Secretarial Review and Publication of the 2022 Annual Report to Congress and the Secretary Submitted by the Consensus-Based Entity Regarding Performance Measurement
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Abstract
This notice acknowledges the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services' (the Secretary's) receipt and review of the 2022 National Quality Forum Annual Report to Congress and the Secretary submitted by the consensus-based entity under a contract with the Secretary as mandated by the Social Security Act. The Secretary has reviewed and is publishing the report in the Federal Register together with the Secretary's comments on the report not later than 6 months after receiving the report in accordance with section 1890(b)(5)(B) of the Act. This notice fulfills the statutory requirements.
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 88 Issue 180 (Tuesday, September 19, 2023)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 180 (Tuesday, September 19, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64660-64753]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2023-20076]
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Vol. 88
Tuesday,
No. 180
September 19, 2023
Part III
Department of Health and Human Services
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Secretarial Review and Publication of the 2022 Annual Report to
Congress and the Secretary Submitted by the Consensus-Based Entity
Regarding Performance Measurement; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 19, 2023 /
Notices
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
[CMS-3432-N]
Secretarial Review and Publication of the 2022 Annual Report to
Congress and the Secretary Submitted by the Consensus-Based Entity
Regarding Performance Measurement
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary of Health and Human Services, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: This notice acknowledges the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services' (the Secretary's) receipt and review of the
2022 National Quality Forum Annual Report to Congress and the Secretary
submitted by the consensus-based entity under a contract with the
Secretary as mandated by the Social Security Act. The Secretary has
reviewed and is publishing the report in the Federal Register together
with the Secretary's comments on the report not later than 6 months
after receiving the report in accordance with section 1890(b)(5)(B) of
the Act. This notice fulfills the statutory requirements.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carrie Sena, (410) 786-8003.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has
long recognized that a high functioning health care system that
provides higher quality care requires accurate, valid, and reliable
measurement of quality and efficiency. The Medicare Improvements for
Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L. 110-275) added
section 1890 of the Social Security Act (the Act), which requires the
Secretary of HHS (the Secretary) to contract with a consensus-based
entity (CBE) to perform multiple duties to help improve performance
measurement. Section 3014 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (the Affordable Care Act) (Pub. L. 111-148) expanded the duties of
the CBE to help in the identification of gaps in available measures and
to improve the selection of measures used in health care programs. The
Secretary extends his appreciation to the CBE in their partnership for
the fulfillment of these statutory requirements.
In January 2009, a competitive contract was awarded by HHS to the
National Quality Forum (NQF) to fulfill requirements of section 1890 of
the Act. A second, multi-year contract was awarded again to NQF after
an open competition in 2012. A third, multi-year contract was awarded
again to NQF after an open competition in 2017. Section 1890(b) of the
Act requires the following:
Priority Setting Process: Formulation of a National Strategy and
Priorities for Health Care Performance Measurement: The CBE must
synthesize evidence and convene key stakeholders to make
recommendations on an integrated national strategy and priorities for
health care performance measurement in all applicable settings. In
doing so, the CBE must give priority to measures that: (1) address the
health care provided to patients with prevalent, high-cost chronic
diseases; (2) have the greatest potential for improving quality,
efficiency, and patient-centered health care; and (3) may be
implemented rapidly due to existing evidence, standards of care, or
other reasons. Additionally, the CBE must take into account measures
that: (1) may assist consumers and patients in making informed health
care decisions; (2) address health disparities across groups and areas;
and (3) address the continuum of care furnished by multiple providers
or practitioners across multiple settings.
Endorsement of Measures: The CBE must provide for the endorsement
of standardized health care performance measures. This process must
consider whether measures are evidence-based, reliable, valid,
verifiable, relevant to enhanced health outcomes, actionable at the
caregiver level, feasible to collect and report, responsive to
variations in patient characteristics such as health status, language
capabilities, race or ethnicity, and income level and are consistent
across types of health care providers, including hospitals and
physicians.
Maintenance of CBE Endorsed Measures: The CBE is required to
establish and implement a process to ensure that endorsed measures are
updated (or retired if obsolete) as new evidence is developed.
