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Use of Electronic Health Record Systems in Accountable Care Organizations

Publication
Article
The American Journal of Managed CareJanuary 2022
Volume 28
Issue 1

A recent survey found that more than 90% of accountable care organizations (ACOs) have multiple EHRs. This could present issues as ACOs adopt electronic quality measures.

ABSTRACT

Objectives: To assess the ability of accountable care organizations (ACOs) to use electronic health record (EHR) data for quality.

Study Design: Cross-sectional study of ACOs participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP).

Methods: A national survey of MSSP ACOs included questions on the number of EHR systems used across all providers in the ACO and barriers to reporting EHR-based quality measures.

Results: Just 9% of ACOs use a single EHR system, whereas 77% use 6 or more EHR systems. The more EHR systems an ACO uses, the less likely it is to report having the infrastructure to aggregate EHR data and the more concerned it is about the short-term viability and accuracy of EHR-based quality measures.

Conclusions: ACOs have diverse structures that often result in the usage of multiple EHR systems. This has the potential to cause serious delays when CMS begins requiring ACOs to report their quality measures through their EHRs in 2022.

Am J Manag Care. 2022;28(1):e31-e34. https://doi.org/10.37765/ajmc.2022.88818

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Takeaway Points

The usage of multiple electronic health record (EHR) systems is a common occurrence among accountable care organizations (ACOs). This paper summarizes the results of a survey on EHR usage within ACOs and discusses some of the issues this may present in reporting quality measures, including that:

  • Just 9% of surveyed ACOs use a single EHR system throughout their entire organization;
  • 77% of surveyed ACOs use 6 or more EHR systems; and
  • Among the 37% of Medicare Shared Savings Program ACOs with 16 or more EHR systems, concerns about EHR-based quality measures include access to data, standardization of data elements, and cost of integrating across systems.

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Electronic health records (EHRs) have been the centerpiece of modernizing the US health care delivery system, promising everything from greater efficiency to better patient engagement.1,2 The latest ambition is better safety and quality through the use of electronic clinical quality measures (eCQMs). These measures, which are being implemented for accountable care organizations (ACOs) beginning in 2023 as part of the 2021 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule final rule,3 draw on EHR data elements for diagnoses, services, and laboratory values4 and should be a simple extension of current EHR functionality, reducing the burden of manual abstraction and reporting.5 However, ACOs and other complex delivery systems utilize multiple EHR systems, many of which have limited functionality, making it complex and costly to benefit from this new way of reporting quality measures. This study seeks to analyze the key challenges facing ACOs as they move toward eCQMs and the added challenges for ACOs with multiple EHR systems.

BACKGROUND

EHRs

There is evidence that EHRs have improved health care by improving data documentation,6 decreasing medication errors,7 and improving ability to share information across providers.8 At the same time, EHRs are also contributing to medical errors and clinician burnout, problems either driven or exacerbated by the lack of interoperability between records.1 This lack of interoperability presents a deeper issue. Health care systems, made up of hospitals and clinician groups, are complex, and, as they develop over time, even a single corporate entity may have multiple legacy EHR systems. Although some are in a single-EHR environment, the rest need to find ways to make multiple EHR platforms interoperable to share data within their own system.9 This problem is compounded for ACOs and other groups of clinicians, as they may represent multiple health care systems, each with their own set of EHR platforms, joining together into an even larger group to provide value-based care.

eCQMs

eCQMs are quality measures that use data extracted from EHRs or other health information technology.5 They are currently required for acute care, critical access, and dual-eligible hospitals participating in CMS’ Promoting Interoperability Programs.10 There are reasons for this, as their virtues include being able to use clinical data to assess the outcomes of treatment, reducing the burden of manual abstraction and reporting, and working toward providing the ability to access real-time data for point-of-care quality improvement.5 However, similarly to EHRs, eCQMs also have their drawbacks. A recent study found that system-owned physician practices struggled to report cardiovascular eCQMs, taking up to 15 months to submit results.11 Another study found that the median time for a physician practice to report at least 1 of 4 eCQMs was more than 8 months, although they did find that practices in ACOs tended to be able to report more quickly.12 In addition to problems reporting results, a recent study in Kansas found that 15% of EHR-based measures were missing information when patients moved between facilities (eg, hospital to skilled nursing facility).13

