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Feds Approve Expanded 'Maryland Model' All-Payer Contract

News  |  By John Commins  
   May 15, 2018

More than $1 billion in Medicare savings projected as CMS and Maryland state officials sign a five-year agreement to expand the state's value-based payment system into non-hospital settings.

The federal government has given the go ahead for a renewal and expansion of the "Maryland Model," which will take Medicare value-based care beyond hospital walls to include long-term and community-based care, and mental health services.

"The new Maryland Model will expand healthcare access and affordability – and ultimately improve quality of life – for Marylanders, especially those with chronic and complex medical conditions,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said in a media release.

With the existing all-payer model up for renewal at the end of 2018, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services required Maryland to build a new model that encompassed all of the healthcare that patients receive, both in the hospital and the community, including long-term care and mental health services.

The five-year contract signed this week by state and federal officials takes effect on January 1, 2019, and is expected to provide an additional $300 million in savings per year by 2023.

The expanded model will:

  • Invest resources in care that is focused on the patient and enhance primary-care teams to improve individual patient outcomes;
     
  • Set a range of quality and care improvement goals and provide incentives for providers to meet them;
     
  • Concentrate resources on population health goals to help address opioid use and deaths, diabetes, hypertension, and other chronic conditions;
     
  • Encourage and facilitate programs focusing on the needs of Medicare recipients across geographic settings and other key demographics.

The current Maryland All-Payer Model Contract started on January 1, 2014, and was set to expire on December 31, 2018. Maryland officials say the current model has already saved Medicare more than $586 million through 2016, compared to national spending, through reduced readmissions, and lower growth in hospital per capita costs.

John Commins is the news editor for HealthLeaders.


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