Convening Multi-Stakeholder Groups: The CBE must convene multi-
stakeholder groups to provide input on: (1) the selection of certain
categories of quality and efficiency measures, from among such measures
that have been endorsed by the entity and from among such measures that
have not been considered for endorsement by such entity but are used or
proposed to be used by the Secretary for the collection or reporting of
quality and efficiency measures; and (2) national priorities for
improvement in population health and in the delivery of health care
services for consideration under the national strategy. The CBE may
also provide input to the Secretary on measures that could be
considered for removal. The CBE provides input on measures for use in
certain specific Medicare programs, for use in programs that report
performance information to the public, and for use in health care
programs that are not included under the Act. The multi-stakeholder
groups provide input on quality and efficiency measures for various
federal health care quality reporting and quality improvement programs
including those that address certain Medicare services provided through
hospices, ambulatory surgical centers, hospital inpatient and
outpatient facilities, physician offices, cancer hospitals, end stage
renal disease (ESRD) facilities, inpatient rehabilitation facilities,
long-term care hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, and home health care
programs.
Transmission of Multi-Stakeholder Input: Not later than February 1
of each year, the CBE must transmit to the Secretary the input of
multi-stakeholder groups.
Annual Report to Congress and the Secretary: Not later than March 1
of each year, the CBE is required to submit to the Congress and the
Secretary an annual report. The report is to describe:
<bullet> The implementation of quality and efficiency measurement
initiatives and the coordination of such initiatives with quality and
efficiency initiatives implemented by other payers;
<bullet> Recommendations on an integrated national strategy and
priorities for health care performance measurement;
<bullet> Performance of the CBE's duties required under its
contract with the Secretary;
<bullet> Gaps in endorsed quality and efficiency measures,
including measures that are within priority areas identified by the
Secretary under the national strategy established under section 399HH
of the Public Health Service Act (National Quality Strategy), and where
quality and efficiency measures are unavailable or inadequate to
identify or address such gaps;
<bullet> Areas in which evidence is insufficient to support
endorsement of quality and efficiency measures in priority areas
identified by the Secretary under the National Quality Strategy, and
where targeted research may address such gaps; and
<bullet> The convening of multi-stakeholder groups to provide input
on: (1) the selection of quality and efficiency measures from among
such measures that have been endorsed by the CBE and such measures that
have not been considered for endorsement by the CBE but are used or
proposed to be used by
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the Secretary for the collection or reporting of quality and efficiency
measures; and (2) national priorities for improvement in population
health and the delivery of health care services for consideration under
the National Quality Strategy.
Section 50206(c)(1) of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (Pub. L.
115-123) amended section 1890(b)(5)(A) of the Act to require the CBE's
annual report to the Congress to include the following: (1) an
itemization of financial information for the previous fiscal year
ending September 30th, including annual revenues of the entity, annual
expenses of the entity, and a breakdown of the amount awarded per
contracted task order and the specific projects funded in each task
order assigned to the entity; and (2) any updates or modifications to
internal policies and procedures of the entity as they relate to the
duties of the CBE including specifically identifying any modifications
to the disclosure of interests and conflicts of interests for
committees, work groups, task forces, and advisory panels of the
entity, and information on external stakeholder participation in the
duties of the entity.
The statutory requirements for the CBE to annually report to the
Congress and the Secretary also specify that the Secretary must review
and publish the CBE's annual report in the Federal Register, together
with any comments of the Secretary on the report, not later than 6
months after receiving it.
This Federal Register notice complies with the statutory
requirement for Secretarial review and publication of the CBE's annual
report. NQF submitted a report on its 2022 activities to the Congress
and the Secretary on March 1, 2023. The Secretary's Comments on this
report are presented in section II. of this notice, and the 2022 Annual
Report to the Congress and the Secretary is provided, as submitted to
HHS, in the addendum to this Federal Register notice in section III.
II. Secretarial Comments on the National Quality Forum 2022 Activities:
Report to Congress and the Secretary of the Department of Health and
Human Services
Across the country, many communities are facing immense challenges
that have been exacerbated by public health emergencies including the
opioid crisis, disasters related to climate change, and the COVID-19
pandemic. Throughout these recent crises and to prudently prepare for
imminent threats the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) must
continue to focus on advancing equity and inclusion, strengthening
public trust, and building meaningful engagement and learning across
the health care system. By embedding the cross-cutting principles \1\
of equity, public trust, and collaboration into its diverse programs
and initiatives, HHS is working to improve the health and well-being of
individuals and families.
