AFMC to Offer Training and Technical Assistance to Rural Clinics and Practices

Mar 17, 2017 at 01:49 pm by admin


LITTLE ROCK - The Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care (AFMC) is providing Quality Payment Program hands-on training and technical assistance to eligible Arkansas and Mississippi health care clinicians and physician practices as a result of funding awarded by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Nationally, CMS awarded approximately $20 million to 11 organizations for the first year of a five-year program to provide direct, individualized training about the Quality Payment Program for clinicians in individual or small group practices of 15 clinicians or fewer. CMS intends to invest up to an additional $80 million over the remaining four years.

In Arkansas and Mississippi, this direct technical assistance will be provided by the AFMC through a subcontract with TMF Health Quality Institute, one of the 11 organizations receiving a CMS contract award.

Technical assistance will help thousands of small practices across the country, especially those that practice in historically under-resourced areas including rural areas, health professional shortage areas and medically underserved areas. The training and educational resources will be available immediately, nationwide, and will be provided at no cost to eligible clinicians and practices.

AFMC has worked with TMF, a multistate, regional Quality Innovation Network (QIN) Quality Improvement Organization (QIO), for nearly three years to improve the quality of health care, control costs and more closely involve Arkansas Medicare patients in their health care.

Congress recognized the importance of small and rural practices by funding the bipartisan Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) to help clinicians navigate the new reimbursement model without losing focus on the needs of their patients.

Nationally, CMS is leading the transition to alternative payment models as a way to both improve health care and control its costs. Transitioning from the traditional fee-for-service reimbursement, CMS now reimburses a large part of Medicare services based on patient outcomes or value-based care. MACRA addresses the resources gap between large and small practices by helping to transform small practices so they can succeed in the value-based care environment.

AFMC expects to enroll 3,486 clinicians and 2,020 small practices in Arkansas and Mississippi. The organization will assess the unique needs of each clinician/practice, develop an individualized action plan and then provide customized technical assistance - all at no cost to the health care providers. Examples of this assistance include help choosing and reporting on quality measures, assessing and optimizing health information technology, and direct support in implementing change management and strategic planning.

AFMC will also provide an information technology (IT) specialist, who will assist clinicians in the nine-state region served by TMF with electronic health record vendor selection, health information technology interoperability, e-prescribing, Meaningful Use optimization, privacy and security assessments.

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