Skip to content

ACOs Multiply As Medicare Announces 27 New Ones

Despite uncertainty over how the Supreme Court will rule on the health law, a key provision intended to help transform the delivery of care is moving ahead.

The Obama administration announced Tuesday that 27 health systems have been selected to participate in Medicare’s Shared Savings Program, which offers financial incentives for physicians, hospitals and other health care providers to team up in “accountable care organizations.”

Advocates say ACOs can improve care for Medicare beneficiaries and slow rising costs by changing the incentives that influence how doctors and hospitals operate. Experts cite as models highly touted health systems such as the Mayo Clinic and the Geisinger Health System of Pennsylvania.

Instead of getting paid for each service ACOs reward providers that are able to manage chronic disease and meet certain quality measures, including reducing hospital admissions and emergency room visits. If they improve care while restraining costs, the systems can share in the savings.

> > FAQ: Accountable Care Organizations, Explained

Tuesday’s announcement was the government’s first major health law action since the Supreme Court hearings two weeks ago on challenges to the law and has been highly anticipated by the health care industry. The new ACOs will serve an estimated 375,000 beneficiaries in 18 states.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is reviewing another 150 applications from additional ACOs seeking to enter the program in July, suggesting that the Shared Savings Program is moving full-speed ahead.

The program is “off to a very phenomenal start,” said Jonathan Blum, who is a CMS deputy administrator. “We are on track to fundamentally transform the [Medicare] fee-for-service program.”

More ACOs Will Be Approved

Last December, HHS selected 32 organizations to take part in an advanced version of the Medicare program. These “pioneers,” as they’re called, are further along in developing the ACO model, with many already largely functioning as ACOs.

Pioneers began operating Jan. 1, and during their first two years they will assume a greater risk, but with a greater potential reward, than the ACOs announced on Tuesday.

Although some experts expected hospitals to dominate the ACO field, Blum noted that the majority of ACOs announced Tuesday are physician-led organizations. He also said many of the organizations are working with private health insurers to serve patients not in the Medicare program.

Chas Roades, chief research officer at the Advisory Board Company in Washington, D.C., cautioned that as the ACOS take off and “people actually start to deliver care in a different way, it’s messy and complicated. There will be successes and failures, and it may go slower than policy-makers would like it to.”

He says it’s important that CMS create some way for the initial cohort of ACOs to share their data and best practices with one another. “It’s a slow ramp but everyone will be watching very closely to see how these early ACOs succeed,” Rhoades said.

Some ACO leaders say they aren’t worried about the Supreme Court case.

“It’s not changing anything for us,” said Emily Brower, an executive director with Atrius Health, operator of a pioneer ACO in Massachusetts. “This is a model of care we’ve been trying to evolve into since before the pioneer program existed.”

“We’ll continue making investments, and if the law is overturned, we’ll be asking where the return on investment is for us, if not in shared savings,” Brower added. The return on investment “might be in patient growth because our patients become increasingly satisfied with the quality of care we provide.”

Harold Miller, president and CEO of the Network for Regional Healthcare Improvement and executive director of the Center for Healthcare Quality & Payment Reform in Pittsburgh, says ACOs will continue to be the model of the future, even if the Supreme Court strikes down the health care law. The private sector, he says, has been moving in the direction of coordinated care for years.

Miller points out that the Medicare ACO program isn’t “interwoven with the controversial parts of the law,” such as the mandate requiring all Americans to carry health insurance, and should be able to stand on its own. If not, CMS can likely shift the program into a demonstration project without any new legislation.

Blair Childs, senior vice president of public affairs at Premier health care alliance in Charlotte, N.C., adds that ACOs have always been a rare bright spot of bipartisan agreement. Even if the entirety of the ACA is struck down, he argues, Congress is likely to pass additional legislation to continue both the Shared Savings and Pioneer programs.

But Stephen Nuckolls, CEO of Coastal Carolina Health Care in New Bern, N.C., said the organization’s ACO “would not have the incentive” to institute new services without the law and its funding.

Nuckolls nonetheless says he’s confident about the future. “This part of the law is one of those areas that, even if the law is struck down, I think both parties will come together to reinstate it,” he said.

Shane Carter, CEO of Jackson Purchase Medical Associates in Paducah, Ky., is also optimistic. “The positives are enough that regardless of whether or not there’s a formal program, we’ll continue working” toward an ACO, he said. “We’re in it, and we’re going for it.”

Medicare Shared Savings Program ACOs

Name Location Est. Beneficiaries
Accountable Care Coalition of Caldwell County, LLC Lenoir, NC 5,000
Accountable Care Coalition of Coastal Georgia Ormond, FL (Serving beneficiaries in GA and SC) 8,000
Accountable Care Coalition of Eastern North Carolina, LLC New Bern, NC 10,000
Accountable Care Coalition of Greater Athens Georgia Athens, GA 8,500
Accountable Care Coalition of Mount Kisco, LLC Mount Kisco, NY N/A
Accountable Care Coalition of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, LLC Clearwater, FL (Serving beneficiaries in the Mississippi Gulf Coast area) 7,000
Accountable Care Coalition of the North Country, LLC Canton, NY 5,300
Accountable Care Coalition of Southeast Wisconsin, LLC Milwaukee, WI 10,000
Accountable Care Coalition of Texas, Inc. Houston, TX 70,000
AHS ACO, LLC Morristown, NJ (Serving beneficiaries in NJ and PA) 50,000
AppleCare Medical ACO, LLC Buena Park, CA 8,000
Arizona Connected Care, LLC Tucson, AZ 7,500
Chinese Community Accountable Care Organization New York, NY 12,000
CIPA Western New York IPA, doing business as Catholic Medical Partners Buffalo, NY 31,000
Coastal Carolina Quality Care, Inc. New Bern, NC 11,000
Crystal Run Healthcare ACO, LLC Middletown, NY (Serving beneficiaries in NY and PA) 10,000
Florida Physicians Trust, LLC Winter Park, FL 16,500
Hackensack Physician-Hospital Alliance ACO, LLC Hackensack, NJ (Serving beneficiaries in NJ and NY) 11,000
Jackson Purchase Medical Associates, PSC Paducah, KY 6,000
Jordan Community ACO Plymouth, MA 6,000
North Country ACO Littleton, NH (Serving beneficiaries in NH and VT) 6,000
Optimus Healthcare Partners, LLC Summit, NJ 29,000
Physicians of Cape Cod ACO Description of Organization Hyannis, MA 5,000
Premier ACO Physician Network Lakewood, CA 12,500
Primary Partners, LLC Clermont, FL 7,500
RGV ACO Health Providers, LLC Donna, TX 6,000
West Florida ACO, LLC Trinity, FL 10,000
Source: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

 This article was produced by Kaiser Health News with support from The SCAN Foundation.