ACOs and Complexity

An ACO is a set of providers who take on risk for managing the total cost of care for a given population of patients. CMS sponsors ACO models for Medicare beneficiaries, but there are also commercial ACOs, such as the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Alternative Quality Contract, and Medicaid ACOs. The organizational structures of ACOs vary widely, ranging from small clinician groups with no hospitals and fewer than 100 total providers to large groups with more than a dozen hospitals and thousands of providers.14 Federally qualified health centers and rural health centers can also participate. ACOs are often formed by a number of different individual clinical practices coming together. Twenty percent of the time, those forming an ACO are part of an already existing organization, and in more than 50% of cases, the groups forming the ACO have never pursued a risk-based contract together. In these newly formed ACOs, providers share the same EHR system 20% of the time.15

As a result, ACOs may have providers using numerous different EHR systems, ranging from simple tools, such as NueMD, to more sophisticated tools supported by large companies, such as Epic and Cerner. This diversity poses challenges for data integration, quality reporting, care coordination, and other functions for which the ACO needs to extract and share information stored in an EHR.14

METHODS

This cross-sectional study of CMS Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) ACOs used a web-based survey to gather information on the number of EHR systems currently in use across ACO networks in the spring of 2021. This question was part of a larger survey looking at the impact of a recent overhaul of the ACO quality reporting process included in the 2021 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule final rule that was due to go into effect in 2021 and 2022, with a specific focus on the effects of the change in how quality measures will be reported.

Sample

The survey was sent to all MSSP ACOs that were active in 2021, with targeted outreach to members of the National Association of ACOs (NAACOS). We received responses from a total of 163 MSSP ACOs. The point of contact for the survey was either the primary ACO contact from CMS’ list of 2021 MSSP ACOs or the primary or secondary contact from the NAACOS database.

Tool

Survey questions were developed by ACO experts at NAACOS and the Institute for Accountable Care. Specific items were pilot tested with ACO leaders on the NAACOS Quality Committee. The survey was distributed through the Alchemer platform via an introductory email in which the first question was embedded, with a response triggering the launch of the remainder of the survey. Respondents received 3 reminder emails, each of which included a link to the full survey.

Measures and Data

The primary question of interest asks: “How many EHRs do the practices/participant Taxpayer Identification Numbers (TINs) in your ACO use?” Additional questions asked about ease of integrating EHR data and implementing eCQMs. Survey responses were linked with the 2020 MSSP Public Use File to determine the characteristics of responders vs nonresponders. ACO high revenue status was included as an indicator of size/capital reserves. CMS considers an ACO high revenue if its total Medicare Part A and Part B expenditures far exceed its expenditures on ACO beneficiaries (the threshold is 35% or more of total A+B revenue for ACO participants / total A+B expenditures for ACO’s assigned beneficiaries). ACO size is defined by the number of unique beneficiaries participating in the model.

Analysis

The descriptive analysis shows characteristics of ACOs by the number of EHR systems.

RESULTS

Of 477 MSSP ACOs in 2021, there were 163 respondents, for a response rate of 34%. As can be seen in Table 1, survey respondents tend to have more attributed beneficiaries and more providers and are more likely to be considered high revenue, an indicator of significant Medicare reimbursements outside the ACO program, than the MSSP ACO population as a whole. As shown in Table 2, only 9% of respondents have a single EHR system, with an additional 14% using between 2 and 5 EHR systems.

Large numbers of EHR systems are common, with 40% having 6 to 15 different systems and almost 40% having 16 or more systems. ACOs with more beneficiaries and provider groups (as defined by TINs) are more likely to have multiple EHR systems, and, consequently, they need to make greater investments to integrate their data. For example, 49% of those with 16 or more EHR systems are large, with more than 25,000 beneficiaries, compared with just one-third of those with 1 EHR system. Those in the group with 16 or more EHR systems are also least likely to have software to integrate EHRs (23% compared with 48% for those with 2-5 EHR systems) and most likely to report challenges with adding needed integration infrastructure (62% compared with 30% for those with 2-5 EHR systems).

