Medicare initiatives to improve heart failure care: an introduction

Congest Heart Fail. 2000 Sep-Oct;6(5):280-282. doi: 10.1111/j.1527-5299.2000.80166.x.

Abstract

Purchasers of health care, patients, physicians, and other health care professionals are increasingly seeking to evaluate quality of health care. Scattered reports have suggested that there is currently marked variation in evaluation and treatment of heart failure and substantial gaps between guideline recommendations and care delivered to heart failure patients. Heart failure is the most common discharge diagnosis for Medicare beneficiaries and yet, until recently, relatively little national information was available to describe the quality of care and to identify opportunities to improve practice. To address the need to evaluate care of patients with heart failure and support national, state, and local efforts to improve care and outcomes, the Health Care Financing Administration has initiated three programs that stretch across much of the continuum of care: the National Heart Failure Quality Improvement Project, focusing on inpatient care; the Heart Failure Practice Improvement Effort (HF PIE), a pilot outpatient effort in 11 states; and the 2001 requirement for Medicare+Choice Organizations to initiate quality improvement efforts for their heart failure patients. This paper is the first in a series that will provide information about these programs. We hope that this series will stimulate discussion on how clinicians can join these national efforts to improve the care and outcomes of patients with heart failure. (c)2000 by CHF, Inc.