(1) The administrator shall
within available resources appoint a lead organization by January
1, 2011, to support at least one integrated health care delivery
system and one network of nonintegrated community health care
providers in establishing two distinct accountable care
organization pilot projects. The intent is that at least two
accountable care organization pilot projects be in the process of
implementation no later than January 1, 2012. In order to obtain
expert guidance and consultation in design and implementation of
the pilots, the lead organization shall contract with a
recognized national learning collaborative with a reputable
research organization having expertise in the development and
implementation of accountable care organizations and payment
systems.
(2) The lead organization designated by the administrator
under this section shall:
(a) Be representative of health care providers and payors
across the state;
(b) Have expertise and knowledge in medical payment and
practice reform;
(c) Be able to support the costs of its work without
recourse to state funding. The administrator and the lead
organization are authorized and encouraged to seek federal funds,
as well as solicit, receive, contract for, collect, and hold
grants, donations, and gifts to support the implementation of
this section and may scale back implementation to fall within
resulting resource parameters;
(d) In collaboration with the health care authority,
identify and convene work groups, as needed, to accomplish the
goals of chapter 220, Laws of 2010; and
(e) Submit regular reports to the administrator on the
progress of implementing the requirements of chapter 220, Laws of
2010.
(3) As used in this section, an "accountable care
organization" is an entity that enables networks consisting of
health care providers or a health care delivery system to become
accountable for the overall costs and quality of care for the
population they jointly serve and to share in the savings created
by improving quality and slowing spending growth while relying on
the following principles:
(a) Local accountability:
(i) Accountable care organizations must be composed of local
delivery systems; and
(ii) Accountable care organizations spending benchmarks must
make the local system accountable for cost, quality, and
capacity;
(b) Appropriate payment and delivery models:
(i) Accountable care organizations with expenditures below
benchmarks are recognized and rewarded with appropriate financial
incentives;
(ii) Payment models have financial incentives that allow
stakeholders to make investments that improve care and slow cost
growth such as health information technology; and
(iii) Patient-centered medical homes are an integral
component to an accountable care organization with a focus on
improving patient outcomes, optimizing the use of health care
information technology, patient registries, and chronic disease
management, thereby improving the primary care team, and
achieving cost savings through lowering health care utilization;
(c) Performance measurement:
(i) Measurement is essential to ensure that appropriate care
is being delivered and that cost savings are not the result of
limiting necessary care; and
(ii) Accountable care organizations must report patient
experience data in addition to clinical process and outcome
measures.
(4) The lead organization, subject to available resources,
shall research other opportunities to establish accountable care
organization pilot projects, which may become available through
participation in a demonstration project in medicaid, payment
reform in medicare, national health care reform, or other federal
changes that support the development of accountable care
organizations.
(5) The lead organization, subject to available resources,
shall coordinate the accountable care organization selection
process with the primary care medical home reimbursement pilot
projects established in RCW 70.54.380 and the ongoing joint
project of the department of health and the Washington academy of
family physicians patient-centered medical home collaborative
being put into practice under section 2, chapter 295, Laws of
2008, as well as other private and public efforts to promote
adoption of medical homes within the state.
(6) The lead organization shall make a report to the health
care committees of the legislature, by January 1, 2013, on the
progress of the accountable care organization pilot projects,
recommendations about further expansion, and needed changes to
the statute to more broadly implement and oversee accountable
care organizations in the state.
(7) As used in this section, "administrator," "health care
provider," "lead organization," and "payor" have the same meaning
as provided in RCW 41.05.036.
[2010 c 220 § 2.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- 2010 c 220: "(1)(a) The legislature finds
that a necessary component of bending the health care cost curve
is innovative payment and practice reforms that capitalize on
current incentives and create new incentives in the delivery
system to further the goals of increased quality, accessibility,
and affordability.
(b) The legislature further finds that accountable care
organizations have received significant attention in the recent
health care reform debate and have been found by the
congressional budget office to be one of the few comprehensive
reform models that can be relied on to reduce costs.
(c) The legislature further finds that accountable care
organizations present an intriguing path forward on reform that
builds on current provider referral patterns and offers shared
savings payments to providers willing to be held accountable for
quality and costs.
(d) The legislature further finds that the accountable care
organization framework offers a basic method of decoupling volume
and intensity from revenue and profit and is thus a crucial step
toward achieving a truly sustainable health care delivery system.
(2) The legislature declares that collaboration among public
payors, private health carriers, third-party purchasers, health
care delivery systems, and providers to identify appropriate
reimbursement methods to align incentives in support of
accountable care organizations is in the best interest of the
public. The legislature therefore intends to exempt from state
antitrust laws, and to provide immunity from federal antitrust
laws through the state action doctrine, for activities undertaken
pursuant to pilots designed and implemented under RCW 70.54.420
that might otherwise be constrained by such laws. The
legislature does not intend and does not authorize any person or
entity to engage in activities or to conspire to engage in
activities that would constitute per se violations of state and
federal antitrust laws including, but not limited to, agreements
among competing health care providers or health carriers as to
the price or specific level of reimbursement for health care
services.
(3) The legislature further finds that public-private
partnerships and joint projects, such as the Washington
patient-centered medical home collaborative administered and
funded jointly between the department of health and the
Washington academy of family physicians, are research-supported,
evidence-based primary care delivery projects that should be
encouraged to the fullest extent possible because they improve
health outcomes for patients and increase primary care clinical
effectiveness, thereby reducing the overall costs in our health
care system." [2010 c 220 § 1.]