The Aledade Policy team met with several U.S. lawmakers on Capitol Hill last week to advocate on behalf of our physician-led Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs). Accompanying our Policy team were four of our member physicians and two leaders with federally qualified health centers (FQHCs). We also were joined by the National Association of Accountable Care Organizations (NAACOS), and others in the ACO community, to advocate for primary care and accountable care with legislators. We held meetings with both Democrats and Republicans, and lawmakers in both the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives.
During the meetings, we shared the unique needs of independent practices and FQHCs face, such as how their participation in an ACO is vital for them to deliver high quality care to their patients and communities. The physicians and FQHC leaders spoke about how shared savings has enabled them to hire more staff, invest in extended hours to keep patients out of the emergency department and expand outreach programs to continually reach patients who have chronic conditions. These benefits result in reduced hospitalization and emergency department visits and improved patient outcomes.
Our short term priorities include advocating for Congress to extend the financial incentives to join Alternative Payment Models (APMs), which the Value in Health Care Act (S.3503/H.R. 5013) would do in several ways. These include extending the APM incentives for two years and freezing qualifying thresholds; ensuring APM benchmarks do not penalize clinicians for prior success; increasing flexibility for clinicians in ACOs; and removing regulatory burden.
In particular, we asked the lawmakers to work with CMS to extend the Web Interface quality reporting. We also asked them to exempt clinicians in APMs from the Merit Based Incentive Program (MIPs) reporting that promotes the interoperability category. As in previous years, Congress is expected to address the 2.8% cut to the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule in an end-of-year package. However, as we enter 2025, we recognize the need to make long-term reforms to both physician payments and the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA).
Last week Aledade also submitted our comments to CMS in response to the 2025 Proposed Physician Fee Schedule (PFS). We are grateful to CMS for their continued efforts to refine and improve MSSP.
We shared the following recommendations:
Outside of MSSP, we also did the following:
In actuality, Congress is expected to extend the telehealth flexibilities from the Public Health Emergency for two additional years. We went a step further and asked CMS to consider making these policies permanent.
We expect the upcoming presidential election to consume a lot of policy space and news in the final weeks of 2024. In addition, Congress has some pressing tasks. These include addressing physician payment cuts and passing fiscal year federal spending legislation to avoid a government shutdown in October. For CMS, we expect the final PFS to be published in early November.
As always, we will continue to keep you informed and up-to-date on issues related to primary care and accountable care policy.