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Mispricing in Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment

Author

Listed:
  • Jing Chen

    (EMC Corporation)

  • Randall P. Ellis

    (Boston University)

  • Katherine H. Toro

    (University of Massachusetts Medical School)

  • Arlene S. Ash

    (Verisk Health)

Abstract

The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services implemented hierarchical condition category (CMS-HCC) models in 2004 to adjust payments to Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to reflect enrollees’ expected health care costs. We use DxCG Medicare models, refined “descendants†of the same HCC framework with 189 comprehensive clinical categories available to CMS in 2004, to reveal two mispricing errors resulting from CMS’ implementation. One comes from ignoring all diagnostic information for “new enrollees†(those with less than 12 months of prior claims). Another comes from continuing to use the simplified models which were originally adopted in response to assertions from some capitated health plans that submitting the claims-like data that facilitate richer models was too burdensome. Even the main CMS model being used in 2014 recognizes only 79 condition categories, excluding many diagnoses and merging conditions with somewhat heterogeneous costs. Omitted conditions are typically lower cost or “vague†and not easily audited from simplified data submissions. In contrast, DxCG Medicare models use a comprehensive, 394-HCC classification system. Applying both models to Medicare’s 2010 - 2011 Fee-For-Service five-percent sample, we find mispricing and lower predictive accuracy for the CMS implementation. For example, in 2010, 13% of beneficiaries had at least one higher-cost DxCG- recognized condition, but no CMS-recognized, condition; their 2011 actual costs averaged $6,628, almost one-third more than the CMS model prediction. Since MA plans must now supply encounter data, CMS should consider using more refined and comprehensive (DxCG-like) models.

Suggested Citation

  • Jing Chen & Randall P. Ellis & Katherine H. Toro & Arlene S. Ash, 2015. "Mispricing in Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment," Boston University - Department of Economics - Working Papers Series wp2015-020, Boston University - Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:bos:wpaper:wp2015-020
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    File URL: http://blogs.bu.edu/ellisrp/files/2015/03/2015_ChenEllisToroAsh_Mispricing-in-the-MA-risk-adjustment-model_final-SingleSpaced.pdf
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    3. McGuire, Thomas G. & Glazer, Jacob & Newhouse, Joseph P. & Normand, Sharon-Lise & Shi, Julie & Sinaiko, Anna D. & Zuvekas, Samuel H., 2013. "Integrating risk adjustment and enrollee premiums in health plan payment," Journal of Health Economics, Elsevier, vol. 32(6), pages 1263-1277.
    4. Kanika Kapur & Chien-Wen Tseng & Afshin Rastegar & Grace Carter & Emmett Keeler, 2003. "Medicare calibration of the clinically detailed risk information system for cost," Open Access publications 10197/274, School of Economics, University College Dublin.
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    Cited by:

    1. Keith M. Marzilli Ericson & Kimberley H. Geissler & Benjamin Lubin, 2018. "The Impact of Partial-Year Enrollment on the Accuracy of Risk-Adjustment Systems: A Framework and Evidence," American Journal of Health Economics, University of Chicago Press, vol. 4(4), pages 454-478, Fall.

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    More about this item

    Keywords

    Medicare; CMS-HCC; DxCG; risk adjustment; payment models;
    All these keywords.

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