Finally, ACOs with only 1 EHR system report the fewest concerns about moving into an eCQM reporting system. Only 29% of the single-system ACOs report concerns with data access and just 21% have concerns about standardization across EHRs. This is in stark contrast to the 67% of the ACOs with 16 or more EHR systems concerned with data access and 82% concerned with standardization across EHRs.

DISCUSSION

ACOs have diverse structures that often cut across organizations or provider groups. This frequently results in multiple EHR systems within the same ACO, many of which vary in terms of sophistication and ability to export data. In addition to different data models, EHR systems may differ in terms of quality, completeness, and even which data elements are in a standard, machine-readable format (as opposed to clinician notes). This makes it administratively burdensome for these organizations to draw on EHR data for quality or other types of reporting, such as eCQMs, at this time. Furthermore, data integration is likely to come with unanticipated expenses, staff training, new data validation processes, changes in workflow for providers, and other logistical and legal considerations. It is also important to note that the accuracy of measures may be low, particularly early in the data integration process when different EHR systems may have different definitions for the same field.

Limitations

There are a few limitations that should be kept in mind when interpreting these results. First, respondents tend to be larger MSSP ACOs. It is hard to know whether smaller ACOs face the same degree of EHR integration challenges as larger ACOs. On one hand, they may be singular entities with a single EHR system, although it seems plausible to assume that independent groups that come together to form an ACO also have numerous legacy health record systems. Second, the study is cross-sectional, reflecting the technology of mid-2021. ACOs may have made data integration improvements since the time of the survey. Finally, we cannot say whether the challenges described are caused by having more EHR systems in use or whether there is another confounding factor (eg, size and complexity of ACO activity) that both is the cause of the numerous EHR systems in ACOs and makes aspects of coordination, such as eCQM reporting, difficult.

CONCLUSIONS

To fulfill the potential of EHR technology and advance the use of eCQMs, EHR vendors have to increase the availability of data integration tools and software that allow ACOs to efficiently gather data across different platforms. There is some hope that the 21st Century Cures Act, which sets up certain criteria for certification for application program interfaces (APIs), will ultimately result in the establishment of a standard for health care quality exchange.16 APIs are software intermediaries that allow 2 programs to talk to each other.17 Thus, in theory, standardizing APIs would make it easier to connect EHRs when it comes time to report eCQMs. In practice, however, the timeline for such standardization is still unclear. HHS’ Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement, billed as a nationwide on-ramp to interoperability, is not due to go live until 2022, more than 3 years after an initial draft was released.18 CMS is also behind in implementing its interoperability agenda.19 This leaves ACOs in a difficult position. They are required to begin reporting at least 1 eCQM in 2023.

With no clear idea of when interoperability among their many EHR systems will become a realistic option, many ACO leaders are worried. Specifically, concerns about the completeness and accuracy of the data they will be able to provide in this new setting are forcing many ACOs to hire vendors or additional analysts—expensive moves that they worry will hinder their ability to achieve shared savings.3 Vendors can help in the short term by precoding eCQMs into their records, allowing ACOs to export results rather than data elements. Alternatively, expanding the data dictionaries for capturing an ACO’s core measures has the potential to provide a workaround that does not rely on EHR interoperability.20

Ultimately, value-based payment models require meaningful, actionable, and patient-centered quality measures to succeed. eCQMs are an example of how EHR platforms can help create a real-time quality and patient management infrastructure across the US health care delivery system. However, without timely solutions to the issues of data aggregation, any movement toward eCQMs has the potential to create more problems, in the short term, than it solves.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Jennifer Gasperini, who reviewed drafts of this paper, and the members of the NAACOS Policy Committee for their contributions to reviewing the survey tool.

Author Affiliations: Brandeis University (JP), Waltham, MA; Institute for Accountable Care (JP, SS), Washington, DC.

Source of Funding: This project was self-funded.

Author Disclosures: Mr Sobul has attended meetings of the National Association of ACOs with accountable care organization leaders.

Authorship Information: Concept and design (JP, SS); acquisition of data (SS); analysis and interpretation of data (JP, SS); drafting of the manuscript (JP, SS); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (JP, SS); and supervision (JP).

Address Correspondence to: Jennifer Perloff, PhD, Brandeis University, MS 035, Waltham, MA 02454. Email: perloff@brandeis.edu.

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