Here are four takeaways:
1. CMS’ proposal is in response to many healthcare leaders concerns over the pain management assessment’s correlation to opioid prescribing patterns. Often, providers are motivated to prescribe opioids to alleviate patients’ pain, thereby increasing satisfaction scores.
2. The current pain management questions do not ask specially about a type of pain-control method.
3. While CMS does not cite any proven studies that pain management dimension questions are linked to opioid prescribing patterns, the agency is proposing the emission to be cautious about the potential link.
4. Hospitals will continue to publicly report pain management data under the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program while CMS devises alternative pain management questions.
More articles on practice management:
4 tips for small practitioners
7 essential parts of a strong compliance program
Dr. Scott Bruder to speak on building a regenerative medicine company — 5 notes
At the Becker's 23rd Annual Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + The Future of Spine Conference, taking place June 18–20 in Chicago, spine surgeons, orthopedic leaders and ASC executives will come together to explore minimally invasive techniques, ASC growth strategies and innovations shaping the future of outpatient spine care. Apply for complimentary registration now.
