Due to the federal government shutdown, the eCQI Resource Center has paused updates to site information.
Any updates, questions, and requests will resume when the government is re-opened. Note this includes all eCQM related help desks and Jira.
Electronic clinical quality measures (eCQMs) are measures specified in a standard electronic format using data electronically extracted from electronic health records (EHRs) and/or health information technology (IT) systems to assess the quality of health care provided. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) uses eCQMs in a variety of quality reporting and value-based purchasing programs.
There are several benefits of using eCQMs:
Measured entities use eCQMs to provide feedback on their care systems and to help them identify opportunities for clinical quality improvement. Measured entities report eCQMs to CMS, The Joint Commission, other federal health agencies, and commercial insurance payers in programs that track and/or reimburse measured entities based on quality reporting or quality performance.
Review eCQM Basics, eCQM 101 - Getting Started with eCQMs for Quality Reporting Programs, and visit the eCQM Annual Timeline and Educational Resources pages to learn more about eCQMs.
For CMS programs, eligible hospitals, critical access hospitals, and/or eligible clinicians must use the most current version of eCQMs when reporting eCQMs to CMS.
The Quality Mission of the CMS National Quality Strategy is to achieve optimal health and well-being for all individuals. The Quality Vision is shaping a resilient, high-value American health care system delivering high-quality, safe, and equitable care for all.
The goal of the Universal Foundation is to align quality measures across CMS and advance the vision of the National Quality Strategy. Interoperability is a goal of the National Quality Strategy and several of the initial list of Universal Foundation measures are eCQMs.
CMS’s Meaningful Measures 2.0 promotes innovation and modernization of all aspects of quality, addressing a wide variety of settings, stakeholders, and measurement requirements.
The eCQM Strategy Project supported the CMS Patients Over Paperwork initiative to evaluate and streamline regulations with a goal to reduce unnecessary burden, to increase efficiencies, and to improve the beneficiary experience. The project provided CMS with an understanding of eCQM implementation and reporting burden and made recommendations for improvement in the use of eCQMs in CMS quality reporting programs. Read the report here.