eCQM Title | Closing the Referral Loop: Receipt of Specialist Report |
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eCQM Identifier (Measure Authoring Tool) | 50 | eCQM Version Number | 12.0.000 |
NQF Number | Not Applicable | GUID | f58fc0d6-edf5-416a-8d29-79afbfd24dea |
Measurement Period | January 1, 20XX through December 31, 20XX | ||
Measure Steward | Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) | ||
Measure Developer | Mathematica | ||
Endorsed By | None | ||
Description |
Percentage of patients with referrals, regardless of age, for which the referring clinician receives a report from the clinician to whom the patient was referred |
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Copyright |
Limited proprietary coding is contained in the Measure specifications for user convenience. Users of proprietary code sets should obtain all necessary licenses from the owners of the code sets. CPT(R) contained in the Measure specifications is copyright 2004-2022 American Medical Association. LOINC(R) is copyright 2004-2022 Regenstrief Institute, Inc. This material contains SNOMED Clinical Terms(R) (SNOMED CT[R]) copyright 2004-2022 International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation. |
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Disclaimer |
This performance Measure is not a clinical guideline, does not establish a standard of medical care, and has not been tested for all potential applications. THE MEASURE AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. Due to technical limitations, registered trademarks are indicated by (R) or [R] and unregistered trademarks are indicated by (TM) or [TM]. |
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Measure Scoring | Proportion | ||
Measure Type | Process | ||
Stratification |
None |
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Risk Adjustment |
None |
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Rate Aggregation |
None |
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Rationale |
Problems in the outpatient referral and consultation process have been documented, including lack of timeliness of information and inadequate provision of information between the specialist and the requesting physician (Gandhi et al., 2000; Forrest et al., 2000; Stille et al., 2005). In a study of physician satisfaction with the outpatient referral process, Gandhi et al. (2000) found that 68% of specialists reported receiving no information from the primary care provider prior to referral visits, and 25% of primary care providers had still not received any information from specialists 4 weeks after referral visits. In another study of 963 referrals (Forrest et al., 2000), pediatricians scheduled appointments with specialists for only 39% and sent patient information to the specialists for only 51% of referrals. In a 2006 report to Congress, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) found that care coordination programs improved quality of care for patients, reduced hospitalizations, and improved adherence to evidence-based care guidelines, especially among patients with diabetes and coronary heart disease. Associations with cost-savings were less clear; this was attributed to how well the intervention group was chosen and defined, as well as the intervention put in place. Additionally, cost-savings were usually calculated in the short-term, while some argue that the greatest cost-savings accrue over time (MedPAC, 2006). Improved mechanisms for information exchange could facilitate communication between providers, whether for time-limited referrals or consultations, on-going co-management, or during care transitions. For example, a study by Branger, van’t Hooft, van der Wouden, Moorman & van Bemmel (1999) found that an electronic communication network that linked the computer-based patient records of physicians who had shared care of patients with diabetes significantly increased frequency of communications between physicians and availability of important clinical data. There was a 3-fold increase in the likelihood that the specialist provided written communication of results if the primary care physician scheduled appointments and sent patient information to the specialist (Forrest et al., 2000). Care coordination is a focal point in the current health care reform and our nation's ambulatory health information technology framework. The National Priorities Partnership (2008) recently highlighted care coordination as one of the most critical areas for development of quality measurement and improvement. |
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Clinical Recommendation Statement |
None |
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Improvement Notation |
A higher score indicates better quality |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'Branger, P. J., van't Hooft, A., van der Wouden, J. C., Moorman, P. W., & van Bemmel, J. H. (1999). Shared care for diabetes: Supporting communication between primary and secondary care. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 53(2-3), 133-142. doi: 10.1016/s1386-5056(98)00154-3' |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'Forrest, C. B., Glade, G. B., Baker, A. E., Bocian, A., von Schrader, S., & Starfield, B. (2000). Coordination of specialty referrals and physician satisfaction with referral care. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, 154(5), 499-506. doi: 10.1001/archpedi.154.5.499' |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'Gandhi, T. K., Sittig, D. F., Franklin, M., Sussman, A. J., Fairchild, D. G., & Bates, D. W. (2000). Communication breakdown in the outpatient referral process. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 15(9), 626-631. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2000.91119.x' |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'MedPAC. (2006, March). Report to the Congress: Medicare payment policy. Retrieved from https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/reports/Mar06_EntireReport.pdf' |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'National Priorities Partnership. (2008). National priorities and goals: Aligning our efforts to transform America’s healthcare. Washington, DC: National Quality Forum.' |
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Reference |
Reference Type: CITATION Reference Text: 'Stille, C. J., Jerant, A., Bell, D., Meltzer, D., & Elmore, J. G. (2005). Coordinating care across diseases, settings, and clinicians: A key role for the generalist in practice. Annals of Internal Medicine, 142(8), 700-708. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-142-8-200504190-00038' |
