(Bloomberg) — A Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) experiment to lower Medicare health care costs may expand after recording more than $384 million in savings in its first two years, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said Monday.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is now considering how to spread the benefits of the accountable care organization (ACO) program to other parts of Medicare. The ACO effort, the Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations program, saved about $300 per Medicare beneficiary per year, Burwell said. Program designers hoped it would reduce spending by improving coordination of care for Medicare patients with chronic diseases such as diabetes.
"An innovative payment model created as a pilot project by the Affordable Care Act generated substantial savings to Medicare," Burwell said in a speech at the American Hospital Association conference in Washington. "The model has delivered high-quality patient care without limiting coverage or benefits."
Pioneer is one of several PPACA "accountable care" pilot projects. The hospitals and doctors in the programs are asked to closely monitor their sickest patients and better coordinate the patients' care, in an effort to improve the quality of care and reduce wasteful spending. In exchange, the health care providers split any financial savings with the government.