended Reading

Zika topped Lyme in 2016
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Prostate screening should be by request
MDedge Internal Medicine
MDedge Daily News: Do HPV vaccines really cut cancer risk?
MDedge Internal Medicine
White House targets CHIP, CMMI for budget cuts
MDedge Internal Medicine
New Medicare cards
MDedge Internal Medicine
White House pushes transparency in drug price plan
MDedge Internal Medicine
Novel initiative aims to combat resident burnout
MDedge Internal Medicine
Patients who record office visits
MDedge Internal Medicine
Diet
MDedge Internal Medicine
Doctor groups float APM for treating opioid addiction
MDedge Internal Medicine