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Definition |
Referral: A request from one clinician to another clinician for evaluation, treatment, or co-management of a patient's condition. This term encompasses referral and consultation as defined by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Report: A written document prepared by the eligible clinician (and staff) to whom the patient was referred and that accounts for his or her findings, provides summary of care information about findings, diagnostics, assessments and/or plans of care, and is provided to the referring eligible clinician. |
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Guidance |
The clinician who refers the patient to another clinician is the clinician who should be held accountable for the performance of this measure. Only the first referral made between January 1 – October 31 of the measurement period will be considered for this measure to allow adequate time for the referring clinician to collect the consult report by the end of the measurement period. If there are multiple referrals for a patient during the measurement period, use the first referral. The clinician to whom the patient was referred is responsible for sending the consultant report that will fulfill the communication. Note: this is not the same clinician who would report on the measure. The consultant report that will successfully close the referral loop should be related to the first referral for a patient during the measurement period. If there are multiple consultant reports received by the referring clinician which pertain to a particular referral, use the first consultant report to satisfy the measure. Eligible clinicians reporting on this measure should note that all data for the performance period is to be submitted by the deadline established by CMS. Therefore, eligible clinicians who refer patients towards the end of the performance period (i.e., October), should request that clinicians to whom they referred their patients share their consult reports as soon as possible in order for those patients to be counted in the measure numerator during the measurement period. When clinicians to whom patients are referred communicate the consult report as soon as possible with the referring clinician, it ensures that the communication loop is closed in a timely manner and that the data are included in the submission to CMS. This eCQM is a patient-based measure. This version of the eCQM uses QDM version 5.6. Please refer to the eCQI resource center (https://ecqi.healthit.gov/qdm) for more information on the QDM. |
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Transmission Format |
TBD |
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Initial Population |
Number of patients, regardless of age, who had an encounter during the measurement period and were referred by one clinician to another clinician on or before October 31 |
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Denominator |
Equals Initial Population |
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Denominator Exclusions |
None |
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Numerator |
Number of patients with a referral on or before October 31, for which the referring clinician received a report from the clinician to whom the patient was referred |
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Numerator Exclusions |
Not Applicable |
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Denominator Exceptions |
None |
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Supplemental Data Elements |
For every patient evaluated by this measure also identify payer, race, ethnicity and sex |
"Has Encounter during Measurement Period" and "First Referral during First 10 Months of Measurement Period" is not null
"Initial Population"
None
"Referring Clinician Receives Consultant Report to Close Referral Loop"
None
None
None
"Initial Population"
First(((["Intervention, Performed": "Referral"] ReferralPerform where Global."NormalizeInterval"(ReferralPerform.relevantDatetime, ReferralPerform.relevantPeriod)ends during day of Interval[start of "Measurement Period", DateTime(year from start of "Measurement Period", 10, 31)] return { identification: ReferralPerform.id, dateIntervention: end of Global."NormalizeInterval"(ReferralPerform.relevantDatetime, ReferralPerform.relevantPeriod) } ) union(["Intervention, Order": "Referral"] ReferralOrder where ReferralOrder.authorDatetime during day of Interval[start of "Measurement Period", DateTime(year from start of "Measurement Period", 10, 31)] return { identification: ReferralOrder.id, dateIntervention: ReferralOrder.authorDatetime } ))ReferralInterventions sort by dateIntervention ascending )
exists ( ( ["Encounter, Performed": "Office Visit"] union ["Encounter, Performed": "Ophthalmological Services"] union ["Encounter, Performed": "Preventive Care Services Established Office Visit, 18 and Up"] union ["Encounter, Performed": "Preventive Care Services, Initial Office Visit, 0 to 17"] union ["Encounter, Performed": "Preventive Care Services Initial Office Visit, 18 and Up"] union ["Encounter, Performed": "Preventive Care, Established Office Visit, 0 to 17"] ) Encounter where Encounter.relevantPeriod during day of "Measurement Period" )
"Has Encounter during Measurement Period" and "First Referral during First 10 Months of Measurement Period" is not null
"Referring Clinician Receives Consultant Report to Close Referral Loop"
exists ( ["Communication, Performed": "Consultant Report"] ConsultantReportCommunicated with "First Referral during First 10 Months of Measurement Period" FirstReferral such that FirstReferral.identification in ConsultantReportCommunicated.relatedTo and ConsultantReportCommunicated.receivedDatetime after FirstReferral.dateIntervention and ConsultantReportCommunicated.receivedDatetime during day of "Measurement Period" )
["Patient Characteristic Ethnicity": "Ethnicity"]
["Patient Characteristic Payer": "Payer"]
["Patient Characteristic Race": "Race"]
["Patient Characteristic Sex": "ONC Administrative Sex"]
if pointInTime is not null then Interval[pointInTime, pointInTime] else if period is not null then period else null as Interval<DateTime>
["Patient Characteristic Ethnicity": "Ethnicity"]
["Patient Characteristic Payer": "Payer"]
["Patient Characteristic Race": "Race"]
["Patient Characteristic Sex": "ONC Administrative Sex"]
Measure Set |
Not Applicable |
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