• J Gen Intern Med · Dec 2019

    Review

    Accountable Care Organizations' Performance in Depression: Lessons for Value-Based Payment and Behavioral Health.

    • Nathaniel Z Counts, Glenda Wrenn, and David Muhlestein.
    • Mental Health America, 500 Montgomery St, Suite 820, Alexandria, VA, 22314, USA. ncounts@mentalhealthamerica.net.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2019 Dec 1; 34 (12): 2898-2900.

    AbstractValue-based payment initiatives, such as the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP), offer the possibility of using financial incentives to drive improvements in mental health and substance use outcomes. In the past 2 years, Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) participating in the MSSP began to publicly report on one behavioral health outcome-Depression Remission at Twelve Months, which may indicate how value-based payment incentives have impacted mental health and substance use, and if reforms are needed. For ACOs that meaningfully reported performance on the depression remission measure in 2017, the median rate of depression remission at 12 months was 8.33%. A recent meta-analysis found that the average rate of spontaneous depression remission at 12 months absent treatment was approximately 53%. Although a number of factors likely explain these results, the current ACO design does not appear to incentivize improved behavioral health outcomes. Four changes in value-based payment incentive design may help to drive better outcomes: (1) making data collection easier, (2) increasing the salience of incentives, (3) building capacity to implement new interventions, and (4) creating safeguards for inappropriate treatment or reporting.

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