Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented hierarchical condition category (HCC) models in 2004 to adjust payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to reflect enrollees’ expected health care costs. We use Verisk Health’s diagnostic cost group (DxCG) Medicare models, refined “de...

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Main Authors: Jing Chen PhD, MBA, Randall P. Ellis PhD, Katherine H. Toro MA, Arlene S. Ash PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-04-01
Series:Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958015583089
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author Jing Chen PhD, MBA
Randall P. Ellis PhD
Katherine H. Toro MA
Arlene S. Ash PhD
author_facet Jing Chen PhD, MBA
Randall P. Ellis PhD
Katherine H. Toro MA
Arlene S. Ash PhD
author_sort Jing Chen PhD, MBA
collection DOAJ
description The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented hierarchical condition category (HCC) models in 2004 to adjust payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to reflect enrollees’ expected health care costs. We use Verisk Health’s diagnostic cost group (DxCG) Medicare models, refined “descendants” of the same HCC framework with 189 comprehensive clinical categories available to CMS in 2004, to reveal 2 mispricing errors resulting from CMS’ implementation. One comes from ignoring all diagnostic information for “new enrollees” (those with less than 12 months of prior claims). Another comes from continuing to use the simplified models that were originally adopted in response to assertions from some capitated health plans that submitting the claims-like data that facilitate richer models was too burdensome. Even the main CMS model being used in 2014 recognizes only 79 condition categories, excluding many diagnoses and merging conditions with somewhat heterogeneous costs. Omitted conditions are typically lower cost or “vague” and not easily audited from simplified data submissions. In contrast, DxCG Medicare models use a comprehensive, 394-HCC classification system. Applying both models to Medicare’s 2010-2011 fee-for-service 5% sample, we find mispricing and lower predictive accuracy for the CMS implementation. For example, in 2010, 13% of beneficiaries had at least 1 higher cost DxCG-recognized condition but no CMS-recognized condition; their 2011 actual costs averaged US$6628, almost one-third more than the CMS model prediction. As MA plans must now supply encounter data, CMS should consider using more refined and comprehensive (DxCG-like) models.
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spelling doaj.art-b7aec2efdfc74ff48d9ab1b4121483282022-12-21T19:37:44ZengSAGE PublishingInquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing0046-95801945-72432015-04-015210.1177/004695801558308910.1177_0046958015583089Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment ModelJing Chen PhD, MBA0Randall P. Ellis PhD1Katherine H. Toro MAArlene S. Ash PhD2EMC Corporation, Hopkinton, MA, USAVerisk Health, Waltham, MA, USAVerisk Health, Waltham, MA, USAThe Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented hierarchical condition category (HCC) models in 2004 to adjust payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to reflect enrollees’ expected health care costs. We use Verisk Health’s diagnostic cost group (DxCG) Medicare models, refined “descendants” of the same HCC framework with 189 comprehensive clinical categories available to CMS in 2004, to reveal 2 mispricing errors resulting from CMS’ implementation. One comes from ignoring all diagnostic information for “new enrollees” (those with less than 12 months of prior claims). Another comes from continuing to use the simplified models that were originally adopted in response to assertions from some capitated health plans that submitting the claims-like data that facilitate richer models was too burdensome. Even the main CMS model being used in 2014 recognizes only 79 condition categories, excluding many diagnoses and merging conditions with somewhat heterogeneous costs. Omitted conditions are typically lower cost or “vague” and not easily audited from simplified data submissions. In contrast, DxCG Medicare models use a comprehensive, 394-HCC classification system. Applying both models to Medicare’s 2010-2011 fee-for-service 5% sample, we find mispricing and lower predictive accuracy for the CMS implementation. For example, in 2010, 13% of beneficiaries had at least 1 higher cost DxCG-recognized condition but no CMS-recognized condition; their 2011 actual costs averaged US$6628, almost one-third more than the CMS model prediction. As MA plans must now supply encounter data, CMS should consider using more refined and comprehensive (DxCG-like) models.https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958015583089
spellingShingle Jing Chen PhD, MBA
Randall P. Ellis PhD
Katherine H. Toro MA
Arlene S. Ash PhD
Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing
title Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
title_full Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
title_fullStr Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
title_full_unstemmed Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
title_short Mispricing in the Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Model
title_sort mispricing in the medicare advantage risk adjustment model
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958015583089
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