FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 2, 2007
Contact: Jennifer Felsher
Phone: 202-261-7565
Email: jfelsher@ahqa.org
Download PDF version of this Press Release
Read a summary from The Commonwealth Fund
Study: QIO Program Is ‘Good Value
for Health Care Dollars’
Washington,
DC (August
2, 2007) – In a study
released earlier this year, researchers found that Quality Improvement
Organization (QIO) program efforts in nursing homes were “a very
sound investment” for Medicare, costing significantly less than
$10,000 per quality-adjusted life year (QALY). In the U.S., a QALY falling
between $50,000 and $100,000 is commonly considered a good value.
Published
in the Spring 2007 edition of Health Care Financing Review, the study, “Medicare’s Quality Improvement Organization Program
Value in Nursing Homes,” attempts to answer the question, are the
benefits of the QIO program worth Medicare’s investment? The answer,
the authors conclude, is yes. “Even with conservative assumptions
about QIO program impact, investment in QIO nursing home QI activities
appears to be a good value for health care dollars,” wrote study
authors Anthony Shih, MD, MPH, of The Commonwealth Fund; Diane M. Dewar,
PhD, of the University of Albany; and Thomas Hartman, of IPRO, the New
York QIO. The study is available at: http://www.cms.hhs.gov/HealthCareFinancingReview/08_2007%20Edition.asp.
An executive summary of the study is available on The Commonwealth Fund
Web site at: http://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/publications_show.htm?doc_id=512641.
“Policymakers
and federal officials are already planning for the QIO program’s
next contract cycle, which will begin in August 2008,” said
David Schulke, American Health Quality Association (AHQA) Executive Vice
President. “This study will help them understand the value that
QIOs provide to American taxpayers through the Medicare program.” AHQA
represents the national network of QIOs that work under contract to the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and others to improve
health care quality across the nation.
Findings
The authors used data from three of the five quality measures most frequently
addressed by QIOs during the first national QIO nursing home improvement
effort from 2002-2005: short-stay residents with moderate to severe pain,
long-stay residents with moderate to severe pain, and residents with
physical restraints. The analysis was stratified into three levels, each
assuming a percent of overall improvement that could be attributed to
QIO interventions: 50 percent, 75 percent, and 100 percent. During the
time period studied, the QIO program was the only coordinated, national
effort to help nursing homes improve on care.
Estimates
of CMS’ investment in the QIO program were calculated
based on the total reported cost of QIO efforts in nursing homes by quality-adjusted
life year (QALY) at each assumed attribution level. QALYs are a measure
of cost effectiveness. According to the 2006 National Health Care Quality
Report, published by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, “1
year in perfect health is equal to 1.0 QALY and a year in poor health
would be something less than 1.0.” (See below for a comparative
list of interventions based on cost/QALY.)
Schulke
commented, “The
study makes an important contribution by evaluating three different
levels of impact attributable to the QIOs. It is reasonable to believe
that nursing homes would have improved to some extent on their own,
without help from the QIOs, suggesting that less than 100 percent of
the observed improvement should be attributed to the federal program
and its QIO contractors. Yet, during the time period studied, the QIO
program was the only coordinated national effort to help nursing homes
improve on care, suggesting that it is reasonable to attribute a significant
share of the improvement to QIO activities. Before this study, policymakers
could only argue back and forth about whether the QIOs had no effect
at all or were entirely responsible for the observed improvement, both
of which are implausible.”
At 50 percent attribution (assuming
the QIO program was responsible for 50 percent of the improvement in
nursing home care), the study authors estimated:
- 10,144 fewer short-stay residents experiencing moderate to severe
pain
- 23,483 fewer long-stay residents experiencing moderate to severe
pain
- 13,416 residents being physically restrained
- A mean of 18,805 QALYs gained at a cost of $5,365 per QALY
At 100 percent attribution (assuming the QIO program was responsible
for all of the improvement in nursing home care), the study authors estimated:
- 20,288 fewer short-stay residents experiencing moderate to severe
pain
- 46,966 fewer long-stay residents experiencing moderate to severe
pain
- 26,832 residents being physically restrained
- A mean of 37,610 QALYs gained at a cost of $2,683
“The improvements occurring in nursing homes with QIO assistance
represent an excellent value for Medicare even under the most conservative
estimates in this study,” concluded Schulke.
QIOs are
community-based organizations that work under contract to the Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services to improve care for the
nation’s 43 million Medicare beneficiaries. QIOs are working in
all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and two U.S. territories. The
program is the largest coordinated federal investment in health care
quality and its funding amounts to less than one tenth of one percent
of all Medicare spending.
###
AHQA
is dedicated to improving the safety and effectiveness of health
care. AHQA represents the national network of QIOs that work with
hospitals, medical practices, long-term care facilities, home health
agencies, health plans, pharmacists, and employers to encourage the
spread of best clinical practices and improve systems of care delivery.
Find your local QIO at: www.ahqa.org
Comparative cost-effectiveness for selected interventions by
Quality-Adjusted Life Year (QALY):
- Mammography screening for breast cancer: $10,000 - $25,000/QALY**
- Colon cancer screening: $10,000 - $25,000/QALY**
- Osteoporosis screening: $10,000 - $25,000/QALY**
- Hypertension medication: $10,000 - $60,000/QALY**
- Cholesterol management: $10,000-$50,000/QALY**
- Dialysis in end-stage renal disease: $50,000 - $100,000/QALY**
- Aspirin for all eligible patients with coronary disease: $11,000/QALY*
- Heart failure outpatient management program: $20,000/QALY*
- Pneumococcal vaccination: $10,000 - $23,000/QALY*
- Lifestyle training for diabetes: $54,000*
*Data is derived from the CEA Registry at: http://www.tufts-nemc.org/cearegistry/.
**Data
is derived from “Medicare and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis,” Neumann,
et al., New England Journal of Medicine, October 6, 2005.
Ranges are provided because actual cost varies based on target populations
and the strategies used.
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