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\1\ HHS Strategic Cross-Cutting Principles, available at <a href="https://www.hhs.gov/about/strategic-plan/2022-2026/overview/index.html">https://www.hhs.gov/about/strategic-plan/2022-2026/overview/index.html</a>.
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HHS values the work of the consensus-based entity for performance
measurement and our mutual commitment to promote a resilient, high
value, and safe health care system for all Americans. In 2022, HHS
supported the work conducted by the CBE to identify health care quality
measurement priorities and to provide consensus-based recommendations
about measures to use for assessing and improving quality. As the CBE
in 2022, the NQF continued to use rigorous standards to review measures
for quality measure endorsement and maintain highly reliable and
scientifically sound measures across priority health care topic areas.
As required by section 1890(b) of the Act, the NQF Measure Applications
Partnership (MAP) provided input on measures under consideration for
quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs across various
settings including ambulatory, acute care, post-acute care and long-
term care. Specifically, the MAP considered measures related to health
equity, COVID-19, person-centered care, rural health, and care
coordination. The MAP also deliberated over measures for potential
removal from HHS programs. The MAP supported HHS and national
priorities to keep measures that are of the highest-value, aligned
across programs, prioritizing patient-reported outcome measures,
digital measures, and those that reflect consideration of social
determinants of health.
In 2022, the CBE also convened the Core Quality Measures
Collaborative (CQMC), a public-private partnership with the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and America's Health Insurance
Plans (AHIP), to maximize alignment of quality measures among public
and private payers. The CBE established a Health Equity Workgroup that
identified disparity-sensitive measures within the CQMC core sets and
proposed approaches for future considerations to prioritize measures
that address social determinants of health. In alignment with HHS
priorities to advance data interoperability and digital measure use,
the CQMC Digital Measurement Workgroup continued, in 2022, to identify
ways to address barriers to using digital quality measures and
supporting efforts to align data standards for measurement.
To support the CMS National Quality Strategy \2\ and critical
health care priorities, the CBE worked with quality measurement
experts, clinicians, health plans, hospitals, accrediting and
certifying entities, consumer organizations and others to improve areas
of behavioral health, rural health, health care communication and
coordination, and patient-centered care. In 2022, the CBE developed
measurement frameworks detailing guidance, recommendations, and
identifying measurement gaps for Opioid-Related Outcomes Among
Individuals With Co-occurring Behavioral Health Conditions; Leveraging
Quality Measures to Improve Rural Health; and Leveraging Electronic
Health Record-Sourced Measures to Improve Care Communication and
Coordination. Additional CBE projects included provided guidance for
Best Practices for Developing and Testing Risk Adjustment Models;
Building a Roadmap From Patient-Reported Outcome Measures to Patient-
Reported Outcome Performance Measures; and establishing a Patient and
Caregiver Engagement Advisory Group.
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\2\ CMS National Quality Strategy available at <a href="https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Based-Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy">https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Based-Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy</a>.
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In many ways, the CBE activities detailed in its 2022 Report to
Congress enhanced quality measurement strategies that support HHS and
national progress towards safe, accessible, value-based, and equitable
care for individuals and communities. As our world and the demands on
our health care system continue to evolve, HHS recognizes the
increasing importance of varied experiences and perspectives, of
consensus-based recommendations, and of evidence-based foundations that
inform policies and strategies to improve the health care system. HHS
looks forward to the continuity of activities with a new CBE, Battelle,
who has extensive expertise and experience in collaborating with and
engaging various health care partners to advance quality performance
measurement.
III. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection requirements,
that is, reporting, recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
requirements.
[[Page 64662]]
Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office of Management
and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
IV. Addendum
In this Addendum, we are publishing the NQF Report on 2022
Activities to Congress and the Secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services, as submitted to HHS.
Dated: September 12, 2023.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
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[FR Doc. 2023-20076 Filed 9-18-23; 8:45 am]
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