The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is responding to the chaos of the covid-19 pandemic to hide from the public a rating that lets consumers compare hospitals鈥 safety records and to waive approximately $350 million in financial penalties for roughly 750 hospitals with the worst patient-safety track records.
CMS鈥 chief medical officer, Dr. , said those safety metrics were not designed to properly account for how a pandemic, with its patient surges and workforce shortages, might affect hospital systems.
鈥淪afety, transparency, and quality of care of patients is not enhanced by the use of skewed or inaccurate data, and, in fact, could result in negative consequences for patients,鈥 he said. 鈥淐MS wants the public to have complete trust in the data and will make data on quality available when we have a high confidence in its credibility and accuracy.鈥
But patient safety advocates argue CMS is letting hospitals off the hook for their pandemic performances, and many decried the loss of transparency that suppression of such data would cause.
CMS wants to keep 鈥減atients, payers, and insurers in the dark on what happened during the pandemic,鈥 said , director of health care campaigns for the nonprofit U.S. Public Interest Research Group. She added that without penalties, hospitals won鈥檛 be forced to change ahead of the next crisis that strains health systems.
鈥淭here was no comma in the law that says, 鈥楿nless there鈥檚 a pandemic, you don鈥檛 have to pay these penalties,鈥欌 Kelmar said.
The proposed rule comes after CMS officials publicly acknowledged in the that progress on lowering hospital-acquired infections 鈥 such as urinary tract and staph infections, as well as bloodstream infections associated with central lines 鈥 has faltered significantly during the pandemic. Also, a May that used data from 2018 found that even before the pandemic, 1 in 4 Medicare patients were harmed in the hospital, with nearly half of such events being preventable.
The Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit patient advocacy group, estimates that a year die because of the patient safety issues measured by CMS鈥 ratings.
The metrics that CMS wants to suppress appear on website, formerly known as Hospital Compare. The site allows consumers to view a broad range of quality metrics for hospitals, including mortality and readmission rates. Those scores would continue to appear under the CMS proposal, but the site would not report data from what鈥檚 known as the , or 鈥淧atient Safety and Adverse Events Composite,鈥 including how often patients had serious complications from potentially preventable medical harm, such as falls and sepsis. CMS will publicly release other safety data, although the pandemic has complicated that, too.
The penalties CMS wants to waive are issued annually through the , which was created by the Affordable Care Act. But because the PSI 90 won鈥檛 be available and CMS officials are wary of counting some other metrics skewed by the pandemic, they said penalizing hospitals, as they have done in the past, would not be reasonable.
The poorest-performing hospitals would be spared the 1% Medicare payment reductions that CMS would otherwise have applied throughout the upcoming federal fiscal year, which begins Oct. 1. CMS plans to resume the penalties in the following fiscal year, which begins in October 2023.
CMS鈥 proposal to pause such penalties is reasonable, said , a professor of health care management at the University of Michigan鈥檚 School of Public Health, who has on the hospital quality program. He pointed out that the metrics that underlie these financial penalties are easily skewed by variations in patient mix 鈥 such as those triggered by covid surges or lockdowns.
But , co-founder of and board president for the Patient Safety Action Network, said she鈥檚 tired of hearing hospitals talk about the administrative strain that reporting the data would create and of CMS saying that adjusting how it compares hospitals would be difficult.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a real burden if you die or lose your mom,鈥 McGiffert said.
A 2021 KHN investigative series detailed the gaps in CMS鈥 oversight in tracking and holding hospitals accountable for patients who were diagnosed with covid after entering the hospital.
As the pandemic continues, the agency has not added hospital-acquired covid infections to its patient safety quality metrics, Fleisher said. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spokesperson Martha Sharan said a joint effort of the CDC, CMS, and the National Quality Forum, a nonprofit that aims to improve patient care value, that would establish such metrics 鈥渃ould be a consideration after the emergency phase of the pandemic.鈥
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services currently maintains of covid-19 hospital-onset data, but, as KHN previously reported, such data does not hold individual hospitals accountable. Patient safety experts say the HHS report is likely an undercount because it tracks only hospital-onset covid cases that appeared after 14 days.
Separately, CMS has yet to further regulate the private accrediting agencies that oversee the majority of U.S. hospitals, following from June 2021 that found 鈥淐MS could not ensure that accredited hospitals would continue to provide quality care and operate safely during the COVID-19 emergency鈥 and could not guarantee safety going forward. The report cited holes in CMS鈥 authority to make accrediting agencies execute a special, covid-spurred infection control survey for hospitals to ensure patient safety.
Seema Verma, who served as CMS administrator under President Donald Trump, said hospital-acquired infections are a long-standing issue that covid exacerbated 鈥 and one that most Americans are unaware of when they choose where to receive care.
She called for more transparency so patients can decide which hospitals are safe for them. She also called for changes in the accreditation system, which she said is because of between the accrediting organizations鈥 consulting arms and the hospitals they inspect.
鈥淭he American public should have faith that the people that are doing the surveys don鈥檛 have a financial interest with the institution they are surveying,鈥 Verma said.
Accrediting agencies have defended their practices during the pandemic, saying they worked with CMS as they could during the emergency.
In the U.S., of hospitals elect to pay private accrediting agencies, instead of government inspectors, to certify they are safe. But academics have shown that such agencies have not been associated with , and data showing how accrediting agencies fall short compared with government inspectors. A potential dealing with conflict-of-interest concerns was slated to be but has yet to be made public.
Fleisher declined to say when to expect any such rule proposal but did say CMS agreed with last summer鈥檚 inspector general report on the failings in CMS authority. Fleisher said his agency would like to require accrediting organizations to perform special surveys of hospitals at CMS鈥 discretion.
鈥淭here will be an opportunity to comment on this issue,鈥 he said. He added that the agency鈥檚 top priority is to ensure 鈥減atients have access to safe, equitable, quality health care.鈥
Patient advocates said the agency needs to do better 鈥 and the public needs to push it to do so.
鈥淭he people who were harmed during the pandemic deserve to be accounted for,鈥 said McGiffert. 鈥淔rankly, I鈥檝e been a little shocked at how accepting the American public is that hospitals cannot manage to do the things they must do to keep patients safe during a pandemic.鈥
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